Major progress in tackling child malnutrition in some of the world’s toughest countries could be thrown into jeopardy because military and security funding is taking precedence over basic child nutrition, the IF Coalition warns today. [read more]
Preparing thoroughly for disasters – such as providing cyclone shelters and warning systems – must be at the heart of future aid work, World Vision has said at an international conference on the issue. [read more]
More than a thousand people including scores of children have sought refuge in World Vision’s emergency shelters, as stormy weather from Tropical Cyclone Mahasen strike the Bangladesh coastline. [read more]
The damaging impact of tax havens on poor countries was thrown into sharp relief by new figures published today ahead of the G7 Finance Ministers’ Meeting showing that Cayman Islanders are on paper 320,000 times wealthier than Nicaraguans. [read more]
World Vision UK’s reaction to the 2013 Queen’s Speech which has just been delivered, setting out the UK Government’s legislative plans for the next year. [read more]
Aid agency World Vision UK is voicing concerns over reports that a government commitment to meet a 43-year old promise on foreign aid may not be enshrined in law. [read more]
The single most important thing governments can do to end global hunger is to support the millions of poor women farming tiny plots of land in developing countries, a new report by a group of international charities says today. [read more]
World Vision teams in the Philippines are helping determine the extent of the damage caused by Typhoon Bopha’s furious winds, flashfloods and landslides. [read more]
As signs appear that M23 forces in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo have started withdrawing from two towns captured from government troops, World Vision is calling for international support to make sure the conflict does not spur a vast humanitarian crisis. [read more]
Hundreds of thousands of children caught up in erupting violence in eastern DRC are at risk of being forcibly recruited into armed groups, said World Vision. [read more]
Fresh fighting as rebel forces advance from the north towards Goma, the capital of North Kivu province, has prompted 70,000 civilians to move from one camp to another camp located south of Goma. [read more]
Emily Cooper, a nutrition expert for World Vision UK, recently visited South Sudan where she had a chance to talk to women whose children are experiencing these serious health problems first hand. [read more]
read how World Vision is helping 10,000 families (50,000 people) out of the 22,223 families severely affected by the floods in the hardest hit cities [read more]
December 18, 2011, Cagayan de Oro City, the Philippines--As search and rescue efforts shift to relief assistance for the survivors of Mindanao's devastating flooding, World Vision's relief manager in Mindanao, John Salva, said today that water, ready-to-eat food and hygiene kits remain the most urgent needs for affected families. [read more]
Cagayan de Oro City, the Philippines--World Vision aid workers assisting survivors in the flooded communities of Southern Philippines described a scene of widespread devastation and grief today, after nearly 200 have been left dead and more missing after Tropical Storm Washi's landfall. [read more]
Representatives from more than 90 countries are gathering to discuss Afghanistan’s future. The Bonn Conference, which begins next week, is a real chance to put concrete steps forward in how to secure long-term peace and development in Afghanistan, as international troops prepare to withdraw by 2014. [read more]
As international leaders gather in Cannes for the first day of the G20, key staff from World Vision – which is based in 17 of the G20 countries - challenge the French President over his actions to help malnourished children in the developing world. [read more]