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Right Start Initiative to scale-up nutrition for 100 million women and girls
Right Start Initiative launched by MI to improve access to nutrition for 100 million women and girls worldwide.
Posted on May 18, 2016
COPENHAGEN, DENMARK – One hundred million women and girls worldwide will have access to better nutrition thanks to the Right Start Initiative launched today by the Micronutrient Initiative (MI), with the support of the Government of Canada.
Malnutrition remains one of the most persistent barriers to human development and it limits the capacity of generation after generation of women and girls to grow, learn, earn and lead.
One billion women and girls are malnourished – and the cost of that lost potential undermines global progress in multiple areas of human endeavour, including our capacity to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).
Today, Canada reinforced its global leadership on nutrition by supporting the Micronutrient Initiative in launching the Right Start Initiative, a ground-breaking investment platform with the aim of reaching 100 million women and girls with improved nutrition by 2020.
“We are in 2016 and yet one billion women and girls around the world are malnourished. Canada recognizes the importance of investing in initiatives like Right Start to change the status quo for women and girls around the world,” said Marie-Claude Bibeau, Canada’s Minister for International Development and La Francophonie.
The Right Start Initiative has five strategic pillars, including high impact programs, partnerships, resource mobilization, technical assistance and advocacy.
Right Start aims to rally the international development community to generate the know-how, resources and solutions necessary to empower women and girls through improved nutrition.
With $75 million in anchor support already invested by the Government of Canada, MI is launching programs in nine countries across Africa and Asia that will reach 50 million women and adolescent girls by 2020.
Now, MI is using those strategic investments as a launch point for leveraging additional support, from donors, countries and partners, to double its impact.
Canada’s support has already generated additional support, including a $1.5 million investment from the Australian Agency for International Development and a strategic partnership with the Government of Indonesia to improve nutrition for one million pregnant women and children in two of Indonesia’s high burden provinces.
“Malnutrition is one of humanity’s longest running battles,” said Joel Spicer, President and CEO of the Micronutrient Initiative. “The question all of us need to start asking is how do we bring about the beginning of the end of malnutrition? Initiatives like Right Start are a spark that moves us closer to the answer. It starts by doing much more for women and girls.”