Pilda Modjadji is a founding member of the Pankop Women Farmers Forum in Mpumalanga, South Africa.
The Pankop group, which now has 300 members, started with the humble goal of growing fruit collectively and using the proceeds to supplement family diets, raise incomes and pay school tuition fees. But the women quickly realized that the village offered few job prospects for graduates — their children were going off to the cities. Determined to create an alternative source of employment in the village, the women, with the agreement and support of traditional chiefs and municipal authorities, set up a fruit and vegetable dehydration plant.
The women’s plans were ambitious, and they felt that old-style microcredit loans — which usually range between $20 and $300 — were not enough. The Pankop group needed the equivalent of $100,000. They got the funds from local commercial banks because Thembani International Guarantee Fund, a South African organization created in 1996 by the US non-profit Shared Interest and the Swiss-based Recherches et Applications de Financements Alternatifs au Développement (RAFAD), put up $70,000 in loan guarantees. Such guarantees provide banks with an assurance that the guarantor will assume part of the losses if a default occurs.
With that first loan, the women in Mpumalanga converted an old school dormitory into a functioning plant. The project initially hired 65 young people. Then, with a second loan of $120,000, also guaranteed by Thembani, they increased the number of employees to 200, working in shifts. Their latest loan is worth about $1 mn, with $800,000 of it guaranteed by Thembani. With those funds, the women plan to meet European Union health and safety standards and start exporting their produce.
Showing posts with label africa people. Show all posts
Showing posts with label africa people. Show all posts
Sunday, January 18, 2009
Wednesday, January 14, 2009
Poverty Campaign in Africa in Mpumalanga,South Africa
Deputy President Baleka Mbete will attend the launch of the War on Poverty Campaign in Mpumalanga (known as Eastern Transvaal under apartheid South Africa) this month.
This War on Poverty Campaign is a national initiative that was launched by the department of social services in October last year.
Spokesperson for the provincial department of social development, Abie Ndlela, said the campaign will focus on the most poverty stricken and deprived communities in the province.
The most deprived households will be visited periodically during the campaign by a team of youths called Masupatsela (which means “give direction”) and community development workers who will identify their specific needs, help them access government services and provide mosquito nets to protect them from malaria.
Ms Mbete will attend the provincial campaign launch in Skhwahlane village near Malalane on 30 January.
The national "War Room on Poverty" in the deputy president's office will lead the campaign.
Mr Ndlela said the War Room on Poverty aimed to bring together government departments to identify and help impoverished households that are in urgent need of assistance, without duplicating any programs.
One intervention seeks to assist children aged 14 to 18 by providing child support grants for them, ensuring they are being educated, have access to health care and that schools are able to properly implement the school nutrition program.
He said younger children, regardless of where they live, must also attend creche to prepare them for school.
The above are baby steps but nevertheless steps towards eradicating poverty in the world starting in Africa.
This War on Poverty Campaign is a national initiative that was launched by the department of social services in October last year.
Spokesperson for the provincial department of social development, Abie Ndlela, said the campaign will focus on the most poverty stricken and deprived communities in the province.
The most deprived households will be visited periodically during the campaign by a team of youths called Masupatsela (which means “give direction”) and community development workers who will identify their specific needs, help them access government services and provide mosquito nets to protect them from malaria.
Ms Mbete will attend the provincial campaign launch in Skhwahlane village near Malalane on 30 January.
The national "War Room on Poverty" in the deputy president's office will lead the campaign.
Mr Ndlela said the War Room on Poverty aimed to bring together government departments to identify and help impoverished households that are in urgent need of assistance, without duplicating any programs.
One intervention seeks to assist children aged 14 to 18 by providing child support grants for them, ensuring they are being educated, have access to health care and that schools are able to properly implement the school nutrition program.
He said younger children, regardless of where they live, must also attend creche to prepare them for school.
The above are baby steps but nevertheless steps towards eradicating poverty in the world starting in Africa.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)