Capital: Bissau
Area: 36,125 km²
Population: 1.4 million (July 2005)
Ethnic groups: Balanta, Fulbe, Manjaca, Malinke, Papel, small minority of Cape Verdeans
Official language(s): Portuguese
Religion(s): indigenous beliefs, Muslim, and Christian
Currency: 1 CFA franc = 100 centimes
SOS Children's Villages' activities in the country
Due to the prevailing poverty in Guinea-Bissau, the government approached SOS-Kinderdorf International in 1984 requesting the establishment of an SOS Children's Village in Guinea-Bissau. In the subsequent years, contacts between the secretary general of SOS-Kinderdorf International and the local authorities were established, and it was the ambassador of Guinea-Bissau in Senegal, José Baptista, in particular who promoted these contacts. In February 1988, a property in Mansiri, a suburb of the capital Bissau, was transferred free of charge to SOS Children's Villages. So, from 1991 to 1994 the first SOS Children's Village Guinea-Bissau with an adjoining kindergarten and primary school came into being. After construction had been completed at the beginning of 1994, two clerical sisters (Mrs Ronchi and Mrs Benedetti) assumed the task of staff training and child selection and initially directed the village. In May 1994, the first children could move into their new home.
During the official opening of the SOS Children's Village Bissau the state president of Guinea-Bissau expressed his appreciation of the SOS Children's Village work by renaming the road on which the SOS Children's Village Bissau is situated into "Rua Hermann Gmeiner". Subsequently, SOS Children's Villages received a second property in Gabú, a province capital, about 200 km from Bissau. However, due to the political and social unrest in 1997/98 the start of construction of the second SOS Children's Village was delayed. In June 1998, military operations began in the immediate vicinity of the SOS Children's Village Bissau. Children and staff were evacuated, first to the town of Gabú and then from October 1998 to July 1999 to the safe SOS Children's Village Bakoteh in the Gambia.
During the civil war SOS Children's Villages carried out a small emergency relief programme in order to provide the immediate neighbourhood of the SOS Children's Village as well as a public hospital with food, medicine and water during this difficult time and to assist them with the reconstruction of their houses. In 2000/2001 the SOS Children's Village Gabú, together with a kindergarten and a school, were finally built. At the same time an SOS Youth Village and an SOS Social Centre were established in Bissau on a neighbouring property of the existing SOS Children's Village. Besides a small first aid clinic, the social centre provides further training and various recreational facilities for young people. In December 2000 the national SOS Children's Village Association of Guinea-Bissau was founded as legal entity of the activities in the country. In 2003 SOS Children's Villages Guinea-Bissau strengthened its community assistance activities, e.g. SOS in Bissau constructed a water well to provide approx. 12,000 persons with clean drinking water.
At present there are three SOS Children's Villages in Guinea-Bissau, one SOS Youth Facility, three SOS Kindergartens, four SOS Hermann Gmeiner Schools and one SOS Social Centre.
Website of SOS Children's Villages Guinea-Bissau
(available in Portuguese)