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June News Wrap: 2.6 million people protected from blinding trachoma in Ethiopia 

30.06.2026
Aryam Teklay, a young girl in a school uniform, holds up a small cup of medication during a trachoma treatment campaign, with classmates lined up behind her.
© Adwa Pictures/Light for the World
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June 2026 News Wrap — our work, successes and impact 

Mass Drug Administration treats millions for trachoma in Ethiopia 

More than 2.6 million people have been protected from blindness caused by trachoma after a Mass Drug Administration (MDA) led by Light for the World and the Tigray Region Health Bureau. 

Funded by The Task Force for Global Health, the MDA campaign took place from January to June, protecting communities in 41 districts spanning Mekelle, the Eastern Zone, Central Zone and Northwestern Zone. 

Saba Gebre, a young girl in school uniform, receives medication from a health worker as classmates wait in line during a trachoma Mass Drug Administration in Tigray, Ethiopia.
Saba Gebre lines up with classmates to receive medication against blinding trachoma. Children like Saba, and Aryam Teklay (pictured above), and adults received treatment in the MDA. © Adwa Pictures/Light for the World

The campaign formed part of the SAFE strategy for eliminating trachoma, focusing on the “A” or antibiotics component, to treat active trachoma infections and reduce transmission within communities. By bringing medication directly to households and villages, the campaign ensured access to essential eye health services, including for people in remote areas. 

The MDA is the latest effort in Light for the World’s mission, alongside partners, to work towards eliminating trachoma in Ethiopia by 2030.   

A health worker prepares medication beside Berhane Teklay and his two children, Lidiya Berhanu and her younger brother Temesgen Berhane, outdoors during a trachoma treatment campaign.
The MDA reached people who live in remote areas, including Lidiya Berhanu, 8, pictured with brother Temesgen Berhane, 2, and father Berhane Teklay. © Adwa Pictures/Light for the World

Inclusive education milestone in Burkina Faso 

A teacher stands smiling beside Léonel Kiendrébéogo, who wears headphones and works at a laptop displaying exam questions. Other students work at laptops nearby in the classroom, in Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso.
Léonel Kiendrébéogo works on an assignment with his new laptop. © Alexandra Compaore/Light for the World

Students with visual impairments have sat accessible exams alongside sighted peers in a successful inclusive education trial in Burkina Faso. 

The milestone came through Light for the World’s “Optimising Digital Learning” project, implemented with partner National Union of Burkinabe Associations for the Promotion of the Blind and Visually Impaired (UN-ABPAM).  

The pilot, in schools across the country, saw 30 teachers trained to create accessible content and use accessibility tools, with 49  learners with visual impairments provided with laptops and 78 trained to use the numeric keypad. 

An inclusive mock exam at Gounghin Co-ed High School, in Ouagadougou, proved accessible assessments are possible and can work at scale. 

Léonel Kiendrébéogo, a student at Nongtaaba Inclusive High School, says using a computer has helped him complete work without relying on others. 

“Before, I often depended on classmates to dictate notes or assignments to me. However, many students are not used to working with people with disabilities, and they may not always have the patience needed for braille writing, which can take more time,” he says. 

“Using a computer has made studying much easier and faster. I can write at my own pace and work more independently. It makes me so happy and gives me a strong sense of independence.” 

Jannet Aude Compaore wears headphones and types on a laptop in a classroom, smiling at the camera. Other students work at laptops in the background. They are in a classroom in Ouagadougou.
Jannet Aude Compaore has improved her grades since using a computer. “It allows me to work faster, complete assignments more easily and improve my learning,” she says. © Alexandra Compaore/Light for the World

Children see bright future after eye surgeries in Mozambique 

Luísa Macamo and Leona Mondlane sit together smiling, each with a protective eye patch following cataract surgery, wearing hospital gowns.
Luísa and Leona following their cataract surgeries. © Adérito Maundze/Light for the World.

Luísa Macamo made it through four years and countless hospital trips before finally receiving the cataract surgery she needed.  

The 13-year-old, initially diagnosed in 2022, recently had a successful operation at Maputo Central Hospital to restore sight in one of her eyes. The outreach was carried out through the “1, 2, 3 I can see!” child eye health programme led by Light for the World. 

“I’ve already forgotten what it’s like to see with this eye. I can’t wait to see the result,” Luísa said before the surgery. 

“I want to go back to studying better, playing and being able to do everything without difficulty.” 

Leona Mondlane, 10, also received a life-changing cataract surgery.  

“Because the doctor who took care of me helped me a lot, I want to help other children too,” Leona said. 

“When I get older, I want to be an ophthalmologist to be able to help others the same way I was.” 

The “1, 2, 3 I can see!” programme advocates for promotion of eye health in schools and works to reinforce healthcare systems, improving early detection and provision of quality eye care services for children.    

Luísa Macamo and Leona Mondlane stand together outdoors in Maputo, smiling, with Luísa's arm around Leona's shoulders, after their cataract surgeries.
Luísa Macamo and Leona Mondlane received vital cataract surgeries as part of the outreach campaign. © Adérito Maundze/Light for the World

Light for the World calls for systems change at Inclusive Africa Conference  

Light for the World CEO Marion Lieser speaks into a microphone at a podium, with an Inclusive Africa Conference 2026 banner behind her.
Light for the World CEO Marion Lieser at the Inclusive Africa Conference. © Dennis Hombe/Light for the World

Light for the World experts have called for disability-inclusive employment efforts to focus less on individual skills and more on fixing broken systems. 

Speaking at a roundtable at the Inclusive Africa Conference in Nairobi, CEO Marion Lieser said: “The skills gap is actually a systems gap. Work must be dignified, fulfilling and meaningful.”  

Inclusive Employment Expert Iram Bahawal echoed this, noting that the real question is whether inclusion tools actually shape how organisations hire, support and develop talent. 

Youth leader Isaac Muhumuza, from the We Can Work programme, called for people with disabilities to be involved in designing potential solutions from the start: “We need to recognise young people with disabilities as experts in their own right,” he said.

“When we design without them, the final product often does not fit their reality.”

Three people smile as they pose together behind an Inclusive Africa Conference 2026 photo frame at the event.
Richard Mativu (left), Country Director at Light for the World Kenya, with fellow attendees at the conference. © Dennis Hombe/Light for the World

The conference, held under the theme “Accelerating Digital Accessibility and AI Solutions for Africa’s Future,” brought together employers, governments, technology leaders and organisations of persons with disabilities. 

Light for the World launched the We Can Work Africa Disability Inclusion learning platform and introduced the #PlayTheFullDeck campaign, encouraging employers to recognise the strengths people with disabilities bring to the workplace. 

In case you missed it… 

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  • Ambrose Murangira, Senior Expert, Disability Inclusion, reviewed the Uganda national budget through an inclusion lens in an article for Daily Monitor
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