Togo Sample Clauses
Togo. Togo currently has an estimated population of 6 million, with approximately 41% under the age of 15. While there has been some improvement in infant and maternal mortality rates, accessing quality RH services in Togo remains difficult, particularly outside of urban centers. Unmet need for contraception currently stands at 40.5%. The TFR has declined somewhat between 2005 and 2012 to 4.7 children per woman, but the CPR for modern methods remains quite low at 13%. Given the high unmet need for contraception and the continued low CPR in the country, it is not surprising that PAC services remain an important part of overall reproductive health care for women (Box 11). Abortion is illegal in Togo, except to save the life of a woman or in cases of fetal impairment, rape, or incest.5 Estimates of the Population size (in millions)1 6.0 Under 15 years of age1 41% Infant Mortality Rate per 1,000 live births1 78 Maternal Mortality Ratio per 100,000 live births2 300 Total Fertility Rate1 4.7 Contraceptive Prevalence Rate, modern methods1 13% Unmet need1 40.5% 1Population Reference Bureau, “World Population Data Sheet 2012,” accessed July 26, 2013, ▇▇▇▇://▇▇▇.▇▇▇.▇▇▇/pdf12/2012-population-data- sheet_eng.pdf.
Togo. Franco-Canadian Trade Agreement of Since the creation of Togo as an independ- 1933 applied to Togo. GATT effective Apr. 27, 1960. ent state in 1960, Canada has continued to grant most-favoured-nation treat- ment.
Togo. Supported the Ministry of Health to convene an advocacy event and disseminate an HP+-developed budget process brief in support of increasing public resources for the purchase of antiretroviral drugs. At the end of the meeting, participants—which included UNDP, the USAID Global Health Supply Chain Program, RAS+, the Ministry of Health, the Ministry of Economy and Finance, and other HIV stakeholders— called for increasing resource mobilization by finding synergies with family planning advocacy interventions. Mali • Disseminated an advocacy video on the importance of CHWs in providing essential community healthcare via various channels, including national and local television and social media to influence political decisionmakers and bolster public support for the government to take responsibility for the payment of CHWs' salaries using domestic resources. • Supported advocacy by the National Program against Gender Based Violence, resulting in a partnership between them and the Alliance of Christian and Muslim Leaders that ensures key actors are united in the fight against gender-based violence in Mali. Malawi • Roundtable discussions held, on two separate occasions, resulting in commitments by key ministries and district-level stakeholders to advocate for child- friendly mobile courts; guidelines to prevent child, early, and forced marriages during humanitarian situations, including pandemics; and increased funding for child protections. • A meeting, and later an orientation, organized for Members of Parliament, the Ministry of Gender, and other policymakers to harmonize a legal framework on the minimum legal age of marriage, increasing the likelihood the bill will be passed by Parliament. SPOTLIGHT Joint Accountability Between Government and Civil Society Strengthens Family Planning Implementation and Monitoring Achieving family planning goals requires ongoing involvement from multiple stakeholders, particularly in the face of competing priorities. Countries are revising their FP2030 commitments and, as a new requirement, establishing accountability frameworks to engage stakeholders in meeting and monitoring those commitments. HP+ worked with civil society and government representatives in Benin, Niger, and Senegal to introduce HP+’s innovative joint accountability approach to strengthen civil society engagement in and government stewardship of the implementation and monitoring of FP2030 commitments. This was the first time joint accountability was introduc...
Togo. Proposals on Agreement on Non-Aggression and Assistance on Defence Matters between the Members of ECOWAS. 1973.
Togo. Those who were persecuted for being a woman, however, had more dichotomous interactions with their social networks. On the one hand, they often viewed their parents as persecuting them, and were especially disappointed in their mothers for failing to protect them from ▇▇▇▇▇ like FGM/C or forced marriage. “I was only in contact with my mother because my father had said that I was not his daughter anymore when I refused to come home to get married…I have not talked with my father for two years because I cannot forgive him for what he did to my sisters [FGM/C and forced marriage] and was going to do the same to me if I had not refused to go home. His act was horrible… She [my mother] wrote to me that if I do not come home and do what my father wanted me to do she will not support me. I thought that the earth stopped turning for me because my mother has always been everything for me. She supported me my whole life and her stopping talking to me was like the end of the world… She said that if I do not come back home and honor my family tradition I would be to her as dead. Now where I am I only think about my future, and I would rather die than marry a man who I do not love and on top of that undergo FGM. I will not sacrifice my life for a father who still lives in the past because everyone knows the side effect of FGM, such as infection, huge complications with childbirth, and death.” –A.D., Mali On the other hand, a few women also described some type of redemptive relationship usually with someone residing in a Western country, which allowed them to escape persecution and come to the US.
Togo. 19970105 Declaration of Establishment of Diplomatic Relations. 19970922 Entry into force:19970922 Agreement concerning Cooperation in the Field of Defence. 19990901 Entry into force:19990901 Exchange of Notes Establishing Diplomatic Relations. 19950110 Joint Communique on the Establishment of Diplomatic Relations.
Togo. Preparatory assistance for the inscription of Koutammakou, the Land of the Batammariba, Togo
Togo. The European Community includes trademark protection in the following countries/territories (1) Austria, (2) Belgium, (3) Bulgaria, (4) Croatia, (5) Republic of Cyprus, (6) Czech Republic, (7) Denmark, (8) Estonia, (9) Finland,
Togo. Abortion in Togo was only discussed as a risk factor for pre-‐term delivery in later pregnancies:
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