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World Humanitarian Day 2025: Honoring Dr. Fatima Ali, A Courageous Medical Woman at the Frontlines of Care

Dr. Fatima smiling warmly, embodying resilience and hope

This year’s World Humanitarian Day is marked under the theme: “Strengthening global solidarity and empowering local communities.” Around the world, humanitarians continue to risk their lives to reach those most in need. Among them is Dr. Fatima Ali Margan Faragalla Lado, a South Sudanese medical doctor with over seven years of experience in public health, immunization, and emergency response.

Her story is one of courage, conviction, and compassion. Known among her colleagues at Access for Humanity (AFH) as the doctor who steps forward when others hesitate, Dr. Fatima has earned respect for her willingness to go where health workers are most needed, even to hard-to-reach and insecure areas of Koch, Panyijar, Old Fangak, Fashoda, Nasir, and Ulang.

For Dr. Fatima, her journey is rooted in dignity and compassion. The decision to pursue humanitarian health work was deeply personal. Growing up and working in rural South Sudan, she witnessed the devastating toll that limited access to healthcare had on children and mothers. “Access is not just about logistics, it is about dignity,” she explains.

Her conviction was cemented when, while serving in Nasir, she saw preventable diseases like polio leave children with lifelong disabilities simply because vaccines never reached them. Later, while coordinating projects in Fashoda and Ulang, she saw firsthand how fragile health systems deprive mothers of basic services. These experiences became her mission: ensuring that no child in South Sudan should be denied protection against diseases we know how to prevent.

Humanitarian work in practice is not glamorous. For Dr. Fatima, it often means long hours in flooded, insecure, or isolated areas, far from family and modern comforts. She emphasizes that the reward comes in small but profound victories. She recalls travelling with a small medical team to a village in Ulang County that had never seen a health worker. “The first newborn to receive a vaccine that day brought his mother to tears of gratitude. She told us no one had ever offered her family such care,” she narrates.

Moments like these remind her that a committed team, no matter how small, can transform communities and instill trust in health systems.

Dr. Fatima and team are preparing to send out teams to vaccinate in hard-to-reach floods villages of Rubkona County

Dr. Fatuma and team are preparing to send out teams to vaccinate in hard-to-reach flooded villages of Rubkona County.

The risks she faces are real, yet she faces them with courage. While serving in Jonglei, Upper Nile, and Unity States, Dr. Fatima has been caught in crossfire and evacuated on three different occasions from conflict zones. Reaching remote villages in Panyijar or Old Fangak has sometimes required crossing crocodile-infested rivers in small canoes. Yet what sustains her is the solidarity of the very communities she serves. “Often, youth escort us through contested areas so we can reach children safely. Their determination gives me courage,” she says. Her resilience is not just personal. It is fueled by the collective will of communities who refuse to give up on protecting their children, even in the harshest of circumstances.

Dr. Fatima’s professional impact goes beyond frontline delivery. As Project Coordinator and Gender Focal Person at AFH, her impact has been transformative across multiple counties in South Sudan. Through tailored community engagement strategies, she successfully improved immunization coverage by 20% in Koch, Panyijar, and Old Fangak, ensuring more children were reached with life-saving vaccines. In Fashoda County, her leadership and commitment drove coverage rates from 45% to an impressive 88%, achieved by training vaccinators and mobilizing communities to embrace immunization.

Beyond immediate results, she invested in sustainability by training over 200 vaccinators and strengthening county health departments, leaving behind a skilled workforce and stronger systems even in fragile contexts. Central to her approach has been the integration of gender-sensitive strategies, guaranteeing that women and children not only gained equitable access to services but did so in safe and supportive environments that respected their dignity.

Her work reflects this year’s World Humanitarian Day theme: building systems that empower local communities, especially women, to lead healthcare delivery.

On this World Humanitarian Day, Dr. Fatima calls for solidarity and protection of women like her. She reminds the global community, “Solidarity matters more than ever. Please remember the small, remote communities that are hardest to reach but most in need. Support the health workers on the ground with training, supplies, and protection.”

Her story is not only one of service but also a call to action. When medical women like Dr. Fatima step up with courage, the challenges they face must be met with decisive support. Protecting humanitarians, and particularly women on the frontlines, is essential if they are to continue empowering communities and saving lives.

Dr. Fatima inspires us at SSWIM and embodies the essence of humanitarianism: service rooted in empathy, resilience in the face of danger, and solidarity with the most vulnerable. She is a hero who must be protected, not celebrated in words alone, but supported through policies, resources, and protection mechanisms that ensure women like her can continue this life-saving work.

As SSWIM, we spotlight Dr. Fatima not only to honor her courage but also to reaffirm our belief that when women in medicine rise with bravery, the world must rise with them in solidarity.

