Calls for regional action to secure adolescents’ SRHR in East and Southern Africa

16 October 2025

The Chief Executive Officer of the Zimbabwe National Family Planning Council (ZNFPC), Mr Farai Machinga. Photo: Contributed.

The 2nd Edition of the Regional Engagement Meeting on Adolescents’ SRHR Access that seeks to accelerate access to sexual and reproductive health and rights (SRHR) services for adolescents across East and Southern Africa began here on Tuesday with calls for bold regional action.

Held under the theme “Step Up 4 Adolescents SRHR Access: Collaborating for Equitable SRHR in East and Southern Africa,” the two-day gathering has drawn policymakers, youth advocates, parliamentarians, health experts, and civil society organisations from more than 12 countries.

The Chief Executive Officer of the Zimbabwe National Family Planning Council (ZNFPC), Mr Farai Machinga, was the guest of honour.

He called for urgent, coordinated regional action to remove the legal, cultural, and systemic barriers that continue to deny adolescents their right to sexual and reproductive health and rights (SRHR) services across East and Southern Africa.

He said the meeting was a “timely and strategic dialogue that unites government leaders, policymakers, development partners, and, most importantly, young people themselves, who are the heartbeat of our region’s future.”

The gathering brought together parliamentarians, an official from the SADC Parliamentary Forum, health officials, youth networks, and representatives from civil society across the region.

Mr Machinga stressed that every young person, including those with disabilities, deserves access to quality, youth-friendly SRH information and services “without fear, stigma, or restriction.”

He emphasized that such access “is not a luxury but a necessity, a right, and a cornerstone of sustainable development.”

Despite progress made in many countries, he warned that “age-of-consent laws, parental consent requirements, and persistent stigma within health facilities continue to silence young voices and limit their autonomy.”

The consequences, he said, include “rising STIs including HIV infections, high rates of teenage pregnancies, preventable maternal deaths, unsafe abortions, child marriages, and cycles of poverty that hold back not just individuals but entire communities.”

While applauding national commitments to adolescent health, Mr Machinga cautioned that “implementation often lags.” He lamented that “policies may exist on paper, but too many young people still find themselves excluded from the very services designed to protect their well-being.”

He said the regional platform provided by the Step Up 4 Adolescents SRHR Access Campaign, a joint initiative of Youth Advocates, Restless Development, and the Centre for the Study of Adolescence, with support from Sweden through the Hivos Regional SRHR Fund, offered a chance to transform these commitments into tangible regional action.

Delegates at the 2nd Edition of the Regional Engagement Meeting on Adolescents’ SRHR Access. Photo: Kuda Pembere.

Mr Machinga urged participating countries to “learn from each other and harmonise strategies,” stressing that “no single country can tackle these issues alone. The realities our adolescents face are not confined by borders; neither should our solutions be.”

He outlined key priorities for the region. The include prioritising adolescent SRHR in national budgets and frameworks; strengthen data systems to track progress and inform policies; investing in capacity building for health workers and educators; and ensuring meaningful youth engagement in programme design and evaluation.

He highlighted the principle of “Nothing for us, without us,” and called for the institutionalisation of youth participation.

Mr Machinga challenged delegates to ensure the meeting produces measurable outcomes. He called for a Regional Action Plan with clear commitments, accountability mechanisms, and follow-up measures that will ensure sustainability.

“Together, we can move from isolated efforts to a united regional movement for equitable SRHR access,” he said.

He reminded delegates that behind every statistic is “a young person with dreams, vulnerabilities, and potential.”

Policies, he said, must translate into practice, with resources allocated to “confidential, respectful, and non-judgmental” services.

He reaffirmed Zimbabwe’s commitment to act on the key recommendations emerging from the meeting.

Speaking at the same occasion, Hivos Southern Africa Regional Director, Mr. Joy Mabenge also called for a coordinated regional approach to remove systemic barriers that continue to deny adolescents and young people their SRHR.

Mr Mabenge said the gathering represented a pivotal moment for governments, civil society, and young people to co-create solutions that ensure equitable access to SRHR services.

