I would also suggest taking on this goal of buying a wristband in support.
People doing this as a team:
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Oakland
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Galway
People doing this are also doing these things:
Entries from people on this team:
Celebrities back tampon rebels of Zimbabwe
She has been arrested 22 times, tortured so badly that her front teeth were knocked into her nose and had an AK-47 thrust up her vagina until she bled. Thabitha Khumalo’s crime: to campaign against a critical shortage of tampons and sanitary towels in Zimbabwe, one of the least talked about and most severe side-effects for women of the country’s economic crisis.
Now her cause has been taken up in Britain by celebrities including the actors Anna Chancellor, Gillian Anderson, Prunella Scales and Jeremy Irons.
Later this month they will launch “Dignity. Period!”, a fundraising campaign to buy sanitary products for Zimbabwe’s women. It will start with a night of entertainment at the 20th Century theatre in Notting Hill, west London, hosted by Stephen Fry.
So desperate is the situation that women are being forced to use rolled-up pieces of newspaper. Zimbabwe already has the world’s lowest life expectancy for women – 34 – and Khumalo believes these unhygienic practices could make it drop to as low as 20 because infections will make them more vulnerable to HIV. “It’s a time bomb,” she said. The shortage is forcing schoolgirls to stay at home when they start menstruating.
The crisis began in 1999 when Johnson & Johnson, the healthcare manufacturer, pulled out of the country because of the worsening economic situation. Zimbabwe then had to import products from neighbouring South Africa. But the collapse of the currency and the world’s highest inflation, now more than 1,000%, have made the products unaffordable to all but the elite.
In a country where the minimum wage is Z$6m (£17.14) a month, the cost of a box of 20 tampons is Z$3m. “Who in their right mind is going to spend half their earnings on tampons?” asked Khumalo. “As it is most people can only afford to eat once a day. Women are being forced to choose between their own health and the survival of their family.”
Khumalo, 45, general secretary of the Women’s Advisory Council of the Zimbabwe Congress of Trade Unions, and a mother of two, started her campaign after she saw a woman walking awkwardly on the street: “She told me she was going home from work because she had her period and could no longer afford sanitary protection or cotton wool.”
When an MP raised the issue in parliament, government ministers fell about laughing and dismissed the matter. Khumalo has tried to highlight it through public meetings and distributing scarves printed with demands for affordable sanitary wear. As a result she has been repeatedly arrested and beaten, but refuses to be deterred.
ACTSA have been pushing further with the Dignity! Period. Campaign and have secured the support of Bodyform, manufacturers of sanitary protection in the UK. Bodyform are committed to supporting the work of ACTSA’s Dignity! Period. campaign and will donate funds to produce ¼ million packs of sanitary towels for Zimbabwean women, as well as continuing to raise awareness of the campaign. Please visit the Bodyform website and use the ‘Tell a Friend’ feature to spread word of the campaign.
For a mere £2.50 you can buy yourselves a Dignity! Period. wristband. What’s truly amazing about this is that your money will provide one woman with essential sanitary protection for three months.
The following is a list of information and suggestions on how people around the world can help. If you have more ideas for what people can do to help the campaign then please send us your ideas and we’ll add them to the list:
- Information on the campaign on the ACTSA website
- Make a secure online donation to the campaign here.
- Or you can also send cheques payable to ACTSA (with sanitary appeal written on the back). Details on the website.
- Make a donation to ACTSA via the JustGiving website in the UK here
- People in the UK can ask their MP to sign the parliamentary Early Day Motion (EDM) supporting the campaign.
- Everyone else, please contact your local MP and encourage them to actively support the campaign.
- Download and distribute the ACTSA Dignity. Period! leaflet. Print out multiple copies and leave them in places where people can pick them up – in the cubicles of women’s public toilets are one suggestion.
- If you are a blogger or have a website, please feel free to use the button Sokwanele has created on your website or blog as well. Using our code will add an image like the one we have in our sidebar, and a link back to this post where we hope to build on the list of ideas here. Details on how to do so below.
- Think about how people around the world can help and send us your ideas. We’ll continue to build this list of suggestions.
Help spread the word and thank you all for your support!
Links to recommended reading and updates on the campaign
- Bodyform and the Dignity! Period. campaign
- Join the ‘Rally for Dignity in London’ (10 March 2007) – details here
- Comments left by ACTSA (see comments below) or link directly here and here
- Zimbabwe state security agents seize sanitary pads
- How We Met: Anna Chancellor & Thabitha Khumalo (Dignity. Period! Campaign)
- Answers to frequently asked questions about the campaign (including many asked in our comments) available at this ACTSA link
Click here for a video of a Zimbabwean woman talking frankly about the problem.
