Period Poverty in Côte d’Ivoire
Period poverty in Côte d’Ivoire has had widespread implications for women and girls. Gender inequality across society has compromised many women’s menstrual health and hygiene. Menstrual health has also been a major problem in Ivorian prisons. In recent years, several French and international groups have been battling the issue nationwide and across West Africa.
Period Poverty in Côte d’Ivoire: The Basics
Period poverty entails severely limited — or complete lack of — access to menstrual products, as well as the safe and private space to use them. In Côte d’Ivoire, social stigmas around menstruation have compounded period poverty and resulted in high rates of school absences among young women and girls. Between 2021 and 2022, UNICEF reported that 20% of women and girls in Côte d’Ivoire failed to attend school for period-related reasons. This compares to approximately 15% in neighboring Burkina Faso.
Menstrual Health in Ivorian Prisons
One specific challenge the country is tackling involves menstrual health and hygiene in prisons. According to Le Monde, roughly 448 women were incarcerated in Côte d’Ivoire at the start of 2021. With the national prison population by the end of that year totalling more than 21,000, the overwhelming majority of inmates are adult males. As such, Ivorian prison facilities are not designed to support the health and well-being of incarcerated females.
Côte d’Ivoire’s largest prison in Yopougon is already severely overcrowded, with an excess of up to 9,000 prisoners, including 300 women. In the town of Aboisso, reports have suggested that cramped cells are holding up to 14 women each. Coupled with a lack of access points for sterile menstrual products, the risk of infection in these spaces is high.
Some local organizations have made efforts to alleviate the conditions of female inmates in terms of period poverty. President of Soutien aux Mères et aux Enfants en Détresse de Côte d’Ivoire (SMED-CI) Madoussou Touré has made efforts to obtain sanitary products from private donors and redistribute them to Ivorian prisons.
The ‘Outside’: Space, Stigma and Society
Outside of the penitentiary system, women and girls continue to struggle with period poverty in Côte d’Ivoire. A lack of a private and clean space for period maintenance has been reported by one in five Ivorian women. Economic and infrastructural factors represent only one part of the problem. Social taboos and deeply ingrained patriarchal structures do little to encourage girls to attend school while menstruating. This reality creates a culture of shame and marginalization among young women. Interviews with several locals indicate that gender inequities continue to play into school absenteeism.
Yet in contrast to other West African societies that view periods as a ‘pollutant,’ some studies have suggested that so-called “menstrual taboos” are not a pervasive element in Ivorian society. Anthropologist Alma Gottlieb investigated practices of the indigenous Beng people of Côte d’Ivoire and has agreed that beliefs around menstruating women are restrictive in terms of work. She does point out, however, that menstruation is instead seen as a symbol of fertility, and not a hindrance or weakness. These findings are hopeful in the sense that puncturing social myths around periods in Côte d’Ivoire may be easier than in other neighboring countries.
What Action Is Being Taken
A number of French-language NGOs have organized outreach programs and events to combat the issue of period poverty in Côte d’Ivoire. Actu’Elles and Gouttes Rouges, two women’s rights groups who champion menstrual health and well-being, organized the Menstrues Libres festival in Abidjan in May of 2018. The festival addressed period poverty in prisons more directly with a panel of experts and was the first of its kind in West Africa.
In 2020, UNICEF and UNFPA hosted a symposium to discuss menstrual health and period poverty in West and Central Africa. One topic of note was that the UNFPA, in partnership with Côte d’Ivoire’s Ministries of Education and Health, had developed a menstrual health and hygiene (MHH) guide. The MHH guide is being made available at local and municipal health facilities, and steps are being taken to promote accessibility nationwide.
Several female Ivorian lawyers have also campaigned for the inclusion of sex education in schools. This would hopefully dismantle some of the harmful social taboos around menstruation but also prepare adolescents for future relationships.
Some promising socio-economic indicators have highlighted the importance of fighting period poverty in Côte d’Ivoire. The nation was, as of 2020, one of the fastest-growing economies in sub-Saharan Africa. Since the end of the civil war, women have emerged in political and financial sectors, especially in the dominant cocoa market. These opportunities are only possible when a girl’s education is consistent and accessible at all times of the month.
– Cara Jenkins
Photo: Flickr