Commitments

Ensuring quality, timely and disaggregated population data, and improving population data systems to achieve sustainable development:
1. By 2024, conduct the General Census (2020 Round) according to the international standards; ensure widest possible access to disaggregated data through web-based platforms & databases;
2. By 2025, introduce and publish population projections to improve planning for human capital development;
3. By 2030, adopt and implement the Strategy for developing Population Registry for providing quality, timely and disaggregated data.
By 2025, the GoG will implement Budgetary, Policy and Programmatic commitments to reverse the HIV epidemic by increasing coverage of HIV preventive services, increasing access to PEP, mental health and other referral services and for violence, adding SRH services to existing HIV service package, introducing PrEP at community level; achieve elimination of Mother to Child Transmission of HIV and Syphilis and introducing Behavior Change communication campaigns for the HIV prevention.
The government will implement Legislative, Policy and Programmatic commitments, as described above, including: by 2025, fully integrate & implement education on gender equality & reproductive health in the formal education system; implement Communication for Behavior Impact Strategy to trigger social norm change related to child/forced marriage and son preference, ensure access of women and youth with disabilities to DV/VAW services.
For with rights and choices come opportunities to lead a self-determined life. This is why we stand ready to support:
A world where every young person can seize the opportunity to make the most of their potential.
A world where everyone’s sexual and reproductive rights and choices are respected and realised.
So that every woman and girl may live without fear of violence, coercion or discrimination on any grounds. In a setting where she is empowered and has equal choices to lead the life she desires.
So that every person may have access to sexual and reproductive health services – including for family planning and for information – that safeguard users’ dignity and freedom of choice and that are of adequate quality.
To these ends, Germany will work together with its partners at home and abroad. Our goal is for every pregnancy to be wanted and every birth to be safe.
Increased core funding to UNFPA for 2020 from 33 - 40 Million Euros.
Achieve by 2030:
1. 6% unmet need for FP and 50% CPR,
2. Maternal Mortality Rate of 70/100,000 live births,
3. Improve adolescents and youth access to culturally-sensitive and age-appropriate information, education and friendly, quality and responsive RHS,
4. Reduce U5M rate to below 25 deaths /1000 live births, IMR to 18 /1000 LB and NMR to below 12 /1000 LB,
5. Equitable distribution of health facilities and resources
6. Achieve 100% National Health Insurance coverage
7. Include RH/FP in NHIS
8. Reduce new HIV, AIDS/STIs
9. Eliminate harmful socio-cultural norms and practices
10. Reduce: DV to ≤1000 cases; CM 18yrs by 90%; FGM 15-19yrs to 0%
11. Protect the girl child from emerging criminal activities
12. Strengthen capacity of SGBV management institutions
13. Sustain gender parity for all levels of education
14. Formulate sexual harassment policy
15. Strengthen RH/FP commodities security
16. Increase domestic financing and ODA for RH/FP programmes
17. Expand investments for youth
18. Build peaceful, just and inclusive societies
19. Promote youth participation in decision-making
20. Improve inclusion of OVCs in all spheres of child development (education, justice for children, etc.)
21. RH/FP access for vulnerable groups including PWDs.
1. Promote safe, orderly and regular migration
2. Prevent, combat and eradicate trafficking in persons
3. Scale up interventions to minimize rural-urban migration
4. Institute early warning mechanisms for internal displacement
5. Promote equitable human settlement planning
6. Facilitate access to basic social services in slums
-7. Increase percentage of Districts with disaster risk reduction plans
8. Establish a Cross-sectoral planning group on population
9. Incorporate AADPD/ICPD-PoA into national plans
10. Reposition population management
11. Strengthen oversight role of parliament
12. Ensure quality, timely and disaggregated population data
13. Improve CRVS systems
14. Strengthen multi-stakeholder partnerships
15. Reorient development partners to prioritise P&D
16. Strengthen regional and South-South.
Grenada will implement coordinated interventions to address gaps in the provision of multi-sectoral short-term and long-term responses to victims of sexual and intimate partner violence. By 2030, the prevention and response services provided in the psychosocial, health, justice and law enforcement sectors will be improved and systematized by the institutions, coordinated by the National Gender Machinery, and sustained to protect and fulfill the rights of all victims of sexual and intimate partner violence, including children, the elderly, persons with physical and mental disabilities and persons in other vulnerable groups.
Réduire le déficit de développement généré par les inégalités dans tous les secteurs de la vie, notamment les inégalités de genre, les inégalités spatiales, les inégalités en lien avec le niveau d’instruction, la santé, l’éducation : Il s’agira d’accroitre le financement de l’Etat de Guinée en vue d’atteindre les normes internationales requises pour les secteurs prioritaires, notamment la Santé (faire passer de 7% en 2018 à 15% en 2030) et veiller à la décentralisation des fonds jusqu’au bénéficiaire.
Réduire de 2/3 les décès maternels, néonatals, et infantiles évitables (Faire baisser le taux de mortalité maternelle à 183 pour 100 000 naissances vivantes ; Faire baisser le taux de mortalité néonatale à 10 décès néonatales pour 1000 naissances et Faire baisser la mortalité infantile à 22 pour 1000 naissances vivantes.
Promouvoir la création de travail décent et une formation adéquate aux jeunes grâce à des politiques et programmes efficaces créant des emplois durables, conformément aux conventions internationales et aux déclarations régionales, le but étant d’assurer une augmentation des avantages en matière de développement social, économique et humain résultant du dividende démographique ;
Elaborer, adopter et mettre en œuvre des politiques de migration fondées sur des données fiables, en particulier celles ciblant les femmes et les jeunes, optimiser les avantages et réduire au minimum les coûts et répercussions des migrations internationales, et protéger les droits des migrants et des citoyens ;
Renforcement des droits sexuels et reproductifs des adolescents et des jeunes, particulièrement des jeunes filles par la réduction de 40% du taux de grossesse précoce en milieu scolaire et extra-scolaire: en 2018, la plupart des filles de 15 à 19 ans avaient déjà commencé leur vie procréative (mère ou enceinte d’un enfant). Il est urgent, voire impératif de mettre fin au mariage et aux grossesses précoces en Guinée.
Réduire le taux de prévalence de l’excision de 39% en 2018 à 24% chez les jeunes filles de 0 à 14 ans: Des progrès ont été observés chez les moins de 15 ans ou la prévalence des MGF/E est passée de 54,4% en 1992 à 39% en 2018. Il est important de poursuivre et d’intensifier les initiatives d’abandon total des MGF dans le pays surtout en ce qui concerne la démédicalisation de la pratique qui s’accentue de plus en plus.
Réduire d’au moins 50%, la prévalence des violences sexuelles et les mariages précoces : Au total, 29,3% de filles et de femmes de 15 à 64 ans ont subi une violence sexuelle au moins depuis l’âge de 15 ans dont 36% pour celles de 15 à 24 ans. Encore aujourd’hui, plus de la moitié des femmes et filles (54,6% en 2016) de la Guinée se marient avant 18 ans et 21% avant 15 ans. Il est urgent de mettre en place des services multisectorielles de prise en charge et d’accentuer la prévention a tous les niveaux.
Strengthen national capacity to deliver high quality and appropriate prevention, multi-sectorial (health, psychological, socio economic and legal) responses for at least 5000 survivors of GBV and harmful practices (FGM, child marriage etc.), through men’s clubs, civil society, and various networks (former female genital mutilation practitioners, former women parliamentarian, youth, journalists, religious and traditional leaders), by 2030.