World Vision Ghana to launch five-year strategy to support 2.8 million vulnerable children 

Accra, April 1, GNA – World Vision Ghana will launch its National Strategy for 2026–2030, a five-year roadmap aimed at improving the lives of 2.8 million vulnerable children across Ghana by 2030. 

The strategy, themed “HOPE for Every Child – Harnessing Opportunities for the Protection and Empowerment of Every Child,” would be launched on April 15, 2026, at the Mövenpick Ambassador Hotel in Accra. 

The event is expected to bring together representatives from government institutions, development partners, faith-based organisations, civil society groups, the private sector, the media and community leaders to reflect on child well-being priorities and strengthen collaboration to address child vulnerability. 

In a statement, World Vision Ghana said the strategy reaffirms its commitment to ensuring that children, especially the most vulnerable, grow up loved, healthy, educated and empowered within safe and resilient communities. 

According to the organisation, the plan responds to emerging challenges affecting children while building on more than four decades of integrated development work in Ghana. 

The strategy, it said, aligns with Ghana’s national development priorities and the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals with areas include health, education, water, sanitation and hygiene, nutrition, gender equality, among others.  

World Vision Ghana said it aims to support system-level change through integrated programming and collaboration with government agencies, faith actors, communities and the private sector, placing children’s well-being at the centre of national development. 

The organisation said lasting improvement in children’s lives cannot be achieved by a single institution, calling on stakeholders to partner, innovate and invest in solutions that protect children, expand access to essential services and strengthen families and communities. 

The launch marks a milestone for World Vision Ghana, which has operated in the country for more than 40 years, and sets the direction for its work on child well-being over the next five years. 

GNA  

Kenneth Odeng Adade