Tag Archives: Equal Rights

From potential to skills and real jobs: how young women are powering change in Western and Central Africa

Young women attending a training in Chad. Credit: Miguel San Joaquin.

Washington, USA, 27 March 2026 -/African Media Agency (AMA)/- When you think about sub-Saharan Africa, and about the young women who live across the region, what comes to mind? Many are mothers. Many are tireless workers. Many are the emotional and practical backbone of their households and communities.

But the picture is also changing. Increasingly, more young women are finishing high school, enrolling in university, getting better jobs, and building careers beyond the home. This has not always been the dominant narrative in West and Central Africa, where even today about 40% of young women are neither in school, in training, nor employed.

Linking learning and skills opportunities with access to jobs and real economic pathways for about 3 million women

Across Western and Central Africa, the Sub-Saharan Africa Women’s Empowerment and Demographic Dividend project — known as SWEDD+ — is supporting that change of trajectory.

Building on the original regional SWEDD project launched in the Sahel in 2015, the broader SWEDD/SWEDD+ initiative has reached nearly 3 million women and adolescent girls by linking learning and skills opportunities with real economic pathways and access to maternal and child health services. About 255,000 of these women have gained practical skills and entered the workforce with confidence through the program’s economic empowerment activities. SWEDD+ is expanding the participation and leadership of women and girls while also strengthening institutional capacity for equal rights for women across the region.

Women’s individual stories, spanning fields from skilled trades to healthcare to entrepreneurship, show what becomes possible when talent meets access to opportunity.

“Now we’re motivated and earning money to support our families. We’re happy to bring solar energy to the villages.” Angelique ,Benin.

Angelique and Odette at work. Credit: Miguel San Joaquin.

Angelique and Odette, from Benin, left school in fifth and fourth grade when their families could no longer afford the fees. Today, their path looks very different. Thanks to SWEDD, both young women got trainings in a non-traditional economic activity: building electrification and solar photovoltaic installation. They now have a better job and have been working for over two years with a private company installing solar panels. The pride in their voices is unmistakable. “Now we’re motivated and earning money to support our families,” Angelique says. “We’re happy to bring solar energy to the villages.”

Leaving school because of financial hardship is still a common reality across West and Central Africa. Harmelle, also from Benin, had to leave school at age 14. She married soon after and became a mother, but two years later her husband died, leaving her in a precarious financial situation. A turning point came when she and her twin sister enrolled in a SWEDD entrepreneurship program that provided training and a starter kit for snail farming. With it came something just as important: peace of mind. “When I started farming, there were some difficulties,” she recalls, “but then we began earning money, and everyone was better off.”

Harmelle and her twin sister. Credit: Miguel San Joaquin.

In Chad, Djogoita was inspired by her father, a police officer, to find her own way to serve her community. She chose midwifery and the role has given her both purpose and confidence. “When they bring me a pregnant woman or a child from 0 to 14 years old, I can use the knowledge I gained through my training to help them,” she explains with a great satisfaction of having a fulfilling job.

Djogoita and her father. Credit: Miguel San Joaquin.

Investing in women: one of the smartest economic bets to powering local economies

Across Western and Central Africa, the transformation is underway. With the right skills, support, and opportunities, a new generation of women and girls is not only increasing their own economic independence: they are powering local economies and investing back into their families and communities. The lesson is clear: when young women are given the tools to succeed, the returns reach far beyond the individual. Investing in women and girls is not just the right thing to do; it is one of the smartest economic bets West and Central Africa can make.

Creating more and better jobs across the region is central to the World Bank Group’s mission. By equipping young women with relevant skills and connecting them to real economic opportunities, programs like SWEDD/SWEDD+ directly advance this agenda — turning human potential into productive employment that fuels inclusive and sustainable growth.

In this International Women’s month, the stories of Angelique, Odette, Harmelle, and Djogoita remind us that the future of the region’s growth and resilience is already taking shape: one young woman at a time, trained, employed, and empowered to drive change in her community.

Distributed by African Media Agency (AMA) on behalf of Word Bank Group.

The post From potential to skills and real jobs: how young women are powering change in Western and Central Africa appeared first on African Media Agency.

