UNOPS

In Yemen's critical healthcare crisis, The United Nations Office for Project Services (UNOPS) and KfW are enhancing services by training 243 healthcare workers, empowering them to provide life-saving care amidst significant resource challenges.

Two women look at the screen of their mobile phones as they use an app for sex education in Myanmar.

Limited healthcare infrastructure in remote and conflict-affected areas and lack of comprehensive sexual education in Myanmar's remote and conflict-affected areas pose challenges for youth. Online platforms have become crucial for accessing health information, but they also contain misinformation. Ma Shet Ne (Don't Be Shy), a digital program launched in 2019 by BBC Media Action and supported by the UNOPS-managed Access to Health Fund, is successfully delivering sexual and reproductive health education to youth through social media channels.

elderly woman at blown out window

In Kharkiv, Ukraine, UNOPS and the government of Japan are working to restore housing damaged in 2022, bringing hope and a sense of normalcy to a city still under fire.

women going to markets

Feeder roads are helping improve living standards for more than 1.2 million women, men and children in the country's Greater Bahr El Ghazal region.

rice packaging facility

The 'Rice value chain improvement' project, will improve the livelihood of rice farmers and increase the productivity of Ghana’s rice crops, reducing the country’s dependency on rice imports.

students using computers

Renewable energy solutions are providing a more reliable source of electricity for millions of people in Yemen – and improving their access to essential services.

child at water tap

Paraguay’s indigenous communities are some of the most vulnerable and marginalized people in the world. UNOPS is helping them overcome the everyday challenge of access to safe drinking water.

Amid recent restrictions in Afghanistan, Mumtaz, Ahmad, and Zeyba's lives were upended, but a World Bank and UNOPS project offers a lifeline through community-driven employment and support initiatives.

Since 2017, a wave of violence has interrupted education, destroyed crops and public infrastructure, impacted livelihoods and forced people to flee their homes in northern Mozambique. More than 670,000 people are still displaced and left an estimated 1.3 million people in urgent need of humanitarian assistance. Attacks by armed insurgents have caused damage to infrastructure and disrupted the provision of basic services. The Northern Crisis Recovery Project is responding to these urgent humanitarian and development needs.

The Northern Crisis Recovery Project is focusing on humanitarian aid and infrastructure reconstruction to support internally displaced persons and enhance community stability amidst ongoing conflict.

In the Maldives, UNOPS partnered with the Islamic Development Bank to deliver state-of-the-art medical drones.

In Zanzibar, UNOPS is helping upgrade science labs in secondary schools with funding from KOICA. Watch to learn how this is helping students like Illham to reach their goals.

In the aftermath of Cyclone Idai, World Bank launches recovery project in Zimbabwe to rebuild communities and foster long-term resilience. 

Empowered women lead school restoration amidst Ukraine's conflict, offering hope and opportunities for a brighter future.

UNOPS has partnered with the World Bank to support Ukraine rebuild essential logistics infrastructure.