by Guest Author | Oct 29, 2020 | Child & Maternal Health, Global Health, Sierra Leone
“Infants, Children, and Women should not be allowed to die from preventable health crises and yet they do, every day,” says Heather Hill, Director of Communications and Marketing for CCIH member World Hope International…
by World Hope International | Jul 15, 2020 | Combating Infectious Diseases, Countering Human Trafficking & Gender-Based Violence, Global Health, Opportunities for Youth, Protection, Sierra Leone, Social Ventures, Water and Sanitation, Youth Empowerment
By teaching young women how to run their own soap making business, it can improve their access to the following four things…
by Haley Clark | Jul 8, 2020 | Countering Human Trafficking & Gender-Based Violence, Protection, Sierra Leone
Ending Child Rape in Sierra Leone By Haley Clark and Heather Hill Last month, a five-year-old girl in Sierra Leone died after being brutally raped. Why has this happened yet again, and what will it take to finally end the epidemic of rape in the country? “This...
by World Hope International | Jun 23, 2020 | Cambodia, Clean Water and Energy, Food & Water Security, Haiti, Liberia, Natural Resource Management, Sierra Leone, Water and Sanitation
In June of 2019, World Hope International (WHI) made a year-long commitment, along with 72 other organizations, to focus on Water, Sanitation, and Hygiene in Healthcare Facilities (WASH in HCF).
by World Hope International | Jun 16, 2020 | Combating Infectious Diseases, Enable the Children, Global Health, Outbreak Response, Sierra Leone
Food Distribution to Enable the Children Families The impacts of COVID-19 continue to be felt around the world and are often affecting the world’s vulnerable populations the most. As countries work to follow health guidelines, we are seeing unintended consequences on...
by World Hope International | Feb 11, 2020 | Countering Human Trafficking & Gender-Based Violence, Protection, Sierra Leone
“Exploitation like human trafficking is terrible because not only is it enslavement, but it also preys on the victim’s hopes for the future and steals their dreams, their trust, and their opportunity,” stated Saidu. “Now there is a message from the Government of Sierra Leone that this is not acceptable.”