|
JANE ONYANGA-OMARA | USA TODAY
Updated 4:23 a.m. GMT+9 Apr. 19, 2018
LONDON – Scotland could become the first country to ban "period poverty" to help women and girls who can't afford feminine hygiene products such as maxi-pads and tampons.
The issue is rarely spoken about in public, but it affects millions of women and girls around the world, including the United States.
At least 500 million women and girls are estimated to lack the means to manage their monthly periods, according to a 2015 report by UNICEF and the World Health Organization. Many drop out of school or miss days of class as a result.
In Britain, the problem came to the forefront with a 2015 petition calling for the government to ax the "tampon tax" — a 5% sales tax on sanitary products. The government voted the following year to scrap the tariff, but it hasn't been dropped — caught up in Brexit negotiations to separate from the European Union.
In the USA, most states charge sales tax for women's pads and tampons. Nine states have dropped the tampon tax — Minnesota, Illinois, Pennsylvania, New York, Massachusetts, Maryland, New Jersey, Connecticut and Florida, according to NPR. Seven other states have introduced such legislation, most recently Nebraska, Virginia and Arizona.
An attempt in California to eliminate a tax on tampons failed in January.
Women for Independence, a Scottish grass-roots group, published a survey in March that said nearly one in five women in Scotland have been unable to afford sanitary products and improvised with such items as newspapers, toilet paper, socks and old clothes.
One in 10 British girls and women ages 14 to 21 cannot afford sanitary protection, according to the humanitarian charity Plan International U.K.

A woman washes a menstrual cup under a tap.
THE CUP.ORG/MARTIN LOF
Monica Lennon, a lawmaker from Scotland's opposition Labour Party, plans to introduce a bill that would allow anyone in need to get free sanitary products at food banks, schools, colleges and universities. A six-month pilot program began in July.
“Women in general don’t talk about their periods and how they manage them," Lennon told USA TODAY. “I’m glad it’s out in the open.”
She noted that condoms and other forms of contraception can be accessed free in Scotland and the rest of Britain, so “why can’t we get that for pads and tampons?”
Lennon said that once the problems were explained to her male colleagues, they were “quite horrified” and then supportive.
Progress has been made in Wales, where the Welsh government announced in March $1.4 million to help address period poverty.
Tina Leslie, a public health worker from Leeds in northern England, started Freedom4Girls to deliver washable, reusable sanitary packs to Kenyan women and girls two years ago.
“Last year, a colleague of mine who knew what I was doing in Kenya said: ‘Do you realize it’s happening in your own city? I’ve got five girls who are missing school because their parents don’t have money to buy sanitary protection.’ I thought, 'Let me do something about it.'"
The charity now collects and delivers environmentally friendly washable pads and menstrual cups to schools, refugee agencies and women's shelters in Leeds and has set up stations so the public can donate products in supermarkets and offices.
"If you can’t afford food, you can’t afford sanitary protection," Leslie said.
Camilla Wirseen set up the Cup Foundation to provide menstrual cups to girls in Kenya. She says the foundation has helped about 15,000 girls with the cups, which last for 10 years.
Wirseen, from Sweden, lives in Kenya's capital, Nairobi. She said she founded the organization in 2015 after learning that up to half of the girls in the Nairobi slums have sex in return for pads.
“Poverty is poverty wherever you are. If you can’t afford it, you can’t afford it," Wirseen said. “The menstrual cup shouldn’t be something you hide."
Men have an important role to help end period poverty. “We try to take away the taboo of menstruation — for me that means including men," Wirseen said.
In India, Arunachalam Muruganantham was shocked to find his wife used rags during her periods. That prompted him to invent a simple pad-making machine so women in rural areas could make their own affordable sanitary protection. His story has been turned into a Bollywood movie, Pad Man.

