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About Kiwohede

Kiwohede’s goal is to aid young girls who are being subjected to exploitation and abuse. Due to poverty and neglect many young girls in Tanzania today find themselves in vulnerable positions. As a result they fall prey to prostitution, trafficking, and dangerous, underpaid work. Many of them are homeless or have been taken away from their parents. They are denied their basic human rights and are being deprived from any chance at an education let alone a future.
Kiwohede works in cooperation with the community to rescue and house them. If the police happen across any of these vulnerable children they will be referred to Kiwohede.
Kiwohede tries to give the girls life stability by creating them support networks. They run a variety of rehabilitation programs, offer child counseling and run free testing for STDs and HIV.  Kiwohede centre in Mbeya

They provide the girls with necessary tools for the future, such as a basic education and vocational skills. These include sewing, tie dyeing, tailoring, weaving, embroidery, cooking, carpentry, sculpturing, weaving, hatchery, beekeeping and animal keeping. Finance and business management are also included to show them how to sustain themselves and how to make the most of their tools.
Life skills such as self respect and respect for others are taught. They are taught how to use their own voices and lobby for their human rights.

The center provides sex education for the children and youth aged 12-24 years, highlighting dangers of Teenage Pregnancy, Sexual abuse, Rape and Violence, HIV and AIDS. It offers family planning advice but encourages Abstinence as a means of battling STDs and teen pregnancy.
Kiwohede encourages community involvement through its Outreach program. Through public events and house visits the girls can showcase their theater art talents, promote the center, and raise awareness of issues such as child labour, trafficking and HIV/AIDs.
The center practices group discussion and encourages conversations between themselves, their relatives, community members and government leaders.

What Kiwohede Achieved so Far?

Since its inception, Kiwohede has reached through to roughly 40,000 girls. It has set up 22 counseling centers and 56 Peer Child Rights clubs.
Each center has its own drop-in clinic for HIV testing.
It has established itself in as many as 56 ward communities in 12 separate districts of Dar es Salaam. These include Songea, Iringa urban, Iringa rural, Kilolo, Kondoa, Mbeya, Mbeya rural, Iramba, Arusha, Temeke, Ilala and Kinondoni.KIWOHEDE Offices at Bunju Centre
Each ward has a Kiwohede Community Task Force. They have around 20- 24 members and each member will embody a voice of the community. The main body usually compromises of the chair persons who is the ward executive officer, 1 community development officer, 1 social worker, 1 representative of a woman’s rights group, 1 representative of a youth group, 2 political representatives (one from each side), 2 Kiwohede representatives (one member of staff and one child), 1 police officer, 1 ward education officer, 1ward health officer, 1 influential person and village or street chairpersons depending on  the ward size.
As well as the Kiwohede Head Quarters in Buguruni Dar es Salaam, Kiwohede’s flagship centers include the Bunju Assistance Center for Trafficked Children (also in Dar es Salaam), the Ilula Psychosocial Counseling Center in Iringa rural and The Ivumwe Vocational Training for Young Persons in Mbeya.

Last Updated (Sunday, 11 July 2010 12:44)

 

Vision

KIWOHEDE envisions a society where children, youth and women are free from all forms of abuse, sexual violence and exploitation

Mission

KIWOHEDE exists to contribute to the elimination of all forms of abuse, sexual violence, and exploitation through policy and community engagement, reproductive health and institutionalization of prevention, withdrawal, rehabilitation and integration mechanisms for vulnerable and affected children, youth and women.

Values

  • Protection
  • Peace
  • Love
  • Commitment
  • Transparency
  • Accountability
  • Participatory
  • Voluntarism