Fight against child marriage to get $10M in Canadian funding - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 12:08 PM | Calgary | -12.1°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Politics

Fight against child marriage to get $10M in Canadian funding

Worldwide efforts to end child, early and forced marriage are getting $10 million from Canada, Foreign Affairs Minister Rob Nicholson said Wednesday, the same day the government named 11 NGOs that will share $180 million in maternal, newborn and child health funding.

Names of organizations splitting $196M for maternal and child health programs also announced

Krishna, 14, pictured with her four-month-old baby Alok in 2013, married her husband Gopal when she was 11 and he was 13. International efforts to end child, early and forced marriage are getting $10 million from Canada, Foreign Affairs Minister Rob Nicholson said Wednesday. (Danish Siddiqui/Reuters)

Worldwide efforts to end child, early and forced marriage are getting $10million from Canada, Foreign Affairs Minister Rob Nicholson said Wednesday, as the government also named 11 non-governmental organizationsthat will share $180 million in maternal, newborn and child health funding.

In a news release, Nicholson saidCanada will put$2.3 million towarda project to promote secondary schooling and skills development training for girls and women in Commonwealth countries. The goal is to "promote secondary schooling for girls and women and provide them with skills development training to improve their livelihoods, the release said.

Nicholson alsoannounced the government will devote$8million over two years to supportlocal community groups and governments, as well as NGOs andcivil society groups, in efforts to combat child, early and forced marriage. Canadian embassies and high commissions will administer the money.

The announcement came on the same day as Conservative MPs announced some of the NGOs that would get funding to improve maternal, newborn and child health around the world.

Eleven Ontario-basedNGOswill share $180 million from 2015 to 2020 for projects that address such issues as nutrition, sanitation and hygiene, and health worker training.

Four British Columbia-based NGOswill share another $16.1 million.

The new funding comes from the government's $3.5-billion pledge tofollow up on its 2010-2015 foreign aid focus on maternal, newborn and child health, known as the Muskoka Initiative. The government has set aside $420 million for NGO-run programs.

The NGOs getting funding announced today are:

  • Action Against Hunger.
  • Amref Health Africa in Canada.
  • Christian Children's Fund of Canada.
  • CUSOInternational with theCanadian Association of Midwives.
  • effect:hope The Leprosy Mission Canada.
  • Geospatial/SALASANConsulting Inc.
  • Global Aid Network.
  • GRID & NEA: Ghana Rural Integrated Development.
  • Jane Goodall Institute of Canada.
  • Plan International Canada.
  • The Presbyterian Church in Canada.
  • The Primate's World Relief and Development Fund.
  • TulaFoundation.
  • World Neighbours Canada.
  • World Vision Canada.