Support

In partnership with other foundations and entrepreneurs, Fondation Albatros supports the 9th annual EVPA (European Venture Philanthropy Association) conference, which will take place in Geneva for the first time on November 26 and 27, 2013.

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Involvement in Romania

The Fondation involves itself further in Romania. It is committed to supporting “Hope and Homes – Romania” by assisting with the closure of institutions for children inherited from communist times, and to the development of alternative placement solutions to the state child care system for these children.

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New Partnership

The Department of Security of the Canton of Geneva, represented by the International Solidarity Service, and the Fondation Albatros have forged a partnership to provide schooling to the poorest children in Vietnam. Fondation Albatros would like to express its gratitude to the Republic and Canton of Geneva for their trust.

The project being funded will provide schooling for 800 children from the provinces of Binh Thuan and Hau Giang during the 2013-2014 school year.
The overall goal is to increase the number of years that the poorest children from these two provinces spend at school so they can learn trades that will enable them to earn a decent standard of living.
The local partner in charge of carrying out the project is the French-Belgian NGO Mekong Plus, which has been working in Vietnam for nearly 20 years.  Mekong Plus has made community development in the rural regions of Vietnam and Cambodia its main mission.

Its flagship programme is the fight against poverty.  This includes educating the poorest members of the population, which is a mandatory step in the socioeconomic development of the communities where it works.

 

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NEW PARTNERSHIP

From September 2015, the Albatros Foundation will support the french association “Toutes à l’école” which, since 2006,  freely send to school the most underprivileged girls from the peri-urban areas of Phnom Penh in it’s school Happy Chandara.

The founder, Mrs Tina Kieffer, has decided to give priority to girls education, willing to bring her contribution to the still important cambodian gender inequality: only 36% of the children going to school in Cambodia are girls.

The Albatros Foundation, will support 2 classes of 25 girls.

Currently, Happy Chandara welcomes 1000 girls from 6 to 14 years old.  Every year, 100 girls start their education there.

The girls from the poorest families are accepted in priority (monthly income lower than 100 US$).

In addition to the khmer national programme, the schoolgirls study english, french and computer science.

A  hairdressing vocational centre opened in September 2013.

The first class of high school students will start in September 2015.

With these two orientations (high school and vocational training), Happy Chandara gives the opportunity to choose between third education or a professional course.  In this way, the young girls are accompanied until their admission at university or their first employment.

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New partnership

« Les Enfants du Parc »

AN EDUCATIONAL PROJECT THAT SHAPES INDIVIDUALS FROM CHILDHOOD TO THE VERGE OF ADULTHOOD

This project supports underprivileged parents, mostly from foreign backgrounds, in the education of their children (aged from 6 to 15) by providing learning support, sporting and recreational activities and holiday camps. It aims to help parents facing various social integration problems (limited understanding of French, precarious employment, unemployment, single parent families) in their educational role.

Objectives:

  • To prevent the risk of marginalisation and the development of risk behaviour (dropping out of school, addiction, violence, breaking family ties …).
  • To foster a thirst for knowledge and love of learning.
  • To impart a taste for school work though an educational approach that focuses less on the academic performance of homework and more on the acquisition of knowledge and know-how through fun activities.
  • To instil values such as commitment, respect for rules and other people, and the value of hard work.
  • To grow and mature by sharing and building relationships of friendship and trust.

The beneficiaries are supported by an educational professional and a team of volunteers. Les Enfants du Parc places great emphasis on volunteering, particularly by its previously idle older students, who are now mobilised and trained to mentor younger students. La Fondation Apprentis dAuteuil invested in this project because it reflects its values:

  • In education, no situation is hopeless: young people who regain confidence in themselves and in adults can express their potential and embark on a successful educational and career path.
  • Whatever their path in life, all children have potential, abilities and skills. It is up to the people around the child to enable him or her to express them.
  • Play is a powerful educational tool. Too many children do not know or have forgotten how to play, because their imagination has been suppressed.  Les Enfants du Parc is working to rekindle children’s imagination and their ability to dream and create.

