Please turn JavaScript on
Cordaid International icon

Cordaid International

Subscribe in seconds and receive Cordaid International's news feed updates in your inbox, on your phone or even read them from your own news page here on follow.it.

You can select the updates using tags or topics and you can add as many websites to your feed as you like.

And the service is entirely free!

Follow Cordaid International: Working in and on fragility - Cordaid International

Is this your feed? Claim it!

Publisher:  Unclaimed!
Message frequency:  0.2 / day

Message History

A rare strain of Ebola with no approved vaccine or treatment is spreading rapidly across the Democratic Republic of Congo, pushing an already fragile humanitarian system to its limits. As cases cross regional borders, aid organisations, including Cordaid, are on the ground, training health workers, distributing protective equipment and running community awareness cam...


Read full story

In Afghanistan’s Herat and Nangarhar provinces, many people have found a measure of relief through humanitarian programmes, implemented by local organisations and supported by Cordaid. Their stories reflect the scale of need facing hundreds of thousands of returnees and Afghans in vulnerable circumstances in a country struck by multiple crises.

Abdul ...

Read full story

Refresher training for frontline health workers aims to improve patient retention, data quality and access to care in some of South Sudan’s most fragile settings.

The training for frontline health workers. Photograph: Orlando Moses/Cordaid

In South Sudan, military health facilities do far more than care for soldiers. Across a country where confl...


Read full story

A rare strain of Ebola is spreading rapidly across the Democratic Republic of Congo and into neighbouring countries. With no approved vaccine or treatment available, and the WHO having declared its highest-level health emergency, the outbreak is testing the limits of the international response. Here is what is happening, and what actions Cordaid is taking.


Read full story

In the arid plains of northern Kenya, a group of women farmers has found an unlikely ally in the fight against climate change: the cricket. Their initiative has grown into a small but thriving enterprise, one that points towards a more sustainable future for pastoralist communities.

Agnes Lekomet (left) at her farm in Samburu, northern Kenya. Photogra...

Read full story