Approximately seven million South African girls do not have access to, or cannot afford to buy, sanitary products, which means 30 % of South African girls do not attend school while they are on their period. But this status quo must change immediately, as 1000 Women Trust and other like-minded NGO’s in South Africa are demanding that sanitary towels be made available to women and girls for free.
“Condoms should be sold and sanitary pads should be made available for free. Sex is a choice. Menstruation isn’t. Young girls without money are suffering out there,” said Tina Thiart, a founder and director of 1000 Women Trust.
The statistics about seven million South African girls and women who don’t have access to sanitary towels as they cannot afford it, according to Bathabile Dlamini, former minister of women in the presidency, are upsetting they are a reality of period poverty in South Africa. (Source: news24.com , May 2022).
Speaking at the Menstrual Health Management Symposium in Johannesburg, South Africa in May 2022, Dlamini said that access to sanitary products, dignified treatment and education on menstrual health management is a human rights issue that all must strive for.
In a bid to help, a local a non-profit organisation that operates independently of any government, foundation is on a mission to destigmatise menstruation, provide education on menstruation and offer free sanitary products to schools and communities across South Africa, in honour of World Menstrual Hygiene Day celebrated on 28 May 2022.
It is estimated that 30 % of South African girls do not attend school while they have their period. Not having access to these products often lead to ridicule from their peers, further perpetuating the stigma around menstrual cycles.
Women are often told to keep their cycle a secret, or that they are unclean during this time. Some of these myths go as far as preventing young girls from participating in prayer or being kept in isolation. In many South African cultures, virginity is at the forefront of purity and marriage. Many believe that inserting anything into the vaginal channel is equivalent to breaking one’s virginity. (Source: Health E-news, 2 nd June 2022).
As of 1 April 2019, sanitary pads became a bit more affordable when value-added tax was scrapped from sanitary pad purchases
Shoprite has expanded its R5 offering to include sanitary pads for women and girls – items that it believes is a basic human right.
Manufactured locally, the pack contains eight individually wrapped maxi pads, and are available exclusively from Shoprite and Usave supermarkets for just R5.
In June 2022, Girls on the Go, Clicks Helping Hand Trust program, partnered with the humanitarian organisation Gift of the Givers and feminine products maker Always to donate 1200 packs of sanitary pads to girls at Phomolong Secondary School in Tembisa.
This formed part of a broader donation of 633 000 sanitary pads and sanitary products valued at R1.5 million that was handed over to schools and communities nationwide in June and July 2022.
Thiart said school children not only miss out on attending school during their period every month, but hundreds of thousands of girls aged 10 to 19 fall pregnant annually, which have a massively negative impact on their futures.
In the first quarter of 2021, the rate of pregnancy amongst school learners in South Africa remains unacceptably high, with more than 36000 babies delivered to girls aged 10 to 19 in the first quarter of 2021.
Nearly 130 000 babies were delivered to girls aged 10 to 19 in South African public health facilities in 2019. This figure increased to 136 386 deliveries for girls I the same age cohort in 2020, the department of basic education told Parliament.
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Office 108B
Valyland Centre, Ivanhoe Rd, Fish Hoek, Cape Town, 7974
Info@1000women.co.za
0614690479
The 1000 Women Trust
Registered Trust South Africa (IT738/2014)
NPO REGISTRATION NO: 163-132 NPO
PBO NO: 930 051 359
© Copyright 2023| All Rights Reserved. Designed by Ludet Digital for The 1000 Women Trust