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For years, Kalangala district has been grappling with a high rate of teenage pregnancies coupled with sexual and gender-based violence (SBGV).
The Government and other stakeholders have stepped up and put several interventions in place to ensure that adolescent mothers complete their education or get skilled.
For that reason, 74 teenage mothers and GBV survivors were flagged off to different vocational training institutions in the districts of Masaka and Kyotera, where they will get skills in hairdressing, tailoring, computer studies and plumbing.
This is courtesy of the Heroes for Gender Transformative Action Programme (Heroes 4GTA). The six-year (2020–2026) Ugandan initiative is funded by the Kingdom of the Netherlands and Iceland embassy and implemented by Amref Health Africa, Cordaid, and MIFUMI, a women rights organisation.
While flagging off the teenagers on February 19, 2026, at the Kalangala district headquarters, Resident District Commissioner (RDC) Fred Badda said skilling is a very sustainable way of improving the girls’ lives, their babies and families.
Willy Nkumbi, the district senior probation and social affairs officer speaking during the event.
“The skills help them to forget the issues that pulled them down and instead, focus on turning their lives around,” he said.
Badda added, “We are hopeful that when these girls return later this year, they will be able to change their communities.” Upon graduation, the girls will become trainers. That way, they will pass on the skills to their peers and parents.
He also thanked the Heroes programme for not only spearheading the fight against teenage pregnancies but also SGBV and defilement over the past six years they have camped in Kalangala.
Improvement
On that note, district senior probation and social affairs officer Willy Nkumbi reported that the cases have reduced significantly.
For example, the teenage pregnancy rate has dropped from 32% to 19%. From 2021-2023, Kalangala recorded 60% prevalence of SGBV among women aged 15–49, with more than 30 cases being registered monthly. These have dropped to 20%.
Besides, defilement was widespread at 26%, with aggravated defilement (5-6 years) standing at 15% and 26% for girls between 14-17 years.