letters page.

Does anyone have any ideas of how to get readers to write in to the letters page. Issue 14, I believe we have no letters and if this continues it will be closed. Last year I asked Michelle to do a survey of sorts on the lip website to find out if readers actually want the letters page and the majority of responses were yes. However, no one will write in??

I ‘advertise’ on various websites and through myspace, but not sure where else to let people know about it. Any ideas?

Playing House

I did something quite scary this week; my life changing decision of the year. I put a deposit on my first home and planted some roots.
I’ve known it was on the cards for a while, we’d been saving, organising pre-approval for the
loan and looking at so many over-priced houses that I’d almost given up in frustrtion, but nothing quite prepares you for that moment when you find what you want, make the decision and launch in.
I did’t sleep much that night - I’m not sure if it was from sheer excitement over the prospect that soon I would own it and be able to do what I wanted to it without landlord permisson, or from the fact that I have a mortgage and a very large debt to repay… Maybe a bit of both…
For the first time ever today my partner had to ask me if we could leave Bunnings yet and NOT the other way around. I was too buy designing a new kitchen, bathroom, painting the walls, adding new doors, knocking down walls… it was at that moment I realised that I was definately doing the right thing…

Tell me about your life changing decisions an how you knew you were doing the right/or wrong
thing…

Because I am a girl…report.

I spent the last few weeks volunteering at Plan Australia in the brand and communications department. For those of you who don’t know, Plan is a non profit, non political and non religious organisation that assists children in over 60 countries by bringing sustainable improvements to their communities. These countries are mostly in Africa, Asia and South America. People are also able to sponsor a child, and Jamie Durie is one of their ambassadors.

In my second week of volunteering, I became aware of a report that Plan is conducting called ‘Because I am a Girl: The State of the World’s Girls 2007. This will be the most comprehensive report ever published on why millions of girls and young women are being condemned to a life of inequality and poverty. The report states most girls and young women in the world’s poorest communities are powerlessness, a situation that should not be allowed to continue.

There was a news story on SBS a couple of weeks ago, which spoke about Plan and the report. I only saw it when I was in the office, but it talked about the 2007 report that warns that six of the eight Millennium Development Goals agreed by world leaders are likely to fail girls living in poverty. The report warns the goals will be missed altogether unless world leaders adopt a tougher stance on the enforcement of international laws set up to protect girl’s rights.

Plan will be the first to produce a global report series on girls and young women each year from 2007-2015. Plan will continue to follow the lives of 135 baby girls living in nine developing countries as part of a group study on girl’s rights and gender discrimination. This ‘life cycle’ approach in each report will provide an important lens for examining girls’ rights and will bring to life the inequalities buried in global statistics.

The report demonstrates what is currently being done at a local, national and international level, and highlights the effort needed for real progress. The global statistics provided in this report paint a bleak picture of some of the challenges facing girls and young women growing up in the world’s most impoverished regions:
* girls aged 15-19 years old account for 50% of victims of sexual assault worldwide
* birth complications and unsafe abortions are the leading cause of death for young women aged 15-19 years old
* 70% of the 1.5 billion people living on less than a $1 a day are female
* stunted growth in an estimated 450 million women as a result of childhood malnutrition
* approximately 7.3 million young women are living with HIV/AIDS, in comparison to 4.3 million men
* two thirds of 15-19 year olds newly infected with HIV in sub-Saharan Africa are female
* 62 million girls do not attend primary school.

Global statistics on the extent of female foeticide, early marriage, abuse and violence and the lack of education given to girls in poorer nations are pulled together in this report. Each chapter links to the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child and imposes the question ‘What still needs to be done?’. Real life case studies, action plans, ‘Girls’ voices’, and a table listing 59 years of international legislation specifically addressing girls’ rights are presented within the report.

You can download the whole report at http://www.plan-international.org/news/becauseIamagirl/ (scroll to the end of the page)

Or visit www.plan.org.au for news updates.

I still find it hard to digest that while we have Wii and ipod’s and the chance of so much education and 24 hour convienence stores, and the choice to be whoever we want, some girls don’t get much of a life at all from the moment they are born into this world.

What are your thoughts about this study?

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