
First Lady Thandiwe Banda has urged fellow First Ladies in the Sub Sahara region to double their efforts in working towards bettering the lives of women and girls in the region.
Mrs. Banda noted that if First Ladies could harness the support of governments, individuals and many other stakeholders, the campaign for the improvement of women’s welfare would be unstoppable.[quote]
She was speaking during the 10th anniversary of the White Ribbon Alliance Annual General Meeting (AGM) in Dar-Es-Salaam, Tanzania, today.
Mrs. Banda said there was need for the institutionalisaton of training of midwives in order for them to provide the necessary services for women.
She said First Ladies need to advocate for the development of low cost community interventions such as the development of Mama-Kits for mothers to use in home deliveries and infection prevention.
She said there was also need for developing innovative transportation schemes such as bicycle ambulances to help women reach health facilities from distant places.
Mrs. Banda said if First Ladies succeed in combining efforts, the results are potentially phenomenal, adding that building for women will mean building a lasting future for the world.
She further said there was need to ensure that safe motherhood was a right for women in the region and appealed for unity in the quest to save the lives of mothers and their children.
The First Lady said supervised deliveries is one of the interventions Zambia and other developing countries in the Sub Sahara region have instituted to stem the maternal mortality rate.
Mrs. Banda said the maternal mortality ratio in Zambia and in other sub Sahara Africa stands at 591 per 100, 000 live births.
She however observed that the distance to health facilities, the human resources crisis that the region faces and the limited number of midwives negate the gains that may have been achieved in the recent past.
“I’m speaking on behalf of the half a million mothers who die every year from just about the most avoidable and most preventable deaths of all. And for every death, 30 more suffer debilitating and painful injury from pregnancy and childbirth. This is unacceptable”, she said.
The First Lady said it was the duty of every government in the region to move the world to action against such avoidable tragedies.
Mrs. Banda said a mother’s survival is vital in ensuring the wellbeing of families and the community at large.
“So saving the life of the mothers and reducing maternal mortality is the most central of our gathering today. It is not peripheral, not an afterthought, and not the margins”, she said.
ZANIS