CBO aimed at eliminating discrimination against women and girls by amplifying their voices in socioeconomic devpt activities that affect their day to day lives.
Participants and stakeholders at the WROS Convening on Early Preparedness and Coordination to Advance Women’s Political Participation ahead of the 2027 General Elections, united in commitment to strengthening collaboration, protection, and meaningful inclusion of women in political leadership.
:Gelian Hotel,Machakos
@unwomenkenya
#CBTS2025 | 9 Days To Go! ⏰
@bajeti_hub is set to launch the Kenya CBTS 2025 to check on how Public Budgets impact the daily lives of citizens across all 47 counties. 🇰🇪
📅 Thursday, 4th June 2026
⏰ 8:00 AM - 11:00 AM
📍 Zoom
Join 👇
🔗 https://t.co/9DWZT1j469
#CBTS2025
🚨 #CBTS2025 | 10 days to go! ⏰
@bajeti_hub is launching the Kenya County Budget Transparency Survey 2025. It’s about accountability & how budgets impact our daily lives across all 47 counties! 🇰🇪
Join to see how your county performed.
📅 Wed, 4th June
⏰ 8-11 AM
📍 Zoom
Four women killed in Kitui in one month. Four lives stolen. Four families grieving. It is devastating and it must concern all of us.Femicide is a crisis we cannot normalize. Every ignored threat, every act of violence and every silence creates room for the next tragedy
The TFGBV Gap Analysis validation meeting by CRAWN Trust with the support from African Women’s Development Fund, brought together key stakeholders to address the growing threat of Technology Facilitated Gender Based Violence (TFGBV) in Kenya. The presentation highlighted how Kenya’s rapid digital transformation while empowering, has also created new avenues for abuse that disproportionately impact women and girls. Drawing from extensive legal reviews, multi-sector consultations, and powerful survivor testimonies, the analysis exposed critical systemic gaps, including the absence of a clear, gender-responsive legal definition of TFGBV, limited enforcement and digital forensic capacity, fragmented institutional responses, and a lack of survivor-centered remedies such as content takedown mechanisms and compensation frameworks. The findings further revealed how emerging technologies like AI, deepfakes, and online anonymity are accelerating harm while existing laws struggle to keep pace. Survivors’ lived experiences underscored the human cost ranging from reputational damage and economic loss to mental health challenges and forced relocation often compounded by stigma and inadequate support systems. The report calls for urgent, coordinated action, including strengthening and harmonizing legal frameworks, investing in digital investigation capacity, establishing integrated multi-agency response systems, and advancing policies that prioritize survivor dignity, protection, and recovery. Ultimately, the meeting emphasized that addressing TFGBV is a shared responsibility requiring collaboration across government, civil society, and technology actors to build safer, more inclusive digital spaces in Kenya and set a global standard for action.
@awdf01@CREAWKenya@CAID_Kenya@UAFAfrica@CAREinKenya@UraiaTrust@FamilyMediaTV
Faith leaders continue to shape gender justice and inclusive governance driving real change from the grassroots.Sustained action is key. @KwidOrg remains committed.Grateful to @crawntrustkenya & all partners for the support.
The closure meeting of the Faith in Action project was a powerful moment to pause, reflect, and appreciate a journey that brought people together around a shared vision of fairness, dignity, and inclusion. Over the past several months, the project created meaningful spaces for faith leaders, community members, and partners to openly engage on sensitive but important issues like gender-based violence, harmful cultural practices, and the need for greater inclusion of women in leadership. Through interfaith dialogues, community forums, and media conversations, voices that were once hesitant grew more confident, and conversations that were once avoided became part of everyday discussions.
One of the most impactful aspects of the project was equipping faith leaders with practical tools and knowledge, helping them integrate messages of equality and respect into their teachings and community work. There was also a noticeable shift in mindset, with more leaders stepping forward as advocates for change and encouraging positive roles for men in advancing gender justice. As shared during the meeting, this was not just about activities completed, but about real change in attitudes and perspectives. The closure was not an end, but a reminder of the progress made and a renewed commitment to continue building more inclusive and just communities.
@CAID_Kenya@CREAWKenya@FamilyMediaTV
Budget Facilitators & Champions from 8 counties met virtually to track progress on public participation action plans. Together, they shared updates, tackled challenges and strengthened strategies to ensure citizen voices shape the 2026/27 budgets. @NecBudget@KituiAssembly
Happy International Women’s Day 2026.
