Female genital mutilation (FGM) and child marriage are major issues in East and Southern Africa, where the UN's sexual and reproductive health agency has just launched a new initiative designed to help young people tackle them, AllAfrica reports.
"Despite these challenges, young people are leading change in their own ways," says Sydney Hushie, a regional innovation specialist for UNFPA East and Southern Africa.
"This toolkit will support their efforts and help scale their innovative solutions."
The toolkit, called Addressing Harmful Practices through Social Innovation: A UNFPA Innovation Guide for 'YOU' and Startups, is designed "to equip young people, especially adolescents and girls, with the resources they need to develop innovative solutions to end harmful practices," Hushie says in a press release.
According to UNFPA, more than 200 million girls and women worldwide have undergone FGM, which can cause serious health problems and can be painful and painful for women and their children, the BBC reports.
UNFPA says ending FGM by 2030 is key to achieving the UN's Sustainable Development Goals, which include an end to violence against women and girls and child marriage by 2030.
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