Responding to Protection Needs of the Most Vulnerable Populations and Strengthening Local Capacities for a Safer Environment

Responding to Protection Needs of the Most Vulnerable Populations and Strengthening Local Capacities for a Safer Environment

For nearly a decade, the North-West and South-West (NWSW) regions of Cameroon have been gripped by a violent socio-political crisis that has displaced hundreds of thousands, destroyed livelihoods, and destabilized entire communities. Once peaceful and productive, these regions have become humanitarian flashpoints marked by fear, displacement, and deep social fractures. The continuing hostilities have disrupted education, healthcare, and social protection systems, forcing families, especially women and children to rely on fragile coping mechanisms for survival.

According to humanitarian assessments, over one million people in the NWSW remain acutely in need of protection and assistance. Daily life is governed by insecurity: arbitrary arrests, abductions, gender-based violence, child exploitation, and widespread psychosocial trauma. For the most vulnerable—internally displaced persons (IDPs), women, adolescent girls, and children; the breakdown of safety nets has left them exposed to abuse, exploitation, and neglect. Many displaced families live in overcrowded settlements without access to clean water, education, or medical services. Children without birth certificates risk statelessness, exclusion from schooling, and denial of healthcare, perpetuating a cycle of invisibility and vulnerability.

Women and girls have borne a disproportionate share of this suffering. With men often killed, missing, or displaced, women have become both caregivers and breadwinners under extremely precarious conditions. Sexual violence, intimate-partner abuse, and early marriages have surged, while economic destitution pushes many into exploitative or high-risk survival strategies. The lack of medical care within the crucial 72-hour window after sexual assault has compounded trauma and left survivors without justice or recovery.

The erosion of protection structures and the psychosocial toll of violence have also taken a severe emotional and developmental toll on children. Many have witnessed killings or lost parents, leaving them traumatized, uneducated, and vulnerable to recruitment by armed groups or other forms of exploitation. The absence of psychosocial support and community-based protection has created a generation in distress, with limited hope for recovery.

Against this backdrop, the LUKMEF-IRC-ECHO project was conceived as a direct response to the escalating protection crisis. It sought to restore safety, dignity, and resilience among crisis-affected populations through an integrated approach combining Protection (ProL), Women’s Protection and Empowerment (WPE), and Child Protection (CP) services. The project’s justification rests on the urgent need to save lives, safeguard rights, and build local capacity for long-term resilience.

By addressing the intersecting vulnerabilities of displacement, gender inequality, and child protection gaps, the intervention provided a lifeline for 1,759 individuals, most of them IDPs, survivors, and at-risk children. It was not merely a humanitarian action. It was a moral and strategic imperative to rebuild hope and stability in a region where conflict had stripped people of both.

Responding to Protection Needs of the Most Vulnerable Populations and Strengthening Local Capacities for a Safer Environment

Start Date

20240613

End Date

20250731

Budget

30000

Donor

IRC, ECHO

Coordinator

Mr Nfor S

Sector

CP, Gender and Livelihood

Related Pillars

Related SDGs

Region

Localities

Meme and Manyu Divisions of the South-West Region.

Beneficiaries

1,759 unique individuals 106 urgent protection cases managed and closed 100% of GBV survivors received timely medical assistance within 72 hours, including 14 rape cases 675 children benefited 150 children received birth certificates 75 adolescent girls empowered along with their caregivers Conducted multiple staff trainings, parenting sessions, and legal awareness sessions
Key results achieved include: 106 urgent protection cases were managed and closed, covering survivors of human rights violations, gender-based violence (GBV), and at-risk children. 100% of GBV survivors received timely medical care within the critical 72-hour window, including the management of 14 rape cases. 675 children benefited from psychosocial support (PSS) sessions that helped them build emotional resilience, personal safety awareness, and coping skills. 150 children received legal assistance for birth certificate establishment, ensuring access to education and healthcare. 75 adolescent girls and their caregivers were empowered through the Girl Shine program, gaining life skills and income-generating abilities such as making Ankara slippers and fascinators. Continuous awareness sessions, staff training, and legal education improved community knowledge and strengthened local protection networks.
Persistent insecurity in the North-West and South-West regions limited movement, community outreach, and regular follow-up with beneficiaries. High demand for livelihood support far exceeded available resources, particularly among displaced women and GBV survivors seeking financial independence. Limited access to remote communities due to poor road conditions and security restrictions delayed activities and case referrals. Psychosocial needs remain overwhelming, with few specialized mental health professionals available locally. Underreporting of GBV and child abuse cases continued due to stigma, fear, and lack of trust in formal systems.
ntegrated protection programming works best. Combining psychosocial, legal, and empowerment interventions produced stronger and longer-lasting impact than isolated services. Timely response saves lives. Ensuring that GBV survivors receive medical care within 72 hours proved essential for effective recovery and reducing long-term trauma. Community inclusion increases sustainability. Engaging parents, caregivers, and local authorities in awareness and legal support improved acceptance and ownership. Psychosocial support is crucial in crises. Addressing mental health and trauma was as vital as meeting material needs, especially for children and women. Skills development enhances protection. Empowering adolescent girls economically reduced their risk of exploitation and early marriage.
Scale up livelihood and economic empowerment programs to meet the growing demand, especially among women and IDPs, by providing vocational training and start-up kits. Expand the Girl Shine program to reach more adolescent girls during school holidays and critical risk periods. Enhance community-based protection mechanisms by strengthening local committees and training community leaders to identify and refer cases safely. Invest in mental health and psychosocial support (MHPSS) to build community resilience and prevent long-term trauma. Foster stronger coordination among humanitarian actors, health facilities, and local authorities to improve referral pathways and service quality. Advocate for legal reforms and awareness to ensure every child receives a birth certificate and enjoys access to education and basic rights. Partner with us: partnerships@lukmefcameroon.org

