The Executive Director of UNICEF, Catherine Russell, recently embarked on a significant mission to assess the impact of UNICEF-backed initiatives aimed at fostering education and healthcare for children and adolescent girls in Tanzania. These programmes play an instrumental role in dismantling cycles of deprivation, thereby cultivating a brighter future for the nation’s youth.
During her three-day sojourn in the country, Russell travelled to the Songwe Region, where she engaged with local authorities and observed first-hand the transformative power of granting young girls access to education, healthcare, and nutritional support. Such empowerment not only enriches their individual lives but also stimulates progressive change within their communities at large.

In collaboration with the Tanzanian government and strategic partners, UNICEF is actively championing policies and financial commitments that bolster educational opportunities and accessible community-based healthcare, particularly for adolescent girls. A pivotal aspect of these initiatives is the concerted effort to curtail the prevalence of child marriage and early pregnancies—societal challenges that remain alarmingly pervasive in the region.
Tanzania, regrettably, bears one of the most concerning rates of teenage pregnancies across East Africa, with the Songwe Region alone reporting an incidence of nearly 45 per cent. In response, UNICEF is intensifying its endeavours to provide adolescent girls with the requisite skills, scholastic opportunities, and vocational pathways to secure gainful employment. Simultaneously, the organisation is prioritising expanded access to crucial health and nutrition services to safeguard their well-being.
UNICEF aims to cultivate a future where girls are not merely recipients of aid but architects of their own destinies—empowered, educated, and emboldened to reshape their communities. The ongoing investment in such initiatives underscores a profound commitment to ensuring that every girl in Tanzania has the opportunity to flourish, unfettered by the constraints of systemic inequities.