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Items filtered by date: jeudi, 02 octobre 2025

The Secretary General of the Southern African Development Community Parliamentary Forum (SADC PF), Ms. Boemo Sekgoma, urges parliamentarians and researchers to strengthen monitoring and evaluation (M&E) systems to capture and demonstrate the tangible impact of Sexual and Reproductive Health and Rights (SRHR) interventions across the SADC region.

Officially opening the Monitoring and Evaluation Capacity Development Workshop in Johannesburg on October 1, 2025, organised under the SADC PF’s SRHR, HIV and AIDS, and Governance Programme supported by Sweden, Ms. Sekgoma described the Forum as entering a “defining point” in its journey to deliver universal access to integrated SRHR and HIV and AIDS services, promote gender-responsive climate action, and entrench democratic accountability.

Published in Press Release

JOHANNESBURG, SOUTH AFRICA – Participants at a capacity-building workshop underway in Johannesburg have warned that worsening climate shocks are undermining healthcare systems across Southern Africa, with women, adolescents, and vulnerable groups bearing the brunt.

The SADC Parliamentary Forum, with the support of Sweden, convened the workshop which began on Monday, focusing on Strengthening Parliamentary Evidence-Based Policy Making by Integrating the Nexus between Climate Change, Health, and Sexual and Reproductive Health and Rights (SRHR).

Through interactive group discussions, delegates examined how droughts, floods, and heatwaves are disrupting SRHR service delivery and reviewed the extent to which national climate frameworks integrate health, gender, and SRHR. Their feedback revealed fragile health systems under pressure, weak policy integration, and an urgent need for parliamentary oversight.

One group focusing on drought identified three major threats:

  1. Budget diversion – Funds are being redirected from SRHR to food relief, leaving communities without essential services.

  2. Water scarcity – Shortages compromise hygiene in clinics, undermining sterilisation of medical equipment and increasing infection risks.

  3. Extreme heat – Patient mobility and medicine storage are hampered, limiting access and reducing the effectiveness of vaccines and drugs.

“These combined pressures not only weaken health facilities but also deepen inequalities for women and girls,” one of the rapporteurs noted.

Delegates also pointed to rising social and health risks during climate-related disasters. Women and girls fetching water face heightened exposure to gender-based violence (GBV), while displacement and loss of livelihoods are fuelling early marriages and transactional sex, leading to unintended pregnancies.

For expectant mothers, food insecurity and disrupted health services increase the likelihood of low birth weight and maternal mortality. Blackouts caused by reduced hydropower supply further endanger mothers and newborns during delivery.

The group also lamented data gaps caused by shifting budgets and migration, which complicate population statistics and routine reporting.

“Without reliable data, governments cannot fully understand the scale of SRHR needs in emergencies,” the rapporteur warned.

Adaptation Efforts

Despite the challenges, countries are finding ways to adapt. Examples included mobile clinics for displaced communities, ring-fenced disaster risk reduction funds, solar-powered facilities, early warning systems, and public education campaigns. These innovations, participants said, are helping ensure continuity of SRHR services when disasters strike.

Policy Gaps

A second group reviewed Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs) and National Adaptation Plans (NAPs). They found that while health and gender are often mentioned, SRHR is rarely made explicit.

  • Lesotho: Health and gender prioritised, but SRHR integration weak with no measurable indicators or clear institutional responsibilities.

  • Zimbabwe: Gender acknowledged and stakeholder participation noted, but health treated as peripheral and SRHR absent.

  • South Africa: Health and gender considered, but SRHR barely referenced beyond links to HIV/AIDS.

  • Namibia: Interventions are costed and gender mainstreamed, yet SRHR remains invisible in the NDC text.

“Without clear SRHR commitments, budget lines, or coordination mechanisms, vulnerable groups will continue to fall through the cracks during climate crises,” a rapporteur concluded.

Regional Experiences

Case studies from Mauritius, Mozambique, Madagascar, Malawi, and the DRC showed that cyclones and floods have destroyed clinics, displaced families, and driven girls out of school, exposing them to early marriages and GBV. In Madagascar, survival sex was reported in the aftermath of recent cyclones.

Stronger Parliamentary Oversight Needed

Delegates urged governments to amend climate frameworks to explicitly include SRHR, backed by measurable indicators and dedicated financing. They encouraged parliamentarians to question ministries on how climate funds are supporting SRHR-responsive services and to insist that adaptation projects include gender analysis, partnerships with SRHR organisations, and measures to address GBV.

“Parliamentarians must ensure climate finance is not just about infrastructure or agriculture but also about protecting the health, dignity, and rights of women and vulnerable communities,” one participant stressed.

Ends.

Published in Press Release

À propos de nous

Le Forum parlementaire de la Communauté de développement de l'Afrique australe (SADC PF) a été créé en 1997 conformément à l'article 9 (2) du Traité de la SADC en tant qu'institution autonome de la SADC. Il s'agit d'un organe interparlementaire régional composé de treize (14) parlements représentant plus de 3500 parlementaires dans la région de la SADC.

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