In Burkina Faso, conflict has forced over two million people from their homes—one in ten citizens. With nearly a third of health facilities shut down, women and girls are giving birth without safe care. To help, the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) and the United Nations Volunteers (UNV) sent 25 national UN Volunteer midwives to five regions hit hardest by violence. In just two months, they delivered over 1,400 babies, provided 2,700 prenatal checkups, and treated 200 emergency complications.
Among them are Agathe Ouoba in Diapaga and Élodie Toe in Titao—midwives saving lives and restoring dignity where it’s needed most.
Abandoning is not an option: In Diapaga, in the eastern Tapoa region, Agathe Ouoba is a midwife on the front lines. In May 2025, gunfire hit the town and shut down the health center. But life kept moving. “We were told to stay home,” Agathe says. “Women still went into labour. We helped one mother deliver at home using just a single-use ventouse. She and her baby made it.”