Abbreviation | A.M.A.D.E. |
---|---|
Formation | 1963 |
Founder | Grace, Princess of Monaco |
Type | Charitable organization |
Legal status | NGO |
Headquarters | Monte Carlo, Monaco |
Region served | Europe, Asia, Africa, and South America |
Membership | Alliance of 12 countries |
Honorary Chairman | Albert II, Prince of Monaco |
Chairman | Caroline, Princess of Hanover |
Secretary General | Jérôme Froissart |
Website | http://www.amade-mondiale.org/en |
The World Association of Children's Friends (AMADE) is a charity organization founded by Grace, Princess of Monaco, to support the development, education, and health of children worldwide. AMADE operates through a network of 12 local organisations in Europe, Asia, South-America and Africa. The Association has consultative status with UNICEF, UNESCO and the United Nations Economic and Social Council, as well as participative status with the Council of Europe.
After witnessing the plight of Vietnamese children in 1963, Princess Grace founded the Association to support the fundamental rights of children across the globe. [1] AMADE's code of conduct was later influenced by the Convention on the Rights of the Child, adopted by the United Nations in 1989, as well as the Millennium Declaration adopted in 2000 to fight against poverty. [2] [3]
AMADE's mission statements are: [4]
The Association lists itself as a development charity that offers perennial responses to struggling communities, focusing on strengthening of capacities and the self-sufficiency of beneficiaries. AMADE also contributes to fighting against gender inequalities and highlighting the importance of equal opportunities in struggling regions. [5]
AMADE reportedly has helped 40,000 children each year through its relief efforts. [6] The Association runs ongoing projects under the umbrella of three programs: Dignity for Women, the Energy of Hope, Capoeira for Peace, and Unaccompanied Migrant Children. [7]
In 2013, AMADE assisted in the renovation and development of the VTA Centre, a support center for young girls living in the streets of Kinshasa, Congo, accused of witchcraft. In 2014, the Association worked for the professional inclusion of young street people in Kinshasa, and founded 6 professional training centers. [8] In 2015, AMADE assisted Terre des Hommes, Italia to allocate transit centers in Sicily as part of a psychological and legal support programme for unaccompanied migrant children. [9] In 2016, the Association mobilized alongside other NGO's to persuade the Cambodian government to lower the age of children allowed to stay in prison with their mothers from 6 to 3 years old, in accordance with the Cambodian League for the Promotion and Defense of Human Rights. [10]
AMADE currently works with the Government of the Philippines' Department of Social Affairs to establish a school for young female victims of abuse, exploitation, and violence. [11] The Association assists Marseille City Hall in the coordination of the Second Chance program, designed to educate incarcerated minors in detention. [12] AMADE currently works with Panzi Hospital, founded by Dr. Denis Mukwege, designed to support children and young girl victims of sexual violence in Bukavu. [13]
In 2012, AMADE worked with the Monegasque Government to build a middle school and a high school in the municipality of Matana, Burundi, to advocate for exemplary education standards in the area. [14] In 2016, the Association assisted in the enrollment of OVC (Orphans and Vulnerable Children) into the school's population. [15] In 2017, AMADE worked with Lagazel to donate solar lamps to young students to support access to education in Nouakchott, Mauritania, as well as open production workshops in rural areas to promote employment. [16]
In 2013, the Association worked with the Chiliean Ministry of Health to assist children in Santiago, Chile, with metabolic diseases in low-income communities through awareness and medical treatment. [17] In 2013, AMADE helped finance research and design programs to raise awareness for pediatric cancer in Monaco. [18] In 2015, the Association funded equipment for the emergency, operating, sterilization, and radiology rooms of the Abbis Ababa Mother and Child Centre in Addis Abeba, Ethiopia. [19] In 2016, AMADE assisted in designing pediatric health education protocols, teaching aids, and training systems for health workers in Bamako, Mali aiming to reduce rates of child morality. [20] Later that year, the Association worked with microfinance firms to support access to patients with sickle cell disease at the Tahouha Hospital in Niger. [21]
In 2017, the Association worked to disseminate anti-scam information for health insurance schemes for families in Bamako, Mali. [22] In 2018, AMADE worked with the Princess Grace Foundation (La Foundation Princesse Grace, Monaco), to establish medical resources, tools, and tests for doctors treating Friedreich's ataxia in children and young adults. [23] In 2019, AMADE worked with HEAL Africa to assist in Swahili translations for the Zero Mother's Die App in Bukavu, Congo. [24] Later that year, the Association began construction on a mother-child community health centre in Goma, Congo, providing prenatal consultation, family planning, nutrition, AIDS clinics, and vaccination. [25] AMADE also announced a training program for a catheterization service inside the Mother-Child Hospital le Luxembourg in Bamako, Mali. [26] In 2020, the Association began an extensive 100-day research project for the reduction of child morality in Niger, in partnership with Yale University. [27] AMADE also created a social fund to support healthcare access to children admitted to the Rafic Hariri Hospital in Beyrouth, Lebanon. [28] During the COVID-19 pandemic, AMADE assisted in supporting health services in West Africa to provide medical equipment, research, and remote education. [29]
In 2013, AMADE worked with the Monaco Red Cross to finance the restoration of primary classrooms in Negros Island, Philippines after Typhoon Haiyan. [30] In 2016, the Association renovated and built new classrooms in Canton de Region, Nepal, after the April 2015 Nepal earthquake. [31] In 2020, AMADE began assisting in building repairs and school tuition for the Saint Joseph Brothers School in Beyrouth, Lebanon, after the 2020 Beirut explosion. [32]
In 2015, AMADE worked with the Monaco Department of Education to create digital teaching kits for students to raise awareness about water concerns in the developing world. [33] The also Association assisted with the UNICEF campaign to raise local awareness for the International Convention on the Rights of the Child on its 25th anniversary. [34] In 2017, AMADE assisted in the translations and free distribution of small trade and community service resources in Kinshasa, Congo. [35] Later that year, the Association raised public awareness of the persecution of "witch" girls living on the streets, as well as the recruitment of child soldiers, in Bukavu, Congo. [36]
Bukavu is a city in eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), lying at the extreme south-western edge of Lake Kivu, west of Cyangugu in Rwanda, and separated from it by the outlet of the Ruzizi River. It is the capital of the South Kivu Province and as of 2012 it had an estimated population of 806,940.
