Beating COVID-19 with solidarity

Sierra Leone boosts social mobilization and communication

UNDP Africa
5 min readAug 11, 2020
Mohamed Jalloh (left), a community mobilizer from the Association of Persons Living with Albinism, raises awareness of COVID-19 prevention measures in a neighborhood of Freetown, Sierra Leone’s capital city.

“We don’t wear masks not because we don’t want to, but because we cannot afford to buy them.”

For Haja Marie Kondeh, president of the influential Freetown Market women’s association in Sierra Leone, receiving around 1,000 cloth masks for distribution among the most vulnerable market women was a godsend. Locally made masks cost up to a dollar, which is more than most of the women traders can afford.

The masks were part of a 52,000-batch procured by UNDP as part of a mass awareness campaign on COVID-19 prevention measures, ‘Corona fet na wi all fet’. Meaning, in Krio language, ‘The fight against COVID-19 will be won with solidarity’, the campaign aims to promote behavior change and to encourage safe public health measures.

Corona fet na wi all fet’ is a mass awareness campaign on COVID-19 prevention measures.

“In such unprecedented [times], there are two essential things we can do– support the health care system to address and cope with cases, and enhance risk communication and community engagement to help slow and reduce the spread [of the disease],” said Dr. Samuel Doe, UNDP’s Resident Representative in Sierra Leone.

The Government declared face masks mandatory in public areas early May. UNDP helped design the campaign and procure more than 5,000 posters, 800 placards, 27 banners, 300 megaphones and batteries, and public address systems.

A community-led campaign

To help enforce the use of face masks and social distancing practices, the campaign used a community-led approach by reaching out to influencers groups and individuals like Haja or George Wyndham, a renowned Paralympic medalist.

George Wyndham, a renowned Paralympic medalist in Sierra Leone, and a team of community mobilizers advocated for the campaign in the streets of the capital city, Freetown. Photo: Helen Mayelle

“The pandemic stopped me from doing what I love most — sports. It stopped me from earning an income to take care of myself and my family. [Now] I am using my influence in a good way for my country and myself.” — George Wyndham

George is especially concerned by the plight of youth in Sierra Leone during the pandemic: “I know what it was like for them during the war and then Ebola. With COVID-19…and the poverty worsened by this disease… we have been experiencing some violence in some places, but we must bear, stay strong, stick together, hope and work for the best — that is my message to them”.

“We want to emerge from the other side of this fight stronger and walk into a brighter future,” says Wahid, a young Sierra Leonean artist known for his advocacy work on peace and development.

Wahid and other musicians across the country championed the campaign by creating and performed a national theme song to bolster the fight against COVID-19. Sang in the various languages spoken in the country, the song encourages solidarity and emphasizes the need for unity and social cohesion.

“The country loves these young men and women. The idea was just right to have them join and lead the fight,” says Solomon Jamiru, national spokesperson for the COVID-19 response in Sierra Leone, and also the brains behind the concept of the song.

UNDP’s support was both technical — with the development of a social mobilization and community engagement strategy for the rapid roll-out of the campaign -, and financial, with $253,000 re-directed from programmatic budgets funded by the organization’s core resources.

TheCorona Fighters’

These financial resources also helped recruit the ‘Corona Fighters’, around 1,000 community volunteers who were rapidly trained on risk communication and community engagement. Most of them had already participated in the Stop Ebola campaign in 2014–2016. Trainings were organized by National COVID-19 Emergency Response Center and approved and implemented by the WHO, alongside the Ministry of Health and Sanitation.

Around 1,000 community volunteers, the ‘Corona Fighters’, were rapidly trained on risk communication and community engagement, and reached out to almost 16,000 people in businesses, households and communities.

“I got a message on my phone that I had received some money for my first week of community volunteering. Honestly, I was not expecting payment … I knew I was doing it for my country. But this [allowance] will take our family a long way, things are very difficult for us right now with COVID,” says Samuel Mattia, a community radio anchor who volunteered to sensitize communities in the Western Area Rural, after violent riots against national security forces erupted following national lockdowns.

The initiative helped reach close to 16,000 people in businesses (formal and informal), and in households and communities who, for the most part had not adhered to the prevention measures, either due to denial, affordability or lack of access to water and soap for handwashing.

“I could not choose to buy a mask over food for my family,” said Fatmata Kamara, a market trader in Kroobay, Freetown.

The distribution of cloth masks to vulnerable market women, here in Kroobay, Freetown, was a godsend.

Text and photos: UNDP Sierra Leone / Helen Mayelle

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UNDP Africa

Advancing sustainable human development in 46 Sub-Saharan African countries.