| