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| Flow ID | Status / boundary | Reported amount | Donor | Recipient agency | Country | Plan | Sector | Decision date | First reported | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 343985 | paid / incoming | $91,409 | UN Trust Fund to End Violence against Women | Public Association Union of People with Disabilities Ravenstvo | Kyrgyzstan | Unspecified | Protection - Gender-Based Violence | 29 Oct 2024 | 01 Apr 2025 | 27_44450 |
Evidence for flow 343985 paid · incoming
Multi-Sector - GBV Programming Our organization proposes a 4-year project aimed at preventing and eliminating violence against women and girls with disabilities in Kyrgyzstan. With approximately 102,000 women and girls with disabilities registered in the country, this vulnerable group often faces persecution and violence due to their intersecting marginalization. Our project focuses on working with women and girls with disabilities in Kyrgyzstan, aged 18 to 65, from any ethnicity or socioeconomic background, who are survivors of various forms of violence, including domestic, psychological, economic, and sexual violence. The project addresses a critical gap in support services, as women and girls with disabilities in Kyrgyzstan lack accessible resources and face significant barriers in seeking help and justice when experiencing violence. The project will primarily benefit 280 women and girls with various disabilities, including those who are blind, wheelchair users, and those with mild to moderate mental disabilities or developmental challenges. Also, 567 professionals, including law enforcement officers, healthcare workers, lawyers, and crisis center staff will be trained and educated to better serve this population. Indirect beneficiaries will include the participants' families, state and private organizations, and the broader public through increased awareness and improved services. Our comprehensive approach includes three main components. First, we will focus on building resilience and self-reliance through peer-to-peer counseling, life skills, violence prevention training, legal assistance, and informal professional training for economic independence. We will also conduct summer schools of independent living to develop leadership skills among women with disabilities. Second, our capacity-building efforts will involve training law enforcement, medical professionals, and lawyers to improve their understanding of disability and enhance their interactions with people with disabilities. We will also work to improve staff skills at other women's crisis centers nationwide. Finally, our advocacy and reporting component will include the preparation of an alternative CEDAW report to increase international attention on the issue of violence against women with disabilities in Kyrgyzstan and Central Asia. The project will primarily operate from our Independent Living Center in Bishkek, the only facility in Kyrgyzstan specifically adapted for women with various categories of disabilities. However, our outreach and training activities will extend to five regions nationwide. We will also collaborate with partners in Kazakhstan for the summer schools, broadening our impact in the region. By the end of the project, we expect to see improved self-reliance and resilience among women with disabilities, enhanced capacity of support services to assist this population, increased awareness and improved responses from law enforcement and healthcare professionals, and greater accessibility of crisis centers for women with disabilities across Kyrgyzstan. Through these efforts, we aim to create a more inclusive and supportive environment for women and girls with disabilities, reducing their vulnerability to violence and discrimination. The total cost for this comprehensive 4-year project is $400,000, representing a significant investment in empowering and protecting women and girls with disabilities in Kyrgyzstan. Funding flow detail → | ||||||||||