This World Humanitarian Day, we celebrate Dr. Fatima Ali and all women humanitarians. May their courage inspire us to build stronger systems, empower local communities, and strengthen global solidarity.

Prioritizing Breastfeeding: Stories from the Frontline of Care.

Last week, the world marked World Breastfeeding Week under the theme: “Prioritise Breastfeeding: Create Sustainable Support Systems.” While the official week ended on Thursday, the call to action it inspired must echo far beyond a single calendar slot.

At SSWIM, we not only joined the conversation, but we also added voices that matter. Beyond convening two inspiring female medical doctors and a male medical student for a lively radio talk show at Baraka FM during the week, we also gathered powerful first-hand testimonies from two South Sudanese female medical doctors, Dr. Manuella Michael Towe and Dr. Athieng Luelbai Abdalatif. Their experiences illuminate why breastfeeding must be supported through deliberate systems, not left to chance.

For Dr. Manuella, breastfeeding was both beautiful and bittersweet. “It’s a great experience, one that is lovely and emotionally rewarding but also overwhelming at times,” she says. Complications after a preterm twin delivery meant she often expressed milk to feed her babies within hours, an adjustment that demanded both resilience and resourcefulness.

Dr. Athieng describes her journey with warmth: “I enjoyed breastfeeding my child. It strengthened our bond and brought joy as I watched my baby grow.” Her reflections underscore the emotional richness that makes breastfeeding more than nutrition. It is connection, comfort, and care intertwined.

While their will to breastfeed was strong, both doctors, like any mother, faced hurdles that shouldn’t be faced alone. For Dr. Manuella, preterm delivery limited the ability to breastfeed directly. Dr. Athieng experienced breast tenderness in the early days with her firstborn, which required medical intervention and persistence.

These challenges are a reminder that breastfeeding success often hinges not on a mother’s determination alone, but on the systems surrounding her from healthcare to workplace to community, and whether they have the conditions to make breastfeeding a success.

Support systems made a clear difference in their experiences. Dr. Athieng credits her husband’s encouragement and her colleagues’ understanding as pivotal. She highlights how policies like lactation and nursing rooms, on-site childcare, and extended maternity leave make it possible for working mothers to continue breastfeeding without compromise.

For Dr. Manuella, who navigated early motherhood outside formal employment, the husband’s, family’s, and community’s support proved essential. Her experience shows why breastfeeding advocacy must extend beyond workplaces to reach mothers in every circumstance.

There are policies that enable, and these are needed to make breastfeeding a priority and a success. From paid maternity leave to accessible breastfeeding facilities, the two doctors highlight policies that are already effective. However, they also emphasize the importance of greater alignment with global recommendations.

Dr. Athieng calls for six months of maternity leave to match the World Health Organization’s (WHO’s) exclusive breastfeeding guidelines. Dr. Manuella advocates for embedding breastfeeding-supportive policies in every institution, from hospitals to government offices, so that no mother faces this journey unsupported.

As female healthcare professionals, both women see themselves as advocates from within the profession. Dr. Manuella educates mothers about both the joys and challenges of breastfeeding, urging them to seek help without shame. Dr. Athieng monitors and advises on breastfeeding practices, ensuring mothers have the knowledge to give their babies the best nutritional start. Their shared message to colleagues is: listen without judgment, collaborate across disciplines, and join forces to influence policies that protect and promote breastfeeding.

The two doctors have messages for the public. From Dr. Manuella: “As beautiful and beneficial as breastfeeding is, it comes with challenges. Mothers need understanding and support, not criticism.” From Dr. Athieng: “Recognise the nutritional and emotional benefits, and create environments where mothers can practice it freely and effectively.”

World Breastfeeding Week may be over, but the work continues. For SSWIM, these stories are not just reflections; they are evidence that sustainable breastfeeding support systems matter and change lives among even society’s seemingly privileged women. Whether it’s through radio dialogues, first-person storytelling, or direct policy advocacy, we remain committed to ensuring that breastfeeding is prioritised in homes, workplaces, and national health strategies.

As our motto reminds us: Empower to Save Lives,  when it comes to breastfeeding, empowering mothers is one of the most life-saving acts we can commit to.

At SSWIM, we not only joined the conversation, but we also added voices that matter. Beyond convening two inspiring female medical doctors and a male medical student for a lively radio talk show at Baraka FM during the week, we also gathered powerful first-hand testimonies from two South Sudanese female medical doctors, Dr. Manuella Michael Towe and Dr. Athieng Luelbai Abdalatif. Their experiences illuminate why breastfeeding must be supported through deliberate systems, not left to chance.