Supervisor Elham AbolFateh
Editor in Chief Mohamed Wadie

USAID, UNICEF Mark Achievements of "Creating Enabling Environment for Adolescent Girls in Egypt” Program


Egypt Ministry of Youth and Sports, National Council for Childhood and Motherhood, USAID and UNICEF mark 5 years of progress under USAID support to the "Creating an Enabling Environment for Adolescent Girls in Egypt” Program.

Wed 14 Dec 2022 | 12:00 PM
Ahmed Emam

Egypt's Ministry of Youth and Sports, the National Council for Childhood and Motherhood, USAID and UNICEF held a special event to mark the key milestones achieved over the course of the USAID-funded program ‘Creating an Enabling Environment for Adolescent Girls in Egypt’ since its inauguration in December 2017.

The ceremony event featured appearances by Minister of Youth and Sports Ashraf Sobhi, Eng. Nivine Osman, Secretary General of the National Council for Childhood and Motherhood, Ms. Leslie Reed, USAID Mission Director in Egypt, and Mr. Jeremy Hopkins, UNICEF.

The event showcased the joint program’s achievements. It also included a panel discussion by young beneficiaries of ‘Meshwary’, ‘Dawwie’ and FGM programs. During the event, the ‘Youth Challenge’ winning team presented their ‘Soigel’ project.

According to a statement issued by UNICEF, this joint program was designed to address both individual and community factors to reduce gender disparities, enhance girls social and economic standing, and contribute to the national efforts aimed at reducing the rate of Female Genital Mutilation (FGM) in Egypt. It also aimed to equip thousands of adolescent girls and boys with key life skills to bring about positive change. It also opened greater social and economic opportunities for girls.

The statement said that the achievements of USAID’s ‘Creating an Enabling Environment for Adolescent Girls in Egypt’ program show that when young people have access to relevant skills, information, and quality services, and when the community is willing to listen to their opinions and aspirations, the entire family, community, and nation benefit from a more equitable and prosperous society.

Here are some of the best outcomes of that endeavor:

USAID and UNICEF, in partnership with the Ministry of Youth and Sports (MoYS), NGOs, and development partners, supported the implementation of “Meshwary” program for youth’s empowerment. Meshwary skilled more than 570,000 adolescents and young people from 2018 to 2022, it noted.

“Maharty… Lyaqty” (My Skill, my fitness) program that uses sports to promote gender equality engaged a total of more than 15,000 adolescent girls in 9 governorates. 

7,300 adolescents and youth were trained on design thinking and participation in climate change action within the ‘Youth Challenge’ initiative which is a global initiative that supports young people to realize their full potential as they tackle the world’s most pressing issues through a global competition.

In 2022, two Egyptian teams have been promoted to the global competition, where one of them – the Soigel team – was awarded as the first team at the global level.

Moreover, the USAID-supported “Youth for Climate” caravan roved Egypt’s 27 governorates and engaged 150,000 young people and more than 400,000 community members in the climate change discussion and action.

In cooperation with the National Council for Women and the National Council for Childhood and Motherhood, the joint program supported girls to fulfill their full potential. 

In March 2022, the National Girl’s Empowerment Imitative ‘Dawwie’ was placed under the auspices of H.E. Mrs. Entissar El Sisi. Since its launch, Dawwie’s reached nearly half a million people on the ground and over 60 million online.

Thanks to the joint USAID-funded program, more than 2,400 service providers were trained on addressing Female Genital Mutilation (FGM), with a focus on its medical, legal, and social aspects.

In total, more than 270,000 people were engaged in community mobilization and door-to-door campaigns about the harmful impact of FGM. 

Since 2014, FGM is becoming less prevalent at the national level, particularly for younger generation dropping from 61% in 2014 to 36.8% in 2021 according to the latest EFHS data (age group 15-17 years), thus showing that adolescent girls can lead the progress.