EOC-DICAC, in partnership with EECMY-DASSC, has successfully provided emergency Multi-Purpose Cash Assistance (MPCA) to landslide-affected households in Gachbaba Woreda, Gamo Zone, through the Emergency Life-Saving Project for Landslide-Affected Communities.
Funded by the ACT Alliance with a total consortium budget of USD 100,000 (USD 50,000 for each implementing partner), the project was implemented from April 1 to July 31, 2026, to address the urgent humanitarian needs of communities affected by the devastating landslide.
The intervention targeted 320 vulnerable households across the kebeles of Mazo Doysa, Kodo, Tsayte, and Laka, providing three rounds of Multi-Purpose Cash Assistance. Each household received ETB 11,350 per month from April to June 2026, totaling ETB 34,050 per household over the three-month assistance period.
The cash assistance enabled families to address their most pressing needs with dignity and flexibility. Beneficiaries primarily used the support to purchase food, meet essential household expenses, and begin restoring their livelihoods, demonstrating the effectiveness of cash-based humanitarian assistance in emergency settings.
Under the consortium arrangement, EOC-DICAC and EECMY-DASSC each supported 160 households, collectively reaching all 320 targeted households with timely and life-saving assistance.
The project aims to alleviate the immediate suffering of landslide-affected communities by enabling families to meet their basic needs, reduce their vulnerability, and support their recovery during a critical period.
EOC-DICAC remains committed to working with humanitarian partners and donors to provide timely, dignified, and effective emergency assistance to vulnerable communities across Ethiopia.
Genet Asefa, a 24-year-old mother from a remote area of North Wollo, has endured an extraordinary journey of hardship. Her daughter, Amen, was born with a birth defect known as clubfoot a condition that twists a baby’s foot out of its normal position.
Instead of compassion, Genet was met with stigma and harmful myths. Some community members told her that Amen’s condition was a punishment or caused by her own actions during pregnancy. Feeling ashamed and isolated, Genet hesitated to vaccinate her child. “I was afraid,” she recalls. “I thought the vaccine might make her leg worse.” Later, she admits, “It was my mistake. I didn’t understand how important vaccination was.”
Determined to seek treatment for her daughter, Genet traveled to Bahir Dar. But life there was painfully difficult. With no family, home, or income, she survived by sleeping on cold floors, renting space for 20 birr a night, or spending nights on the street. For over two years, she struggled to care for Amen in unimaginable hardship.
When the CDC-SIPI project, Health Extension Workers (HEWs), found Genet and Amen on the streets they learned that Amen, now four years old, had never received any vaccines a zero-dose child. Through patient discussion and reassurance, the HEWs earned Genet’s trust and helped her access vaccination services for her daughter. ReadMore/success
“The feeling of having my child immunized,” Genet says proudly, “is greater than anything else.” The fear and shame that once burdened her heart have been replaced with knowledge, confidence, and hope.
After receiving the first round of vaccines, Genet was invited to a Community Conversation (CC) session organized by EOC-DICAC and the local health team. There, she found acceptance and strength. Today, Genet is an active CC member and a strong advocate for vaccination. She tells every mother to let their child vaccinated around Gordema Gebriel Church.
With the support of the Health Extension Workers, Genet has found her voice and now stands beside them, reaching children who are too often forgotten. Her story is a reminder that compassionate healthcare not only saves lives but restores dignity and hope.
When a coalition of committed partners joined forces to reach Ethiopia's most remote villages, they didn't just bring vaccines they brought hope to communities that had been forgotten for years and demonstrated how collaborative action can bridge critical equity gaps in immunization coverage.
Through GAVI's Alliance commitment to reaching zero-dose children and the strategic support of funding management partners Oxford Policy Management (OPM) and Manniondaniel, the groundwork was laid for a transformative intervention through RISE project strengthened health systems to reach ZD children.
EOC-DICAC's through community-based implementation capacity aiming to reach isolated populations a multi-stakeholder partnership was formed to address this equity challenge.
Mariam Ware, a mother of two from Mismo village in Garbrare Kebele, Burji Zone, represents the transformation happening across these remote communities. Living with her husband as subsistence farmers, Mariam had watched helplessly as both her daughters—2-years-old Bereket Samuel and her one and half year sister; suffered from continuous coughing and repeated illnesses.
Neither of them had ever received routine immunization services before the mobile team's arrival. "My children often fell sick. They struggled with repeated coughs. For me as a mother, watching them suffering was heartbreaking," Mariam shared, her voice heavy with the memory of those difficult times. read more>Success
Mela’eke Selam Lealem, a dedicated priest deeply invested in the well-being of his community, resides In the Awi Zone, Banja Woreda, Bassa Kebele.