Goto main content

In Mali, HI helps poor households to meet their own needs

Inclusion
Mali

In Mali, drought and conflict are ravaging the region and threatening the population’s food security. In Léré, HI is supporting poor households to gain financial independence.

Five women in a semi-circle sitting on a mat smile and laugh.

Women members of a savings group in the town of Léré, Timbuktu, Mali. | © MAEFILMS / HI

In the Sahel, drought, intensified by climate change, and the conflicts ravaging the region have generated food insecurity and risks of malnutrition for many communities. To address this situation, HI and its partners are supporting them to develop sustainable economic activities that will ensure the financial independence of each household.

Accompanying households to obtain financial independence

In the town of Léré, in the Timbuktu region, HI set up a committee whose role was to identify the community’s poorest households. These households benefited from monetary assistance for three years running.

The organisation also helped them to develop economic activities such as livestock breeding, agriculture, craft-making or small trade, so that each household could generate a sustainable source of income. These initiatives were monitored by community coaches, members of the village trained by HI.

This was the case for the business run by Aya, a 39-year-old single mother of four. Aya ran a little eatery but she was struggling to earn enough income from her business. HI provided Aya with a grant of 120,000 CFA francs that enabled her to renew her equipment and buy more food for cooking. Today, through the income generated by her little diner, Aya is able to provide for her household and pay for her children's school and medical expenses. She is now planning to use some of her savings to carry out repairs on her house.

"Thanks to HI's support, I have been able to save some money and carry out many of my personal projects. In particular, I am starting work on my house, which was really falling into a very worrying state of disrepair. Before, I had many customers but not enough money to serve them all... I was losing a lot of my customers as a result. Now I have been able to increase my production and become autonomous in my activity," says Aya, happily.

Strengthening the population’s resilience

Meeting of a village savings and loan association in Léré © MAEFILMS / HIHI has also helped people save money through the development of village savings and credit associations, such as the one to which Aya belongs to. These associations enable community members to lend to each other to strengthen their businesses, undertake new activities and diversify their sources of income with the support of the group. HI has trained the members of these associations in financial education and provided them with the basic equipment necessary for their activity: a register, three jars, a safe and three wallets.

In Mali and Mauritania, HI and its partners are implementing a project to improve the living conditions and resilience of vulnerable populations by providing them with skills and knowledge that will improve their daily lives in a sustainable way. This four-year project will support more than 2,600 households, i.e. approximately 15,000 people, thanks to financial support from the European Union. In addition, social cohesion and nutrition activities will benefit another 69,000 people. For this project, HI is working in partnership with other humanitarian actors: Solidarités International (SI), International Rescue Committee (IRC), Appui au Développement Intégré des Communautés Rurales (ADICOR) and Association Malienne.

Date published: 20/04/23

COUNTRIES

Where we work

Read more

“I want people to be aware of the risk of putting civilians in the middle of war”
© HI
Emergency Inclusion Rehabilitation

“I want people to be aware of the risk of putting civilians in the middle of war”

Marwa is living in Germany. She fled the conflict in Syria where she was injured and is now using a wheelchair. She tells how she has coped with her disability.

“School has become a scary place”
© HI
Emergency Inclusion

“School has become a scary place”

Salam is the director of the Boys Elementary School in Jenin refugee camp in the West Bank. She tells us about the dangers of teaching in a context of armed violence.

In Laos, HI is supporting 200 children with autism to access education
© V. Teppalath / HI
Health Inclusion

In Laos, HI is supporting 200 children with autism to access education

HI is supporting the inclusion of children with developmental disabilities, including autism, in the provinces of Champasak and Houaphan.

FOLLOW US