Propel Organization

Propel Organization

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27/05/2026

As we celebrate this blessed season of Eid al-Adha / Kurban Bayramı, may our hearts be filled with peace, compassion, forgiveness, and gratitude. May we continue to uplift one another, care for those in need, and remember that even the smallest act of kindness can change someone’s life.

May this special time bring blessings to your homes, strength to your families, healing to the hurting, and hope for a brighter tomorrow for our beautiful Sierra Leone.

Eid Mubarak / Happy Kurban Bayramı

25/05/2026

CLEANING TODAY. PROTECTING TOMORROW.

After the very first rains, the true reality of plastic pollution in our communities became visible once again.

Huge amounts of plastic bottles, waste, trees, bushes, and rubbish were carried through drains and waterways toward the Atlantic Ocean. But this time, something different happened.

The Project EcoVision barrier at Lumley Creek stopped the waste before it could enter the ocean.

What you are seeing in these images is not just a cleanup operation — it is the direct protection of our marine environment, beaches, fisheries, tourism sector, and future generations.

Over the past few days, our cleanup teams and local fishermen have worked tirelessly inside difficult and dangerous river conditions to remove the trapped waste from the barrier and river system. The collected rubbish is then transported and disposed of at authorized dumping sites to ensure responsible waste management.

This is why environmental protection does not stop at collecting rubbish. It continues through:

- River cleanups
- Proper waste disposal
- Community participation
- Environmental awareness
- Long-term sustainability efforts

Every bottle removed from this river is one less bottle entering the ocean.
Every cleanup protects marine life.
Every action matters.

Project EcoVision is more than a barrier.
It is a movement for cleaner rivers, safer oceans, healthier communities, and a better future for Sierra Leone.

A very special thank you to all the cleanup teams, fishermen, community members, and partners supporting this initiative. Your hard work and dedication are making a real difference.

OUR CREEKS.
OUR OCEAN.
OUR FUTURE.

05/05/2026

Project EcoVision public awareness message

Poor waste management does not stop at the roadside. It does not end in the gutter. It does not stay where it was dumped.

When waste is thrown into open spaces, drains, road edges, or informal dump sites, the rains carry it into gutters, streams, rivers, and creeks. From there, it flows into the ocean. And once it reaches the sea, it does not simply disappear. It returns to us again — washed back onto our beaches, trapped in our wetlands, scattered along our shoreline, and broken down into smaller plastics that continue harming the environment. Around 80% of marine pollution comes from land-based human activities, including poorly managed solid waste, and plastic commonly reaches the sea through rivers and waterways. (UNEP - UN Environment Programme)

In cities like Freetown, blocked drains and unmanaged waste are not only an eyesore — they are a serious public safety issue. UNDP noted that the build-up of plastic in drainage systems worsened flooding impacts in Freetown, and similar assessments have linked blocked drains and poor drainage maintenance to repeated urban flood risk. (Exposure)

1. Health Impacts
Poorly managed waste creates breeding grounds for mosquitoes, flies, and rats. This increases the risk of disease outbreaks, especially where drains are blocked and wastewater is allowed to stagnate. Open dumping and unsafe burning also expose communities to smoke, toxic particles, and contaminated water, which can contribute to respiratory illness, diarrhoeal disease, skin infections, and other serious health problems. (World Health Organization)

2. Environmental Damage
Plastic bags, bottles, and other waste materials block gutters and waterways, slowing the natural movement of water and increasing the risk of flooding during heavy rains. Waste that is burned pollutes the air. Waste that is dumped on land can release contamination into soil and water. Waste that escapes into rivers does not stay there — it travels downstream into the ocean, where it damages fish habitat, pollutes coastal ecosystems, and contributes to the wider marine plastic crisis. UNEP describes marine litter and plastic pollution as a growing threat “from source to sea.” (UNEP - UN Environment Programme)

3. Economic Costs
Poor waste management is also expensive. Flooding damages homes, roads, businesses, and public infrastructure. More illness means more medical costs for both families and government. Dirty cities and polluted beaches weaken tourism appeal and reduce economic opportunity. Recyclable materials that could have been recovered are instead lost in open dumping, drainage channels, and coastal pollution. (Exposure)

4. Social Consequences
The burden of poor waste management is not shared equally. Lower-income communities are often the first to suffer from blocked drains, polluted surroundings, unmanaged dump sites, and flood damage. Children and informal waste pickers may also face injury and long-term health risks when waste is not handled safely. (UN-Habitat)

This is why Project EcoVision matters.
What is dumped in the streets today can become flooding tomorrow, river pollution the next day, ocean plastic after that, and beach pollution soon after. Waste moves through the whole environment. That is why proper waste collection, safe disposal, cleaner drains, protected rivers, and stronger public awareness are all connected.

If we fail to act now, the cost will be paid in our health, our streets, our rivers, our ocean, our beaches, and our future.

Project EcoVision believes that cleaner communities, protected waterways, and responsible waste management are not optional — they are essential.

01/05/2026

Today, on 1 May, we honour the strength, dedication, and resilience of the workers of Sierra Leone.

From our farmers, nurses, teachers, drivers, builders, cleaners, community workers, entrepreneurs, and every hardworking hand across our nation — we say thank you.

Your work builds families.
Your work strengthens communities.
Your work moves Sierra Leone forward.

As we celebrate Labour Day, let us continue to work together for a cleaner, stronger, more inclusive, and more prosperous Sierra Leone.

Happy Labour Day, Sierra Leone.

With pride and commitment,
Propel Organisation
Skill Pool Sierra Leone

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Freetown