Menstrual hygiene for girls: a project launched to support Togo's initiatives on good practices
- Posted on 30/08/2025 15:53
- Film
- By abelozih@sante-education.tg

Extract from the article: La ministre en charge de la Promotion de la Femme, Pr Kossiwa Zinsou-Klassou, a lancé, le mercredi 28 Août 2025 à Lomé, le « projet d’appui aux initiatives du Togo pour la sensibilisation des jeunes filles et garçons sur l’hygiène personnelle et mens
On
Wednesday, August 28, 2025, in Lomé, the Minister for the Advancement of Women,
Prof. Kossiwa Zinsou-Klassou, launched the "project to support Togo's
initiatives to raise awareness among girls and boys about personal and
menstrual hygiene ." This project by the West African Health Organization
(WAHO) aims to educate and train young people on good hygiene practices.
The
difficulties women face with regard to menstrual hygiene are linked to
menstrual insecurity, which encompasses problems of access to hygiene products,
lack of adequate sanitary facilities, financial and geographical constraints,
stigmatization, cultural taboos, and inequalities. These obstacles have
negative consequences on the health, education, and well-being of women and
girls, leading to infections, school absenteeism, and limited social
participation. In order to address these major challenges, ECOWAS, through the
West African Health Organization (WAHO), has set up the “project to support
Togo's initiatives to raise awareness among young girls and boys about personal
and menstrual hygiene.”
This
project was launched by the Minister of Social Action, Solidarity, and Women's
Empowerment, Prof. Kossiwa Zinsou-Klassou. The overall goal is to raise the
community's profile by improving young people's health and dignity. More
specifically, it aims to inform and educate girls and boys about good hygiene
practices in order to prevent sexually transmitted infections linked to poor
hygiene. It also aims to train young female seamstresses in the manufacture of
reusable sanitary towel kits. The project also helps to combat period poverty
by providing these reusable sanitary pads. This one-year project will also have
a positive environmental impact, as unlike disposable sanitary pads, which
contribute to plastic pollution, reusable pads are sustainable and
environmentally friendly, offering an eco-friendly alternative to disposable
products.
Three
partner organizations have been identified for the strategic implementation of
the project in the Maritime (Lomé), Kara (Kara), and Plateaux (Anié) regions.
These are the Togolese Association for Family Welfare (ATBEF) and the Togolese
Association for Social Marketing (ATMS), which will jointly be responsible for
awareness-raising, training, and the production and distribution of sanitary
towel kits, the development of which has been entrusted to Handicap Actions
Togo.
Training
workshops will be organized in schools and community centers in the three
target locations to teach good hygiene practices to young girls and boys,
teachers, and parents.
An economical and
environmentally friendly alternative to disposable products
During
the project, 100 young female seamstresses from Lomé, Anié, and Kara will be
trained and each provided with sewing machines and materials for designing
sanitary pad kits. They will make more than 15,000 reusable sanitary pads to
create 5,000 kits for distribution in 12 school complexes. This will take place
during awareness campaigns targeting teachers, parents, and bosses of learning
centers in each of the three locations.
At
the launch, Minister Kossiwa Zinsou-Klassou welcomed the arrival of this
project, which represents "an economical and ecological alternative to
disposable products, which are often expensive and polluting. In addition, the
training of 100 young seamstresses... will create a virtuous circle,
strengthening local skills, promoting women's economic independence, and
providing a sustainable solution for thousands of young girls."
For
the ECOWAS resident representative in Togo, Barros Bacar Banjai, this is a real
response to the crucial challenges faced by many women and girls in member
countries. Its "originality lies in the fact that it is a pilot
initiative, whose approach to empowering young girls will have an impact on its
sustainability. It is intended to be catalytic with seed funding and will have
positive results... which will be replicated at the ECOWAS level through other
projects along the same lines, but on a different scale," he added.
Source: Togo Presse