Indian college students take photographs holding sanitary pads to create awareness in Government Sarojini Naidu Girls College in Bhopal, India.
SANJEEV GUPTA, EPA-EFE
“Why aren’t we talking about it?" Leslie said. "Half the population in the world menstruates. Boys want to know what their girlfriends are going through, and men want to know what their wives are going through."
Originally Published 10:12 p.m. GMT+9 Apr. 18, 2018
Updated 4:23 a.m. GMT+9 Apr. 19, 2018
Share your thoughts
by Taboola
Language Expert Shares The Secret To Learning A Language In 20 Mins A DayBabbel
They Took The Same Picture For 40 Years. Don't Cry When You See The Last!TopGentlemen.com
If You Have An Android, This Strategy Game Is A Must-HaveGet it on On Google Play | Vikings: War of Clans App
12 Signs You Are In A Healthy RelationshipWomensArticle
More Stories

Police: Uber driver fatally shoots passenger on Denver interstate
MIKE SNIDER, TREVOR HUGHES | USA TODAY
UPDATED 6 HOURS AGO
DENVER — An Uber driver fatally shot a passenger early Friday morning while the two were in a vehicle on an interstate in Denver.
Denver police spokesman Sonny Jackson said preliminary information points to a conflict between the driver and passenger. He says shots were fired by the driver on Interstate 25 shortly before 3 a.m Friday.
The driver, identified by police as Michael A. Hancock, 29, is being held without bond in a Denver jail on suspicion of first-degree murder. Hancock told a witness the passenger, identified by the medical examiner as Hyun Kim, 45, assaulted him while they were driving, according to court records.
The initial police investigation snarled morning rush-hour traffic through Denver. I-25 is the primary north-south route through the city, and the closure of the southbound lanes until 8 a.m. Denver time forced drivers to battle heavy traffic through residential areas and the University of Denver campus, backing up vehicles into neighborhoods as commuters sought alternate routes.
Hancock’s mother, Stephanie Hancock, told KUSA-TV that he's been driving for Uber for a couple of years to make extra money. He also works at a youth group home as a counselor, she said.
Read the full article

A pedophile and white supremacist is running for Congress
WILLIAM CUMMINGS | USA TODAY
UPDATED 7 HOURS AGO
Nathan Larson, a man who advocates pedophilia, white supremacy and rape, and who served 16 months in prison for threatening to kill the president, is running for Congress.
The 37-year-old accountant from Charlottesville, Va., is running as an independent in Virginia's 10th congressional district. Larson identifies himself as a "quasi-neoreactionary libertarian." His platform includes drug legalization, the elimination of all regulations regarding firearms and "putting an end to U.S. involvement in foreign wars arising from our country's alliance with Israel."
Larson's unorthodox candidacy further complicates an already wild race in Virginia's 10th. Six Democrats, including one who said President Trump poses as much of a threat to democracy as Osama bin Laden, are vying for the nomination to take on Republican incumbent Rep. Barbara Comstock. Comstock, considered one of the more vulnerable Republicans in this year's midterms, is facing a primary challenge from the right by financial planner Shak Hill.
In 2008, Larson sent a letter to the Secret Service in which he threatened to kill either George W. Bush or Barack Obama, according to The Washington Post. The following year, he pleaded guilty to threatening to kill a president and served 16 months in federal prison.
Before seeking a congressional seat, Larson ran for the Virginia House of Delegates as an independent. His candidacy became an issue in last year's Virginia gubernatorial race, because Larson is only able to run thanks to then-Gov. Terry McAuliffe, a Democrat, restoring civil and voting rights to former felons.
Read the full article

Husky goes on one-night animal 'killing spree'
JOEL SHANNON | USA TODAY
UPDATED 16 HOURS AGO
A husky in Utah killed 20 chickens, one cat, two ducks, two rabbits, a turkey and a goose early on Memorial Day, according to the Toole Transcript Bulletin.
The paper reports the owner of the dog is facing misdemeanor charges in Tooele, Utah and that the husky's attacks occurred at two locations on a single night.
Fox 13, Salt Lake City reports one of those locations was a a backyard petting zoo for children with disabilities run by Trip Kiss and his family.
Kiss provided video of the incident to the station. That video shows the husky, a 4-year old named Nikita, trotting into the dark with animals in its mouth.
The station reported that the husky scattered the dead animals in a two-block radius around the attacked homes.
"He was chewing our goose ... he dug out the rabbits in their enclosure," Kiss told the station.
In a Thursday Facebook post, the station said that local authorities will decide the fate of the dog and it could be returned to its owners, if it is not deemed dangerous.