Andrea Albert Pierre Casiraghi is the elder son of Caroline, Princess of Hanover, and her second husband Stefano Casiraghi. He is the eldest grandchild of Rainier III, Prince of Monaco, and American actress Grace Kelly. Casiraghi is currently fourth in the line of succession to the Monegasque throne, following his twin cousins and his mother.
Panzi Hospital and Foundation is a hospital in Bukavu, the capital of the Sud-Kivu province in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. It specializes in treating survivors of sexual violence, particularly conflict-related sexual violence.
An unaccompanied minor is a child without the presence of a legal guardian.
Women in the Democratic Republic of the Congo have not attained a position of full equality with men, with their struggle continuing to this day. Although the Mobutu regime paid lip service to the important role of women in society, and although women enjoy some legal rights, custom and legal constraints still limit their opportunities.
Mali, one of the world's poorest nations, is greatly affected by poverty, malnutrition, epidemics, and inadequate hygiene and sanitation. Mali's health and development indicators rank among the worst in the world, with little improvement over the last 20 years. Progress is impeded by Mali's poverty and by a lack of physicians. The 2012 conflict in northern Mali exacerbated difficulties in delivering health services to refugees living in the north. With a landlocked, agricultural-based economy, Mali is highly vulnerable to climate change. A catastrophic harvest in 2023 together with escalations in armed conflict have exacerbated food insecurity in Northern and Central Mali.
In areas of the Democratic Republic of the Congo, the human rights record has remained considerably poor, and serious abuses have been committed. Unlawful killings, disappearances, torture, rape, and arbitrary arrest and detention by security forces increased during the year, and the transitional government took few actions to punish harsh people. Harsh and life-threatening conditions in prison and detention facilities; prolonged pretrial detention; lack of an independent and effective judiciary; and arbitrary interference with privacy, family, and home also remained serious problems. Security forces continued to recruit and retain child soldiers and to compel forced labour by adults and children.
The status and social roles of women in Mali have been formed by the complex interplay of a variety of traditions in ethnic communities, the rise and fall of the great Sahelien states, French colonial rule, independence, urbanisation, and postcolonial conflict and progress. Forming just less than half Mali's population, Malian women have sometimes been the center of matrilineal societies, but have always been crucial to the economic and social structure of this largely rural, agricultural society.
Denis Mukwege is a Congolese gynecologist and Pentecostal pastor. He founded and works in Panzi Hospital in Bukavu, where he specializes in the treatment of women who have been raped by armed rebels. In 2018, Mukwege and Iraqi Yazidi human rights activist Nadia Murad were jointly awarded the Nobel Peace Prize for "their efforts to end the use of sexual violence as a weapon of war and armed conflict".
A landlocked sub-Saharan country, Burkina Faso is among the poorest countries in the world—44 percent of its population lives below the international poverty line of US$1.90 per day —and it ranks 185th out of 188 countries on UNDP's 2016 Human Development Index. Rapid population growth, gender inequality, and low levels of educational attainment contribute to food insecurity and poverty in Burkina Faso. The total population is just over 20 million with the estimated population growth rate is 3.1 percent per year and seven out of 10 Burkinabe are younger than 30. Total health care expenditures were an estimated 5% of GDP. Total expenditure on health per capita is 82 in 2014.
Just Like My Child Foundation (JLMC) is a San Diego–based 501(c)(3) organization that works with women and children in rural Uganda and Senegal. Its goal is to create healthy and self-sustaining families who prosper without further aid. Its holistic system encompasses health care, education, women's rights and economic development. The foundation subscribes to a philosophy called deep development focusing on one local area or cluster of villages while addressing critical issues simultaneously.
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Aïcha Chenna was a Moroccan social worker, women's rights advocate and activist. A registered nurse, she began working with disadvantaged women as an employee of the country's Ministry of Health. In 1985, she founded the Association Solidarité Féminine (ASF), a Casablanca-based charity that assists single mothers and victims of abuse. Chenna received various humanitarian awards for her work, including the 2009 Opus Prize.
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