Five areas. One commitment: keep people safe.
Each programme focuses on a different form of abuse — but they all share the same goal: prevention, early action, and support for those affected.

Sexual Abuse
We run community awareness sessions, train every staff member, and maintain clear reporting pathways. If someone comes forward, we listen, we protect their confidentiality, and we respond with care — not bureaucracy.
- Confidential ways to report
- Safeguarding training for all staff
- Response plans centred on survivors
- Community awareness sessions

Exploitation
Exploitation can be subtle — a boss withholding pay, someone using influence for personal gain. We monitor our programmes, set clear standards for partners, and work with communities to spot risks before they become crises.
- Regular risk assessments
- Clear standards for partners
- Awareness of economic abuse
- Simple reporting systems

Physical Abuse
Our team knows what to look for and what to do when they see it. Incidents are documented, referred to the right services, and followed up — because a report that goes nowhere helps no one.
- Clear incident procedures
- Training for staff and volunteers
- Links to medical and legal help
- Community protection networks

Neglect
Neglect is quiet — a child not fed, an elderly person alone without care. We work with communities to notice when someone is slipping through the cracks and coordinate support before it is too late.
- Identifying people at risk
- Regular welfare check-ins
- Working with local services
- Support for families and carers

Emotional Abuse
Words, isolation, and control can wound as deeply as physical violence. We train communities to recognise emotional abuse, offer safe spaces to talk, and connect people with counselling and mental health support.
- Counselling referrals
- Awareness of psychological harm
- Safe, confidential spaces
- Mental wellbeing support
You can make a difference
Report a concern. Volunteer your time. Partner with us. However you choose to get involved, you are helping protect someone's dignity — and that matters.

