Coca-Cola Foundation fights Covid through Red Cross

Home Business Coca-Cola Foundation fights Covid through Red Cross

The Coca-Cola Foundation made a significant contribution to Namibia’s fight against Covid-19 by donating close to N$1 million to the Namibia Red Cross Association in recent months.  

The donation was used to roll out a Covid-19 response project, particularly in the Khomas region where the Red Cross society deployed at least 100 volunteers to do health education, community engagement and distribute PPEs to some of the most vulnerable groups of the society. 
Speaking about the impact of the project to the broader Namibian society, Red Cross Namibia Khomas regional coordinator, Elizabeth Shakujungua, highlighted that they sought to assist the vulnerable communities in 10 constituencies in Windhoek by helping them curb Covid-19, on a household level. 

“What we also pushed to do was to reduce the risk of transmission of the virus and to contain the outbreak. 
Apart from this, our project has been instrumental in supporting public confidence in the system and outbreak response measures coupled with promoting effective community engagement, risk communication, behavioural change and hygiene promotion approaches that motivate action and promote participation while also reducing stigma and possible violence,” said Shakujungua. 
She added that owing to the engagement that has been undertaken by Red Cross, more people in the target communities have come to learn and understand the new virus and learned how to prevent themselves from contracting it. 

“Communities are taking precautions and the virus seriously. 
They are also now cognisant about the virus and how it affects them mentally and emotionally and the fact that it affects the economy of Namibia. Community engagement thus far has assisted the volunteers engaging the public with the support of other partners such as NGOs and the ministry of health.” 

Owing to Coca-Cola Foundation’s donor funds, Red Cross has also managed to provide Personal Protective Equipment namely facemasks, gloves, hand sanitisers, disinfectants, tippy tap containers and water Jerry cans.
 They have also made available and distributed health packs containing a face cloth, a bar of soap, two sets of gloves, masks and a 300ml sanitiser to community members. 

Visibility material for the volunteers as well as toolkits translated into the different vernacular languages to enable volunteers to be able to engage community members in their native languages were used as part of the engagement strategy.