“We gather here in the spirit of a shared mission: to dismantle the barriers that prevent adolescents and young people in East and Southern Africa from claiming their fundamental Sexual and Reproductive Health and Rights,” he said.

Hivos Southern Africa Regional Director, Mr. Joy Mabenge. Photo: Kuda Pembere.

“The consequences – rising HIV infection rates, adolescent pregnancies, and disrupted education- are not just statistics. They are urgent calls to action.”

Mr Mabenge highlighted that age-of-consent laws, parental consent requirements, and pervasive stigma continue to restrict access to essential SRHR services for adolescents. These challenges, he noted, undermine both the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and the broader goal of Universal Health Coverage (UHC).

He said that the regional SRHR Fund campaign, Consent2Access, under which the meeting was convened, aims to galvanize collective advocacy and policy reform.

“This convening has been intentionally designed as a process of co-creation. The presence of young people from across the region is not symbolic. It is foundational. Your lived experiences are our most powerful evidence, and your voices must shape the strategies and policies we develop,” he stated.

Mr Mabenge urged governments to demonstrate leadership by ensuring that the meeting’s outcomes translate into tangible policy changes, while encouraging civil society and youth networks to sustain advocacy efforts. He also commended partners such as Sida and the Ford Foundation for their continued support.

“We must move beyond fragmented national responses and build a coordinated regional front,” he emphasised.

He added, “The journey toward equitable access begins with the commitments we make in this room. Let us make them bold. Let us make them count.”

He said that sustainable progress will only be achieved through genuine collaboration.

“Let us listen deeply, engage meaningfully, and build consensus. Together, we can ensure that every adolescent and young person in East and Southern Africa can access the SRHR services they need freely, safely, and without discrimination.”

The meeting ended on 15 October, 2025.

-Moses Magadza, PhD, is the Media and Communications Manager at the SADC Parliamentary Forum.

Last Posts

President Nicholas Maduro

End the Siege on Venezuela: Let the Venezuelan People Rebuild in Peace

hardship, political pressure and now natural disaster. They deserve respect, not punishment. They deserve solidarity, not coercion. They deserve reconstruction, not occupation. Those who truly care about human rights should demand policies that reduce suffering…

16 October 2025

President of Cuba, Miguel Díaz-Canel

Cuba Must Not Be Punished for Choosing Its Own Path

By Mafa Kwanisai Mafa History has a remarkable way of exposing the contradictions of great powers. Those who speak most loudly about democracy, human rights and the rules-based international order are often the very ones…

16 October 2025

Botswana Vice President and Minister of Finance Hon Ndaba Nkosinathi Gaolathe

Botswana Parliament charts course for stronger law-making through landmark capacity-building seminar

From Moses Magadza in Gaborone, Botswana The Parliament of Botswana has embarked on a drive to strengthen legislative excellence, democratic accountability and evidence-based lawmaking, with parliamentary leaders and regional partners declaring that continuous learning has…

16 October 2025

Foreign Minister Bruno Rodríguez

Cuba: UN to debate blockade on July 7 despite US pressure

Havana (Prensa LatinaNews Agency), Foreign Minister Bruno Rodríguez announced today that Cuba has requested a UN session for July 7 to address the US blockade and denounced Washington’s pressure to prevent the debate. In a…

16 October 2025

Vice Chancellor Prof. David Norris insisted when he joined UB in 2018 that the institution must be subjected to peer review by reputable ranking institutions

University of Botswana Climbs Times Higher Education Impact Rankings on SDG Gains

Gaborone — The University of Botswana (UB) has improved its standing in the Times Higher Education (THE) Impact Rankings 2026, reflecting measurable progress across several Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and underscoring the institution’s expanding role…

16 October 2025

Bruno Rodríguez Parrilla, Cuba’s Minister of Foreign Affairs, highlighted the WFP’s support for Cuba. @BrunoBrunoP

World Food Programme Approves Cooperation with Cuba Despite U.S. Pressure

The Executive Board of the United Nations World Food Programme (WFP) approved the Country Programme for Cuba for the period 2026-2030 with 29 votes in favor and only 2 against. The decision was made at…

16 October 2025

Related Stories