Turning field evidence into action — restoring degraded wetlands in Kono District and building community-owned structures to monitor and enforce environmental protection.
In 2025, YICA-SL transitioned from primarily awareness-raising and advocacy to direct, community-based environmental action — beginning with a comprehensive field assessment in Kono District.
Kono is historically known for diamond mining, but unregulated artisanal mining has expanded into wetland areas that communities depend on for rice cultivation and water. In August 2025, YICA-SL partnered with Nature for Mangroves to document the damage and identify restoration opportunities in two communities: Bumbeh (Nimikoro Chiefdom) and Kayima (Sandor Chiefdom).
From these findings, YICA-SL developed Chiefdom Environmental Enforcement Coordination Committees (CEEComs) — community-owned monitoring structures that:
YICA-SL is piloting the first CEEComs in Bumbeh and Sandor and beginning practical wetland restoration on degraded mining sites — working alongside communities who provide labour and indigenous knowledge.
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