Success Stories

“A Name, A Future

How Birth Certificates Gave Children Their Identity Back”

In the small community of Baduma, nine-year-old Blessing had lived her entire life without a birth certificate. Like many children born amid conflict in Cameroon’s North-West and South-West regions, she was invisible to the system—unable to enroll in school or access healthcare. Her mother had fled violence in 2018, abandoning her home and documents. “Each time my friends talked about their school cards, I felt left out,” Blessing recalls softly.

The ongoing crisis crippled civil registries, leaving thousands of displaced families unable to declare births. This invisibility bred new layers of exclusion, trapping children in a cycle of neglect. To break it, LUKMEF, with IRC and ECHO support, launched a legal protection initiative under its integrated protection program. Through collaboration with local councils and registrars, the team verified data, guided parents through documentation, and delivered 150 birth certificates to children in Weme, Bolo Moboka, and Baduma.

On July 26 2025, as officials handed out the certificates door-to-door, mothers wept and children smiled shyly. “This document is more than a paper,” Blessing’s mother said, gripping it tightly. “It means my daughter can finally go to school.”

Today Blessing sits proudly in her classroom, her certificate pinned inside her exercise book. The initiative not only gave her an identity but also reaffirmed every child’s right to belong. Across Meme and Manyu divisions, families who once felt abandoned now have tangible proof that their children’s futures matter.

Healing Little Hearts : Restoring Childhood in the Shadows of Conflict”

Ten-year-old Jonas from Manyu Division barely spoke when LUKMEF staff first met him. After witnessing his father’s death during an armed clash, the boy had withdrawn completely. “He would stare into space for hours,” his mother said. “I feared I had lost him forever.”

Through the LUKMEF–IRC–ECHO project’s psychosocial support (PSS) component, Jonas joined group sessions with other displaced children. Facilitators used art therapy, play, and storytelling to help them express pain and rebuild confidence. “At first Jonas refused to speak,” said Martha, a child-protection officer. “But by the fourth session he began drawing his family—smiling.”

Over 675 children benefited from these activities across Meme and Manyu. They learned personal safety, conflict-management, and hope. For Jonas, drawing turned into laughter, then words, then dreams. “I want to teach other children to read,” he now says. His recovery inspired other parents to enroll their children in the sessions.

The program not only healed individuals—it rekindled a sense of normalcy in entire communities. Schools that once echoed with silence now ring with laughter again. For families who had lost everything, watching their children smile became the first sign that life could begin anew.

From Survivor to Leader : Amina’s Journey of Empowerment”

When Amina fled violence in Meme Division, she carried only a bag and her siblings. The trauma of displacement and abuse left her withdrawn and hopeless. “I thought my life was over,” she said.

Everything changed when she joined LUKMEF’s Girl Shine program, part of the IRC–ECHO initiative supporting adolescent girls. Over several months, she attended mentoring circles that combined life-skills training, confidence building, and discussions on gender-based violence. Amina also learned practical crafts—making Ankara slippers and fascinators—and received basic start-up materials.

“For the first time, I could make something with my hands,” she smiled. “Now I sell what I create and pay for my siblings’ books.” Among 75 girls who completed the training, Amina stood out as a peer leader. She now facilitates small group talks on rights and safety, mentoring others who have survived violence.

Her transformation mirrors that of many girls in Meme and Manyu who moved from silence to self-reliance. “We used to see victims,” said Theresa, a facilitator. “Now we see entrepreneurs and leaders.” The Girl Shine initiative proved that empowering young women with knowledge and opportunity does more than alleviate suffering—it restores confidence, purpose, and hope for an entire generation.