GENDER-BASED VIOLENCE

Agnes Tirop Conference: Uhuru reiterates his commitment to end gender violence

CS Amina said the government will continue collaborating with stakeholders.

In Summary

• Uhuru said the government has put in place progressive policies to promote gender equity as well as empower women and girls.

• Sports CS Amina Mohamed said the government will continue collaborating with stakeholders in the sector to find a lasting solution to the challenge.

President Uhuru Kenyatta.
President Uhuru Kenyatta.
Image: PSCU

President Uhuru Kenyatta has reiterated that his administration is determined to end Gender-Based Violence (GBV) and urged Kenyans to support efforts by the various state agencies.

On Monday, the president who delivered his address in a pre-recorded video during the opening session of the Agnes Tirop Gender Conference in Kwale Hotel said his administration had allocated adequate resources for GBV response initiatives.

“The government has committed financial and human resources towards GBV research and innovation, to facilitate the designing and implementation of GBV response programs,” Uhuru said.

“Resources have been allocated towards providing GBV medico-legal and psychological support services to survivors as well as strengthened existing partnerships with non-state actors on anti-GBV measures.”

He said the government had put in place progressive policies to promote gender equity as well as empower women and girls to fully participate in the socio-economic transformation of the country.

“We have made strategic investments in our education system to keep girls in school as well as robust socio-economic initiatives to increase women's control of their productive and financial assets,” Uhuru said.

The three-day conference, named after the late Kenyan athlete Agnes Tirop has brought together sports stakeholders to deliberate on recommendations made by a 9-member ministerial committee chaired by legendary marathoner Catherine Ndereba on the wellbeing of Kenyan sportswomen.

Delivering her remarks, Sports CS Amina Mohamed said her ministry's decision to form the Catherine Ndereba-led committee was triggered by the growing number of GBV cases involving sportsmen and women.

The CS said that the committee's mandate included the audit of women inclusion in teams and federations management, examination of existing challenges and opportunities for corrective action as well as conducting analysis on discrimination and abuse in the sports ecosystem.

While listing some of the recent GBV cases in the country involving sportsmen and women, she said the government will continue collaborating with stakeholders in the sector to find a lasting solution to the challenge.

“It is our solemn duty as sports stakeholders and leaders in positions of influence to hold hands, put our heads together and figure out how we can end GBV in sports, because ultimately when the dust settles and the chips fall, we shall not be judged by what we wanted to achieve, but what we actually achieved in the quest for gender parity,” CS Mohamed said.

Other speakers on the first day of the conference included Kwale Governor Salim Mvurya, Chief Justice Martha Koome, Sports CAS Zack Kinuthia as well as PS Joe Okudo among others.

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