Empower Survivors through Microentrepreneurship

by Global Welfare Association (GLOWA)
Empower Survivors through Microentrepreneurship
Empower Survivors through Microentrepreneurship
Empower Survivors through Microentrepreneurship
Empower Survivors through Microentrepreneurship
Empower Survivors through Microentrepreneurship
Empower Survivors through Microentrepreneurship
Empower Survivors through Microentrepreneurship
Empower Survivors through Microentrepreneurship
Empower Survivors through Microentrepreneurship
Empower Survivors through Microentrepreneurship
Empower Survivors through Microentrepreneurship
Empower Survivors through Microentrepreneurship

During the period under review, GLOWA continued to monitors the five beneficiaries of the project to make sure their activities are developing as previewed. Our street side restaurant owner continued with the repay of her interest free loan while the trainees are progressing. A major part of this quarter was concentrated on evaluation both for the complete program and the beneficiaries

Efforts were made to recruit fundraiser for the project with a few editing carried out on the project presentation.

A major achievement of the project this quarter was the admission of one more beneficiary into the project. Uncle Mike (his pseudo name) is starting a roadside grill commonly called soya in Cameroon. The business shall sell roasted meat. The project is helping him in developing a sustainable plan for the business. When this is done, he will receive support with interest-free loan to start the activity.

We also carried out a visit to the road side restaurant and got some video of our project participant and a picture of her at the market place. Monitoring and evaluation has been an ongoing part of our initiative.

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The challenges imposed by COVID-19 brought many financial constraints to bear on our project. Nevertheless, GLOWA has continued to support our five survivors who had been enrolled in the project to acquire vocational training, maintain backyard poultry farming, and to operate a road side restaurant.

The greatest challenge that our project has been the absence of additional income through donations which made the acceptance of new deserving participants (beneficiaries) very difficult. In respond, GLOWA maintained the five participants of the project. We have continued to have one-on-one interactive sessions with the five participants of the project.

The most promising of the participants runs a roadside restaurant. She has expanded the restaurant to include soft drinks and recently initiated a repayment of her interest free revolving loan one year after she collected the money. She has persistently maintained the benchmark of the business development plan

With the repayment of the loan already kick-started, we see a great need to expand funding for the project. In this regard, GLOWA is proposing to edit the project on GlobalGiving to include the vocational training component for rescued victims

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Quarterly Progress Report for the Survivors Microentrepreneurship Project

 

February 2021.

The goal of the project is to facilitate the economic integration of survivors of child trafficking through a microenterprise development scheme. The implementation of the scheme should eventually create opportunities for development of other life skills for survivors. During the period under review we worked with the following program participants to identify their domains of interest. While we are still working on the business plans of others, partial investment capital loan were granted to three of the five participants:-

 

1)     Ama

Ama (name changed) is a 24 years old survivor of sex trafficking who became infected with HIV in a brothel. Beside sexual exploitation, she also pick-pocketed for her slaver. She was a wedlock child who was never adopted by her mother’s husband and never had any formal primary education. She was never recognized by her father. The only close family she has is her maternal grandmother.

Ama desperately needs a source of income to ensure she continues to take her HIV treatment and treat other opportunistic infections. She has identified petty trading to sell vegetable and related items.

 

2)     Ivo

Eve (name chaned) is a survivor of child forced marriage and mother of four children and is separated with her “husband”. She is determined to educate her children beyond the primary education which she had. She believes in the power of girl’s education as the only tool that can stop children from being married off to older men.

During the years she spent with the father of her children, she leant to prepare most of the traditional dishes of the North West Region of Cameroon because he loved good food. Today Ivolyn is an excellent cook and specialist in some of the typical traditional dishes of the region. Our program is supporting her to operate a roadside mobile restaurant. She is the first beneficiary of the Interest Free Loan scheme of the project and hopes to own a modern restaurant one day and employing qualified modern chef to manage it and also learn how to prepare modern dishes from her employees.

