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Published in The Independent on 04 December 2007
http://news.independent.co.uk/appeals/indy_appeal/article3220951.ece
A £300,000 gift: how readers' generosity has made a difference
in the past year
By Emily Dugan
Published: 04 December 2007
Last year's Independent appeal focused on helping
the victims of conflict, political turmoil and natural disaster; innocents swept
up in the troubles. Almost £300,000 was raised by readers for charities working
with children, the disabled and the elderly, and all those who had no way to
escape the destruction that visited their lives.
Merlin, a British medical charity that provides emergency aid to areas
affected by war or natural disasters, used its share of the money for a range of
urgent projects, including improving medical services in war-torn Gaza and
responding to the floods in Bangladesh, Pakistan and Uganda.
"For us, the money meant we were able to help particularly in places that
hadn't hit the headlines, or had been forgotten," said Merlin's chief executive,
Carolyn Miller. "We could never have responded so quickly to events without The
Independent appeal funds, and if you have to hang around and wait for funding
then you lose the impact of what you're able to do."
For women like Saima, a 34-year-old living in Battis Mori village, southern
Pakistan, Merlin provided hope for a better future. Saima, who had already
suffered five miscarriages, lost her first child to malnutrition in the floods
which devastated the region. Now, with the help of antenatal care from a Merlin
mobile medical team, she says she is "happy", and feeling much healthier in this
pregnancy than her previous ones.
For another of The Independent's 2006 charities, Anti-Slavery International,
the appeal donations meant it could lobby and provide for another group whose
lives had been taken out of their control; the victims of human trafficking.
Anti-Slavery International's director, Aidan McQuade, said: "The appeal
particularly helped us to take advantage of the opportunities presented in the
bicentenary year [marking the abolition of the slave trade] to make real
progress in the fight against slavery."
The third of the appeal charities, Welfare Association, provided emergency
medical supplies for Al Ahli Hospital in Gaza and fuel for its ambulances and
began a new schools health programme with 40 primary schools in the West Bank
and Gaza that will improve the health of 25,000 young children there.
Welfare Association
The funds raised enabled WA to support the health and
educational needs of young children, in a new programme to improve children’s
health in primary schools in Palestine. 30% of these children suffer from
anxiety, phobia or depression from witnessing violent scenes of conflict on a
daily basis, children are malnourished and 50% have anaemia due to the
collapsing local economy and low family incomes. And through lack of central
funding to schools, children are not receiving basic health checks e.g. sight,
hearing and dental checks. This project will support all these needs and with
each school’s environmental committee will improve facilities such as schools’
kitchens, toilets and first aid stations.
Merlin
When Cyclone Yemyin devastated southern Pakistan in June this year, Merlin's
response team was on hand to bring an emergency health clinic to the village of
Kot Magsi. Eighty-five people attended the clinic on its first day of operation,
and as news of Merlin's presence spread, more people started arriving. Six
months on, thousands of people still live in basic shelters with poor sanitation
conditions, and Merlin now has a nine-strong team to help them in Balochistan.
In Gaza, Merlin has bolstered existing health services and aid to those
prematurely removed from wards. Three mobile clinics have also been set up in
the West Bank.
Anti-Slavery International
The money helped this lobbying charity make significant progress last year.
The British Government signed the Council of Europe Convention on Action Against
Trafficking in Human Beings in March – due to come into force next year. Also, a
UN special rapporteur has been created to report on instances of slavery around
the world. Its lobbying even reached countries with poor human rights records.
In Mauritania, President Sidi Mohamed Ould Cheikh Abdallahi finally acknowledged
that slavery continued within its borders, and passed legislation to criminalise
it.
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