Source: UNFPA
Traditional leaders hold incredible power to realize young people’s sexual and reproductive health rights. Yet, many traditional communities in rural Swaziland have resisted public discussion of ‘taboo’ topics such as sexual-and gender-based violence and the HIV epidemic, especially regarding young people.  


UNFPA’s Safeguard Young People Programme has been engaging traditional leaders in 13 chiefdoms in the Shiselweni region of Swaziland to help change these often harmful ‘taboos’. Working with implementing partners, including Khulisa Umntfwana, the Swaziland National Youth Council, and others, UNFPA held multiple negotiations with chiefs and local leaders to introduce the plans and promise to emphasize the importance of local leaders in creating long-term, sustainable impact.
With the Safeguard Young People Programme sensitization and evidence-based advocacy, largely grounded in Swaziland’s National Youth Policy, chiefs increasingly understand the proactive role they can play in creating supportive services and structures that ensure the survival of their constituents, especially young people. They have largely re-evaluated their preference for abstinence-only education.
The Safeguard Young People Programme also uses traditional ceremonies as an entry point for reaching young people with messages related to their sexual and reproductive health. It highlights the positive aspects of traditional practices – shared culture/history, solidarity among girls working together – while engaging traditional leaders to address the harmful aspects. In particular, UNFPA uses the Reed Dance for mass outreach as part of the national effort to combat HIV and AIDS.
Since traditional leaders have been engaged, the Safeguard Young People Programme has witnessed increasing numbers of young people engaged in issues related to their sexual and reproductive health.
Petros Dlamini, from the Swaziland National Youth Council emphasizes that working through traditional structures has ensured that UNFPA is community-based and community-owned. He already sees the potential for scaling up.

About the Safeguard Young People Programme
With funding from the Swiss Agency for Development and Cooperation, the UNFPA East and Southern Africa Regional Office has implemented the Safeguard Young People Programme in Botswana, Lesotho, Malawi, Namibia, Swaziland, South Africa, Zambia, and Zimbabwe. The programme displays bold leadership and strategic action to ensure young people’s healthy and successful transition to adulthood.

The goal of SYP is to improve the sexual and reproductive health status of young people aged 10 to 24 by the end of 2019. SYP adopts a multi-sectoral approach that addresses the youth population holistically, in their diverse and complex environments, with an emphasis on transforming the gender dynamics that marginalize and harm young women. 

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