article / May 2, 2025
A New Dawn for Mercy and Her Community: How Child Sponsorship Transformed Lives in Isoka district, Northern Zambia
Life in Kapililonga community was once a cycle of hardship, especially for families like Mercy Nachande’s. At 31 years old, Mercy recalls how difficult it was to meet basic needs.
press release / May 8, 2025
World Vision to Hand Over New Child-Friendly Facility to Lesotho Mounted Police Service
World Vision Lesotho hands over a Child-Friendly Police Office in Pitseng to strengthen child protection and access to justice for children.
article / April 21, 2025
No Child Left Behind: Dona’s Story of Displacement and Discovery
Dona, a sponsored child from Haiti, flees gang violence with her family. World Vision locates and supports them with essential aid and renewed hope.
article / May 8, 2025
A Safe Lesotho for Every Child: Why Child Protection Must Be at the Centre of Our National Agenda
A call to prioritize child protection in Lesotho through child-friendly spaces, stronger systems, and collective action to keep every child safe.
publication / May 6, 2025
Mid-Term Update: Country Strategy 2023–2027
World Vision Cambodia Updates Country Strategy (2023–2027)
publication / May 2, 2025
2024 Global Annual Report, World Vision International
World Vision International's annual report, highlighting the impact of our work across Fiscal year 2024.
article / April 11, 2025
Alinka’s story
The 7.7 earthquake, that hit Myanmar on 28 March caused widespread damage to homes, schools, health centres and public infrastructure in Mandalay and Sagaing. The earthquake compounds an already dire humanitarian situation where nearly 20 million people already needed humanitarian assistance across the country due to prolonged conflict, recurring natural disasters and economic collapse. Children and their families who have lost their homes are now dealing with extreme heat and expected rain or thundershowers, further deepening those already critical needs, especially for shelter.
World Vision is providing live-saving relief assistance to the children and their families affected by the earthquake. Through our humanitarian efforts, both immediate relief and long-term recovery, we aim to support 500,000 people, including 85,057 boys and 86,902 girls. As of 8 April 2025, we have reached 22,063 people affected by the earthquake, including 6574 children (3,830 girls, 2,744 boys).