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Habitat for Humanity Sierra Leone

Country Profile

This program is currently inactive

 

 Existing Housing in Sierra Leone

 

Habitat for Humanity discontinued its program in Sierra Leone in 2006. Currently, there are no plans to build houses in this region in the near future.

Why Habitat was needed in Sierra Leone

Sierra Leone is a country rich in valuable natural resources, including diamonds. However, a decade of brutal civil war has ravaged the country, leaving 50,000 people dead, countless amputees and many more people displaced. The country has plummeted to one of the poorest in the world and is hugely reliant on international aid.

Since peace was declared in 2002, Sierra Leone has faced the huge challenge of reconstruction. Parts of the country remain without electricity or running water and huge piles of rubbish can be seen on the streets. To add to the country’s problems, in July 2005 a massive flood caused many more citizens to lose their homes.

Normal life is gradually being restored, but for most, survival is still a struggle. Unemployment is high and living conditions are poor, with tin shacks being commonplace and five or six people often living in one room.

How Habitat helped

Habitat for Humanity Sierra Leone had a working partnership with World Relief since 2005, but the partnership came to an end in 2006. During this period, Habitat for Humanity and World Relief managed to house 600 returning refugees in the district of Kailahun. This project also included those families who were in temporary housing in one of the communities worst hit by the floods which struck in 2005.

Participation by families in rebuilding their own, permanent homes provided them with not only a physical but psychological anchor to face the daunting challenge of re-establishing livelihoods lost after so many years in exile and conflict.

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Facts about Sierra Leone

Location: Western Africa, bordering the North Atlantic Ocean, between Guinea and Liberia

Population
: 5.3 million

Languages
: English, Krio (Creole language derived from English) and a range of African languages

Climate
: Tropical

Religions
: Islam, Christianity, indigenous beliefs

Government
: Constitutional democracy

Economy
: Main exports are diamonds, cocoa, coffee, fish