 

3)     Wily

Wily (name changed) is a 17 years old primary school dropout. She is an unaccompanied internally displaced child of the Anglophone crisis in Cameroon. As a child IDP without a primary school leaving certificate, she has opted to be trained to sewing.

Because the conditions that caused her displacement still prevails, she prefers vocational training but still hopes to go back to school after the conflict. There is the option of adult education or self-sponsored formal education available for her

In respond to this desire, GLOWA is supporting her to acquire marketable skills in sewing. She is also benefiting from a pilot community shelter program presently being developed by GLOWA

 

4)     Nah

Nah (name changed) is a 19 years old survivor of domestic servitude who was many times abused by a relative of her employer. She is married to a commercial motor bike rider and mother of two beautiful girls.

She is a trained seamstress. Our FollowCare Program is supporting her to set-up a sewing business. Like other participants, she is also undergoing psychosocial therapy to help her heal the scars of childhood abuse.

While benefiting from a business mentorship in sewing, Nah wants to give back to her community by training rescued victims in sewing.

 

5)     Chan (name changed)

This 23-year-old self-sponsoring college graduate is undoubtedly one of the most educated survivor of childhood abuses that is a participant of a GLOWA program. Unfortunately, the high youth unemployment rate and corruption makes it difficult for young women like Chan who do not know influential people in high offices to find a job. Like most survivors, she still lacks self-confidence despite her educational level. She is a mother of a very handsome two years old boy

GLOWA is supporting her to develop a backyard poultry farm. She aspires in the long term to develop it into a commercial poultry farm, while her short-term objective is to build a financial based that can qualify her for an investment loan from a bank.

With increased funds, our program intends to fully support the identified income generating activities while identifying other participants of the project.

With four business plans and one identified vocational training options in place, GLOWA has started with granting two partial interest free loans for the implementation of the project ideas to Eve for roadside restaurant and for Wily for Sewing.

During the period, we identified an established poultry farmer and placed our beneficiary with him for skills transfer. The process which is programed to last eight weeks is in the sixth week now. We hope to begin supporting this back-yard poultry farm with available means soon.

Of the five envisaged interest free micro loans for this quarter, three partial loans have been granted as follows.

  • Eve for street restaurant
  • Wily for sewing apprenticeship
  • Chan for hands-on-training on backyards poultry from an established poultry farmer.
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The Trafficking Survivors Empowerment project of GLOWA seeks to considerably reduce the number of survivors who fall for secondary trafficking and engage survival sex work for livelihood. The project shall systematically transform survivors into entrepreneurs and counter trafficking activist. The execution strategy is in the following stages

  • Identification of participants and business planning
  • Incubation
  • Start-up grants
  • Mentorship and business training

The project reporting period runs from July to September 2020. During this period GLOWA received USD 1,500 from GlobalGiving as our first instalment of funds raised. During the period under review, GLOWA identified five (5) participants of the project. Because the relatively very small amount of money raised, the project teams decided to kickstart the project with only five direct beneficiaries. In this regard the following activities have been carried out during this period

(1)             Identify 5 survivors as participants of the Microentrepreneurship scheme

(2)            Identified two (2) volunteer business mentors to work with the participatory.

(3)            Development of five individual business plans of the five initial beneficiaries through one-on-one intervention with the volunteers

The project shall in the coming weeks finalized the five business plans and provide five micro start-up loans to the beneficiaries

The project is facing a huge challenge based on limited financial resources and the growing insecurity in the project region cause by the Cameroon Anglophone Crisis.

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Organization Information

Global Welfare Association (GLOWA)

Location: Bamenda - Cameroon
Website:
Facebook: Facebook Page
Twitter: @glowa
Project Leader:
Jamils Richard Achunji Anguaseh
Bamenda , Cameroon
$2,763 raised of $50,000 goal
 
76 donations
$47,237 to go
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