On Friday
last, Guyanese civil society representatives elected Dr. Dawn Stewart,
who was the unopposed nominee of the Guyana Equality Forum (GEF), as the
civil society representative to Guyana’s Global Fund Country
Coordinating Mechanism (CCM), replacing Ms. Renuka Anandjit, Programmes
Director of the Guyana Responsible Parenthood Association (GRPA) who
resigned after serving for five months.
The Country Coordinating Mechanism (CCM)
was established as an oversight apparatus for the effective
implementation of grants provided to Guyana by the Global Fund to Fight
AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria. The mandate of the CCM is to coordinate
the preparation and approve proposals for submission to the Global Fund
and to monitor the implementation of all approved grants. The CCM
focuses on performance by linking Global Fund resources to the
achievement of clear, measurable and sustainable results based upon
agreed monitoring indicators.
Membership in the CCM is broadly
representative of a variety of stakeholders, each representing an active
constituency with an interest in one or more of the funded disease
areas - HIV, TB and Malaria. The participation of communities,
particularly those infected and directly affected by the three diseases,
is critical for both the development of proposals and the
implementation of the awarded grant funds.
Newly-elected representative of the
civil society constituency, Dr. Dawn Stewart is the Founder and current
Chief Executive Officer of CPIC’s Monique’s Caring Hands which provides
support to over 200 families from various regions in Guyana affected by
HIV, provides women with empowerment sessions in various communities
throughout Guyana, and overall works as a non-governmental organisation
for sustainable development for women, single parent-homes and families.
She has years of experience in Public
Policy, Health, Education, Nursing Counseling, Psychology, Risk
Management and Business Management; both in the national and
international arena focusing on mostly health and education, US foreign
policy in the Caribbean and the role of the US in international
organizations, NGOs and financial institutions.
Dr. Stewart herself has conducted
workshops on behavioral change for various entities and groups,
including the Guyana Fire Department, prison officers and nursing
students, established the Guyanese Women Roundtable in 2014, and
facilitated and coordinated human rights training programmes for women
across Guyana, alongside her other responsibilities as CEO of CPIC’s
Monique Caring Hands.
Now serving as the Representative on the
CCM for the civil society constituency, Dr. Stewart pledges to work
with other representatives for the betterment of all Guyanese. “I also
pledge to use my creative, energetic and visionary leadership with
demonstrated experience in communication, management, advocacy, and
community involvement to advocate on behalf of the affected communities
and Guyana as a whole,” she added.
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