Corey Feldman Says He Was 1st Person to Think Rob Reiner Was Killed by Son Nick

While Hollywood continues to grieve the deaths of Rob Reiner and his wife, Michele Singer Reiner, the director’s friend Corey Feldman revealed his first reaction to hearing the tragic news and the subsequent arrest of their son Nick Reiner.

“As we watched the news unfold, I was actually the first one who said, ‘I think it was his son,’” Feldman, 54, told cameras in The Rob Reiner Story: A Hollywood Tragedy – ABC News Special, which aired on ABC Tuesday, December 16. “It’s awful. It’s the worst thing I could imagine. … Accepting that fact that this could have happened in his home from his own son, it sent shivers and chills down all of us.”

In the episode, reporters and loved ones revisited Rob’s iconic legacy as a famed actor and director while also reflecting on his and Michele’s tragic and shocking deaths. In addition to Feldman, who starred in Reiner’s 1986 film Stand By Me, the special included commentary from ABC News contributors Chris Connelly and Larry Hackett.

Feldman, who has also battled addiction in his life, offered his thoughts on Nick’s longtime battle with drugs and the fraught relationship that developed with his parents because of it, explaining, “When you grow up living around drug addiction and alcoholism, it’s a lot easier to accept it and process it when it comes to your own family. When we don’t understand the plight of our friends and family, and we don’t understand what a slippery slope addiction is, it’s hard to have empathy for it.”

Maria Shriver Says Rob Reiner and Michele Were ‘Good Parents’ Before Deaths

“All I could think is, ‘Oh my God, there’s no way this could have happened to my friend,’” Feldman remembered thinking after learning of Rob’s death.

Rob and Michele were found dead in their Brentwood, California, home on Sunday, December 14, with apparent stab wounds. Nick, 32, was arrested on Monday, December 15, on suspicion of murder hours after his parents’ bodies were found. He is being held without bail.

Los Angeles District Attorney Nathan Hochman announced in a Tuesday press conference that Nick has been charged with two counts of first-degree murder and is facing life in prison without parole or the death penalty if he is convicted.

“Rob Reiner was a brilliant actor and director, an iconic force in our entertainment industry for decades,” Hochman said. “His wife, Michelle Singer Riner, was an equally iconic photographer and producer. Their loss is beyond tragic and we will commit ourselves to bringing their murderer to justice.”

Rob and Michele were seen with Nick at Conan O’Brien’s Christmas party one day before their deaths on Saturday, December 13. A source told Us that Nick acted “creepily” at the event and asked people “if they were famous” before leaving. Additionally, TMZ reported Nick and Rob got into a “very loud argument” at the celebration.

The son of actors Carl and Estelle Reiner, Rob’s career spanned six decades, with him gaining notoriety for his acting work in the sitcom All in the Family for eight seasons throughout the ‘70s. Additionally, he appeared in Sleepless in Seattle (1993), The First Wives Club (1996) and The Wolf of Wall Street (2013), in addition to his unforgettable work behind the camera.

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Jason Merritt/Getty Images for American Foundation for Equal Rights

Some of Rob’s greatest directorial features included This Is Spinal Tap (1984), When Harry Met Sally (1989), A Few Good Men (1992) and The Bucket List (2007). His life and career is being remembered in tributes shared by his fans, friends and former collaborators after his death, including Jerry O’Connell, Zooey Deschanel and Jamie Lee Curtis.

“Christopher and I are numb and sad and shocked about the violent, tragic deaths of our dear friends Rob and Michele Singer Reiner and our ONLY focus and care right now is for their children and immediate families and we will offer all support possible to help them,” Curtis, 67, said in a statement to Us Weekly on Monday on behalf of her and her husband, Christopher Guest. (Curtis, 67, costarred with Rob in New Girl, while her husband, Guest, 77, worked with Rob on a number of films, including This Is Spinal Tap and its 2025 sequel.)

“There will be plenty of time later to discuss the creative lives we shared a the great political and social impact they both had on the entertainment industry, early childhood development, the fight for gay marriage and their global care for a world in crisis. We have lost great friends. Please give us time to grieve,” she concluded.