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Female foeticide, infanticide and the failure to educate girls: 3 forms of gender discrimination that are still all too present

More than 100 million women are therefore currently missing from the world, with China and India alone accounting for 80 million missing women.

When it is time to start school, girls from families living in extreme poverty will often be sacrificed in favour of boys. Families know that, in a labour market that favours men, men will have more chance of finding a stable job and will be better paid than women.

If they are lucky, girls from underprivileged communities (usually in low income countries) will be allowed to attend school for a few years but will be removed from school when they reach pre-adolescence to be used as work force and/or married young – against their will, needless to say.

Education is one of the main areas in which girls are still subjected to discrimination today.

Girls currently make up 54% of all out-of-school children worldwide. In other words, 32 million girls do not go to school.

Two-thirds of illiterate adults are women (66.6 million women).

In 2015, 31% of countries had still not achieved gender parity in primary education. This figure rises to 62% for secondary education.

Fortunately, immense progress has been made in twenty years: the percentage of out-of-school girls in developing countries has fallen from 58 to 53%.

Girls are still particularly disadvantaged in the Arab States, Southeast Asia and Sub-Saharan Africa.

The education of girls has significant positive knock-on effects: an educated young women will earn at least 25% more income than her illiterate counterpart, leading to autonomy and enabling her to contribute to the economic well-being of the country by participating in the creation of wealth. In terms of health, she can effectively protect herself from viruses and pass on her knowledge to her children, who will in turn enjoy better health. Then, having experienced and understood the value of education, she will do all she can to send her children to school.

The education of girls is the cornerstone of economic and social development.

Every young and teenage girl should be able to go to school and stay there.

Since 2016, the Albatros Foundation has been committed to achieving gender equality in education.  It therefore supports two organisations that are working to give girls the same opportunities to access education as boys:  Educate Girls and Toutes à l’école.

albatrosFemale foeticide, infanticide and the failure to educate girls: 3 forms of gender discrimination that are still all too present
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Mercy Ships – New mission in Benin – Hospital opening

On 18 August 2016, the Africa Mercy and its crew docked in their new home country for the next 10 months – Benin, in West Africa.
Mercy Ships chose Benin because of its very limited access to medical care – the country has only 10 hospital beds and 1 doctor for every 20,000 inhabitants. The country’s health care system is in crisis.
During its mission in Benin, more than 1,700 operations will be performed on more than 835 adults and children, around 8,000 people will be treated at a land-based dental clinic, and holistic health care training will be provided to local health professionals.
The first few weeks were given over to meeting potential patients at the patient screening centre set up in Cotonou. The five operating theatres on board the Africa Mercy opened their doors on 12 September to welcome the first patients.
Mercy Ships can’t wait to see all the lives transformed by surgery and training during its mission in Benin!

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Mercy Ships is in Cameroon

On August 17, Mercy Ships was greeted with a welcome ceremony. Several prominent figures from Cameroon were in attendance, and the Minister of National Health and the Douala Municipal Committee welcomed the volunteer crew. Furthermore, the ten-month mission is under the patronage of Cameroon’s First Lady, Chantal Biya.

In Cameroon, a country in Central Africa where some 24 million people live, there are only 21 hospital beds for 10,000 inhabitants and 7 doctors for 1 million citizens. In addition to providing free surgical operations to those who need them most, within the framework of strengthening the country’s health system, Mercy Ships plans to provide training and mentoring and renovate buildings that will then be used by the Cameroonian Ministry of Health.

Operations in Cameroon began on September 4. Little Justine, 11 years old, got the ball rolling: her bowed legs will be straightened out in the coming weeks: new hope is emerging for her future!

To support the 400 volunteers from around the world in the various work areas on board, more than 260 Cameroonians have been hired. These local professionals, workers, mechanics, radiology assistants and dining room staff will go on board every day of the week to help serve the people of their country. Their knowledge of local languages and English is an important part of their role, enabling the crew of Africa Mercy to communicate easily with patients.

Preparations for this mission began several months prior to the ship’s arrival. A building has been completely renovated and set up to serve as an extension of the floating hospital on the ground. It will remain operational following Mercy Ships’ departure.

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