Netherlands Embassy presents PPE to Solidaridad towards COVID-19 response and resilience in local communities

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The Kingdom of the Netherlands Embassy has handed over personal protective equipment (PPE) to Solidaridad, an international civil society organisation, at a ceremony in Accra.

The equipment worth €10,000 includes face shields, surgical masks, FFP2 masks, gloves, gumboots, overalls, hair covers and goggles. Other items are infra-red thermometers, methylated spirits, bleach and alcohol-based hand sanitisers.

Solidaridad will distribute the equipment to seven health facilities that can be accessed by cocoa and oil palm growing communities in the Eastern, Central, Ashanti, Ahafo and Western North Regions of Ghana, as part of the organisation’s COVID-19 response.

The beneficiary health facilities include: Sefwi Wiawso Government Hospital; Goaso Government Hospital; Dunkwa Government Hospital; St. Francis Xavier Hospital, Assin Fosu; Suhum Government Hospital; Sabronum Health Centre; and Wiawso Health Centre.

With the increasing COVID-19 infection rate in Ghana, the gesture by Solidaridad and its funding partner, the Embassy of the Kingdom of the Netherlands, is meant to complement efforts by government and other entities in curbing spread of the virus among frontline healthcare workers.

The Dutch Ambassador to Ghana, Ron Strikker, assured of the Embassy’s commitment to support Ghana in diverse ways to manage the COVID-19 pandemic.

“As frontline workers lead the effort to deal with the pandemic, they are exposed to health and safety risks which cannot be overlooked. It is in this light that we are working with Solidaridad to contribute toward the protection of these frontline workers operating near communities where the Netherlands government supports cocoa and oil palm programmes,” Mr. Strikker said.

For his part, the Regional Director of Solidaridad West Africa, Isaac Gyamfi, said while Solidaridad in collaboration with other stakeholders is working to improve the lives of farmers in Ghana, the organisation is also sensitive of the need to contribute in the fight against COVID-19.

“We are already doing a lot to reach beneficiaries of our cocoa and oil palm programmes with remote extension support and the supply of personal protective equipment amid the pandemic. But we also need to properly equip healthcare workers, who are a critical resource for securing the health and well-being of the public – including our beneficiary farmers – to carry out their work in a safe environment,” Mr. Gyamfi explained.

The distribution of equipment by Solidaridad is part of a broader COVID-19 response and resilience plan being implemented in Côte d’Ivoire, Ghana, Liberia, Nigeria and Sierra Leone where the organisation implements cocoa, gold and oil palm sustainability programmes.

In these countries, except Nigeria, the Netherlands government funds the Cocoa Rehabilitation and Intensification Programme (CORIP) implemented by Solidaridad to transform the cocoa sector of the countries. In Ghana, the Netherlands and Swiss governments jointly fund the Sustainable West Africa Palm Oil Programme (SWAPP) aimed at building a thriving and resilient oil palm economy.

Solidaridad has over fifty years of experience in developing solutions to make underprivileged communities more resilient. We currently work in over 40 countries, on five continents, through eight independently supervised regional offices. In West Africa, Solidaridad implements sustainability interventions in Cote d’Ivoire, Ghana, Liberia, Nigeria and Sierra Leone in the cocoa, gold and oil palm value chains.

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