Hand in Hand shortlisted for Charity Awards

Hand in Hand International’s target-smashing project with CARE International in Rwanda has been shortlisted for the 2017 Charity Awards, one of three finalists to advance in the International aid and development category.

The programme, which concluded in 2016, created 115,000 jobs versus a target of 80,000 and increased members’ incomes by an average of 75 percent, finishing 22 percent under budget.

Event organisers’ Civil Society Media announced the shortlist last week, selected by an independent panel of charity leaders for demonstrating “outstanding best practice” to other organisations in the sector.

“The standard of entries this year was incredible, and the charities we shortlist remain a constant inspiration to all of us,” said Juliet Chislett, chief executive of Civil Society Media. “Our rigorous judging process singles out those charities with the most innovative ideas and the most inspirational approaches to delivering maximum impact.”

Now in their 18th year, the Charity Awards are the UK’s biggest, longest-running and best-known event of their kind. Winners will be announced on 8 June at a gala held in the grounds of the Tower of London and hosted by BBC presenter Louise Minchin.

For a full shortlist, click here.

Hand in Hand’s Seema Ghani wins Bond’s Outstanding Individual Award

Hand in Hand Afghanistan Chair Seema Ghani is the winner of Bond’s Outstanding Individual Award.

The award, which celebrates “exceptional people who have made a lasting contribution to the sector”, was presented last night at the Bond Conference International Development Awards ceremony in London, the biggest event of its kind in Europe. It was the Outstanding Individual Award’s first year, and the Bond Awards’ fourth.

“At Hand in Hand we believe in helping people to help themselves,” said Seema, accepting her award. “There’s a new generation of young thinkers [with the power to change Afghanistan] but they can’t do it without you.”

Seema was recognised first and foremost for her work with Hand in Hand, but her contribution to the sector does not stop there. After fleeing Afghanistan’s 20-year civil war in the 1990s, Seema settled in London and established a career working with some of the City’s biggest Fortune 500 companies. She returned to Afghanistan just weeks after the fall of the Taliban to help the country rebuild, and went on to co-found the People’s Anti-Corruption Movement and Afghan Women Charter, as well help Hand in Hand Afghanistan create some 27,000 businesses and 32,000 jobs – and counting – as the organisation’s Chair.

Seema beat out seven other nominees to win the award, including finalists Robert Walters of international blindness prevention charity Orbis and Georgette Mulheir, CEO of Lumos, a charity working to end the institutionalisation of children.

Her win comes just months after Martha Huntley, Hand in Hand International’s Major Donor and Corporate Fundraising Officer, won a National Fundraising Award for Best Fundraising Newcomer.

Click here to read Seema’s full nomination.