The Orphans and Vulnerable Children (OVC) programme strengthens community-based child safeguarding mechanisms to protect children against all forms of violence while promoting access to basic child rights such as education, protection from violence and birth registration. MASO creates conducive, supportive and stimulating environments where vulnerable children can thrive and reach their full potential through comprehensive protection, education, and psychosocial care initiatives.
Learn MoreThe Grandmothers Project supports elderly caregivers, particularly grandmothers raising grandchildren orphaned by HIV/AIDS. This initiative provides psychosocial support, income-generating activities, and access to social services while strengthening community resilience through capacitating caregivers with positive parenting skills and various income generating activities that suit each community's needs. By empowering grandmothers, we ensure vulnerable children receive the love, guidance, and stability they need while maintaining their caregivers' health and dignity.
Learn MoreCare to Share Project is a project designed to empower vulnerable young people through community-based vocational skills development and life-skills training. Recognizing the barriers that disadvantaged youth face in accessing formal training opportunities, the project adopted a community skills outreach model that brought learning directly into local communities. Through partnerships with locally available skilled craftsmen and artisans, young people were equipped with practical vocational skills that could help them secure sustainable livelihoods and become economically self-reliant. Beyond vocational training, the project also focused on equipping young people with essential knowledge and life skills, including entrepreneurship, financial literacy, sexual and reproductive health awareness, and self-care practices. By addressing both economic and social vulnerabilities, the project sought to reduce young people's exposure to risks such as sexual exploitation, unemployment, poverty, and HIV infections.
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