Aaron Paul Reveals He and Wife Moved to France After Deadly L.A. Wildfires

Aaron Paul has joined the many actors who have decided to leave Los Angeles behind.

“When the fires happened in L.A., we just knew that we were done with L.A., so we sold our house in L.A. and moved to Paris,” the Breaking Bad actor, 46, told the Daily Mail while attending The Only at 1850 by American Express party during the F1 Las Vegas Grand Prix on Friday, November 21.

“Paris is awesome,” Paul told the outlet, adding that he moved there with his wife, Lauren Paul, and their two young children.

“We went out there for the kiddos,” he added, before exclaiming that he and his wife “always dreamed of doing a year abroad.”

“We just always wanted to be around a completely different culture,” he said.

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In January, multiple wildfires broke out in and around the Los Angeles area, destroying over 18,000 structures, burning more than 57,5000 acres and killing upwards of 440 people, including indirect deaths from smoke exposure. The wildfires are believed to have cost anywhere from $28 billion to $53.8 billion.

In July, People reported that Paul put his Los Feliz home on the market, listing the three bedroom, three-and-a-half bath home for $10 million. The home — designed by famed architect Stiles O. Clements and previously owned by Robert Pattinson, Tim Curry, Noah Wyle, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar and Jim Parsons — sits on 1.5 acres and combines “preserved period detail with refined inferior updates,” according to the listing.

“Aberdeen has been a safe haven for my family and we feel so lucky to have experienced so much life here over the years,” Paul said of his former home in a statement to People at the time. “We will forever hold this home and its history close to our hearts.”

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Aaron Paul and his wife, Lauren Getty Images

Paul is just the latest Hollywood A-lister to leave the U.S. for a life across the pond. Both Ellen DeGeneres and Rosie O’Donnell have decided to relocate to Europe in the wake of Donald Trump’s 2024 presidential victory.

“I’m happy. Clay is happy. I miss my other kids. I miss my friends. I miss many things about life there at home, and I’m trying to find a home here in this beautiful country,” O’Donnell said in a TikTok video detailing her move to Ireland and the reason behind it. “And when it is safe for all citizens to have equal rights there in America, that’s when we will consider coming back.”

DeGeneres, for her part, also admitted that politics played a role in her decision to move to the U.K. with her wife, Portia de Rossi.

Angelina Jolie ‘Is Ready for Her Next Chapter’ — Away From Hollywood

“We got here the day before the election and woke up to lots of texts from our friends with crying emojis, and I was like, ‘He got in,’” she said while speaking to English broadcaster Richard Bacon back in July. “And we’re like, ‘We’re staying here.’”

In April, O’Donnell opened up to Us about her surprise over DeGeneres’ reason for relocating overseas.

“I’ve never really known Ellen to say anything political in her life, so I was surprised to read that she left because of President Trump. Like, that shocked me, actually,” she exclusively told Us Weekly at the time. “I’ve been a political person my whole life, no better or worse, it’s just a different way to be in the world. I was very clear about the reason why I was leaving, and I don’t think it came as a surprise to anyone. We’re not really in each other’s worlds, and it’s been kind of awkward but you know what? I wish her the best. I wish that she has peace and love in her life and that she is OK.”

UN Commission on the Status of Women provides roadmap to women’s full and equal participation in the economy

Equal Pay For Equal Work Seems Like A No-Brainer, Right?

(New York, 24 March)—UN Member States today committed to ensure women’s full and equal participation and leadership in the economy, as well as women’s right to work and rights at work, as a vital step to achieving sustainable development. The strong pledge to women’s economic empowerment came at the closing of the 61st session of the UN Commission on the Status of Women (CSW61), the two-week meeting that concluded today.

The Agreed Conclusions from the UN’s largest gathering on gender equality, women’s empowerment and women’s rights highlight barriers that women face, such as unequal working conditions, women’s over-representation in the informal economy, gender stereotypes and social norms that reinforce women’s concentration in certain sectors, such as health and social sectors, and the uneven share of unpaid care work that women do. Continue reading UN Commission on the Status of Women provides roadmap to women’s full and equal participation in the economy