Today we celebrate the resilience & leadership of women and girls.When we invest in women, communities thrive.
Let’s move beyond words and ensure commitments are fulfilled through action!
#IWD2026#RightsJusticeAction#ForAllWomenAndGirls
📺 Tune in today from 8:00 pm for a conversation on Women's Leadership in Kenya and how to break the barriers hindering women from leadership. In line with this year's International Women’s Day 2026 theme: . "Rights. Justice. Action. For ALL Women and Girls", the discussion will highlight how women’s leadership is a constitutional right protected under the Constitution of Kenya 2010, yet many women still face barriers such as cultural stereotypes, political violence, online harassment, and limited access to resources. The conversation calls for stronger support from institutions, media, political parties, and communities to create safe and inclusive spaces for women and girls to lead and participate in decision-making.
Youtube link https://t.co/5DiHaPdxsu
@CAID_Kenya@FamilyMediaTV@InKitui
Every year on International Women’s Day, the world celebrates the achievements of women while renewing the commitment to gender equality. The 2026 theme, “Rights. Justice. Action. For ALL Women and Girls.,” calls for collective action to support women and girls by ensuring equal opportunities, protection, and representation in all spaces. While women continue to play a vital role in leadership, communities, and development, many still face barriers such as discrimination, violence, and limited access to decision-making spaces. This day is therefore both a celebration of progress and a call to action for governments, institutions, and communities to support women’s leadership and advance rights and justice for all women and girls.
@KariobangiSJC@WeWorldOnlus@InKitui@CREAWKenya@carecanada@UraiaTrust@CAID_Kenya@UAFAfrica @
TFGBV gravely endangers women in Kenya. Cyberstalking, deepfakes, and impersonation weaponise technology to silence voices , demanding urgent and coordinated action to protect women’s digital rights, safety, and freedom of expression.
TFGBV threatens women in Kenya.cyberstalking, deepfakes and impersonation silence voices. Honored to have been engaged in the conversations where @crawntrustkenya urges coordinated action for women’s digital safety.@KwidOrg
International Day of Zero Tolerance for Female Genital Mutilation, observed on 6 February, highlights the urgent need to end FGM and protect the rights and health of girls and women. More than 230 million survivors live today, with 4.5 million girls at risk each year. While progress has been made, it remains fragile due to funding cuts, medicalization and growing resistance. Ending FGM requires sustained, multisectoral action, strong health systems, community engagement and survivor-centred care. With only four years left to meet the 2030 target, renewed commitment and investment are essential to prevent millions more girls from harm.
@CAID_Kenya@CARE@UraiaTrust@CREAWKenya@wee_hub@UAFAfrica
Congratulations Madam ED . KWID congratulates you on your appointment as Co-Chair of the GBVSWG This is a well deserved recognition of your exceptional leadership, depth of expertise and unwavering commitment to survivor centred, evidence based and rights driven GBV responses.
Big congratulations to our Executive Director, Wangechi Wachira, on her appointment as Co-Chair of the Gender-Based Violence Sector Working Group (GBVSWG) 🌸✨
This is a powerful and timely opportunity to advance survivor-centred, evidence-based, and rights-driven responses to gender-based violence which are values that sit at the heart of CREAW’s work.
We are incredibly proud of this milestone and excited about the impact this leadership will bring to the national GBV agenda.
Onwards, together. 💜
@Wwangechi_leah@gender_ke@PsgAnneWangombe
#GBVPrevention #FeministLeadership
The CFSP decides who benefits and who is left behind. Women’s voices must shape Kitui’s budget.
Inclusive, gender responsive budgeting starts with meaningful participation.@NecBudget@KiemaFaith@JosephMutu69138@KituiCountyGovt
According to UNFPA 2024 TFGBV findings there has been Online defamation of (21.9 %), cyberbullying (19.1 %), and non-consensual image sharing (17.8 %) are among the most common forms of technology-facilitated gender-based violence reported by students in Nairobi’s higher-learning institutions.
For female students, the most prevalent forms of abuse were online defamation (30.4 %) and non-consensual pornography (24.4 %), highlighting how young women disproportionately face targeted online attacks that damage their reputation, dignity, and safety.
#16DaysOfActivism #EndDigitalViolence