publication / February 26, 2026
Water Sanitation and Hygiene Capacity statement
Our presence in Somalia since 1993 has enabled us to establish and maintain strong relationships with key stakeholders in the WASH sector. This includes the Ministry of Energy and Water Resources (MoEWR), a crucial partner, as well as other line ministries at federal, regional and state levels, the private sector, local partners, the Somalia WASH Cluster, UN agencies, and community actors.
The sector’s model seamlessly integrates with other sectors to contribute to child wellbeing outcomes
•WASH and health & nutrition
•WASH and livelihoods
•WASH and education
•WASH and child protection & participation
Our WASH sector is led by a multidisciplinary team of professional civil and water engineers, sanitation and hygiene specialists, M&E experts, and GIS specialists, collectively driving the sector’s vision and strategic objective
article / March 4, 2026
Clean Water, Safe Births, and Healthier Futures: Transforming Lives in Shamputa and Katukwe
In the rural communities of Kapiri Mposhi, access to clean water and quality maternal health services has long been a daily struggle. For expectant mothers, health workers, learners, and families, limited Water, Sanitation and Hygiene (WASH) infrastructure meant long walks to unsafe water sources, heightened risks of infection, and added pressure on already stretched health facilities.
article / February 19, 2026
From Fear to Dignity: How Access to Clean Water and Safe Sanitation Transformed Senate’s Life
Access to clean water and safe sanitation through World Vision’s WASH program transformed Senate’s health, safety, and everyday wellbeing.
article / February 26, 2026
A Brighter Path: How Improved WASH Enriched Yanern’s World
A Brighter Path: How Improved WASH Enriched Yanern’s World
article / March 4, 2026
From Long Walks to Flowing Hope: WASH Transforming Lives in Chipili District
For years, life in one community within World Vision Zambia’s Chipili Area Programme was defined by scarcity, exhaustion, and illness. Access to safe water was a daily struggle. Children and families walked kilometres upon kilometres to the nearest water sources, often shallow wells or streams shared by long queues of community members. The consequences were severe: frequent water‑borne diseases, missed school days, fatigue, and declining academic performance.
article / February 25, 2026
World Vision’s Integrated Support Restores Dignity and Learning for 312 Learners in Matlameng Area Programme
From water scarcity and unsafe sanitation to dignity and thriving learning spaces — see how World Vision’s integrated programs changed life for 312 learners in Matlameng.
press release / February 11, 2026
Urgent Call Launched to Ensure Access to Safe Water, Sanitation, and Hygiene to Save the Lives of Thousands of Children
Press release highlighting Aqua nexus a plan to expand access to clean water for vulnerable families in Latin America and the Caribbean
article / February 3, 2026
Clean Water, Happy Learners: Gampakalala Primary’s Journey to Hygiene and Hope
With clean, reliable water now accessible, Gampakalala Primary School has entered a new chapter, one of hope, dignity and joy for both learners and the wider community.