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WEEP Program and Kibera, Kenya

Date post: 06-Jul-2015
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© Glen Smith Photography Glen Smith ( M.Photog. AIPP) and Carmel Smith. Studio: 17 Barron Road, Margate, Queensland 4019 Australia. Phone/Fax: 61 7 3883 2096 Email: [email protected] Web Site: http://www.glensmithphotography.com/ Member of Australian Institute of Professional Photography and Master of Photography (AIPP). Accredited Professional Photographer. Member of Queensland Professional Photographers Assoc. and Certified Professional Photographer.
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The Story of the WEEP Project in Kibera, Kenya.
Transcript
Page 1: WEEP Program and Kibera, Kenya

The Story of the WEEP Project in Kibera, Kenya.

Page 2: WEEP Program and Kibera, Kenya

In Kenya the Kibera slum is located 5 kilometres (3.1 miles) from the Nairobi city centre and is reputed to now be the largest slum in Sub Saharan Africa.

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The 2009 Kenya Population and Housing Census reports Kibera's population as 170,070. Other estimates are one to two million people.

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Unemployment in Kenya is estimated to be between 40% and 70%,

Kenya’s population has grown from around 9 million in 1967 to 40 million in 2011

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Conditions in Kibera are extremely poor, and most of its residents lack access to basic services, including electricity and running water.

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Kibera is heavily polluted by human refuse, garbage, dust, and other wastes. The slum is contaminated with human and animal feces.

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Small businesses eke out an existence.

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Housing is very basic using corrugated iron, plastic sheets, sticks and mud.

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Kibera has an estimated population density of 800 residents per acre.

Kenya reports an HIV prevalence rate of eight percent in adult women and four percent in adult men.

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Open drains, sewerage, garbage disposal and plastics are a huge problem.

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Small children play on the “road”.

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Cooking is usually out in the open along the road side.

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Cooking fires are a danger to small children and a fire risk.

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Medical facilities are limited and some that spring up are of dubious quality .

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Under such adverse conditions children are usually clean and well dressed.

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Women face considerably higher risk of HIV infection than men, and also experience a shorter life expectancy due to HIV/AIDS.

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In the depths of Kibera Slum the Weep Centre is helpingthe people of Africa to survive the HIV/AIDS pandemic.

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As an orphan prevention initiative, WEEP enables women with HIV/AIDS. The project saves the lives of mothers suffering from advanced stages of AIDS, therefore, their children are spared

from becoming orphans.

HEART is a registered TRUST in Kenya and has a fully qualified board of Kenyan Directors who work with the American counterpart of HEART a 501 C-3 organization comprised of American health professionals and concerned business leaders.

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Gladys is the WEEP Center Coordinator.

Gladys is the Center Coordinator Gladys is the Center Coordinator Gladys is the Center Coordinator

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The WEEP Center is located in the heart of Kibera where it is more accessible to those HIV women that need it.

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Amenities are basic

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WEEP identifies mothers who have been widowed or abandoned when their husbands learned of their HIV status.

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The WEEP project started in 2005 with five ladies. It now has 5 locations. Others have graduated started their own businesses or found employment outside the center after becoming well, healthy and trained.

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WEEP commits to providing medical care, nutrition, vitamins, rent assistance and access to ARV drugs; it also assures that their children have a school uniform and necessary resources to attend school.

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Once physically stable, the mother is taught a trade and provided a job at a WEEP center.

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Opportunities For You To Help

$900 supports a woman and her children for 18 months while she gets treatment … and gets prepared for starting her own business.

$10 will purchase a malaria prevention net (at the current rate of exchange).

$30 will buy a uniform for an orphaned child – the WEEP ladies make the uniforms and sustain their families by selling the uniforms.

$6,000 will help open a new center.

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For further information visit:http://www.africaheart.com

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