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Sex and condom education essential - govt

[Mozambique] Condom demonstration in Care microfinance project Supinho locality. IRIN
The condom remains taboo
Tanzania's education ministry has reaffirmed its position on the introduction of reproductive health and HIV/AIDS education at primary school level, despite condemnation from Catholic bishops. The Roman Catholic Church recently slammed the new syllabus, labelling it "unacceptable", as the teaching of proper condom use had been included. "Introduction of the [teaching of] use of condoms in schools, apart from being sinful, is indeed justification and opening the door for immoral lifestyles," Cardinal Polycarp Pengo, the archbishop of Dar es Salaam, said last week in a statement issued on behalf of Tanzania's Episcopal Conference. However, Chief Educational Officer Ricky Mpama said the inclusion had been necessitated by data showing that some primary school pupils were engaging in unprotected sex, and between 2000 and 2005 an estimated 15,000 learners had dropped out of school as a result of pregnancy. "Every primary school student is at risk of infection," Mpama told the local Guardian newspaper. "There is a big possibility some of them could be infected already." About two million Tanzanians are living with HIV/AIDS.

This article was produced by IRIN News while it was part of the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. Please send queries on copyright or liability to the UN. For more information: https://shop.un.org/rights-permissions

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