Afghan Women
Welfare Department
Peshawar, Pakistan
In 1989, a group of Afghan women established the Afghan
Women Welfare Department to address the needs of Afgan refugees in Peshawar, Pakistan.
At that time, no
independent women's organizations existed to serve the three million
refugees who were fleeing the Afghan-Soviet war. A decade later, over a
million Afghan refugees still live in Pakistan. Others arrive daily at
camps to escape continued violence in Afghanistan.
Director Jamila Akbarzai and the staff work in the Nasir Bagh
Refugee Camp. The camps in Pakistan are hopelessly under equipped to
cope with demands placed on them by the refugee population. Families
live in makeshift shelters, often without running water, electricity or
sewage facilities; violence is endemic. Outraged by conditions that
have forced educated and uneducated women alike to beg on the streets
in order to survive. The group has mobilized local and international support
to develop a wide range of income-generating and literacy programs.
Training women in candle-making gives them a practical way to
earn a living, but also enables them to advance their status within the
family and community.
The group pays special attention to disabled women and to women whose
spouses are disabled, by including them in its microcredit program,
which gives women raw material for making clothing. In addition to
sewing classes, participants receive training in basic sales and
marketing, enabling them to sell their goods and earn a small profit.
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Main Issues:
Economic Justice
Education
Grants Received:
2006 $12,000
2004 $8,000
2003 $15,000
2001 $14,700
2000 $15,000
1999 $10,000
Since our founding, the Global Fund has awarded 102 grants to women's
groups in Pakistan and Afghanistan working to claim women's rights by
increasing literacy for women and girls, improving life in refugee
camps, expanding access to health care and ending gender based violence.
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