It also organises free social and wellness activities for foreign domestic workers, such as potluck lunches, yoga and Zumba classes, skills workshops, and health checks and information sessions, and has a business accelerator programme providing domestic helpers returning to their home countries with resources, capital and advice from mentors. But from February 2020 onwards, all in-person classes were suspended due to rising COVID-19 concerns, leaving over 400 students in limbo. RELATED Aidha quickly responded by conducting its first pilot online sessions just a month later, offering Zoom training to students and mentors, and adapting its core curriculum. By Jun 30 that year, Aidha was providing 30 online sessions involving 514 participants, including two mental health courses and one on dealing with debt.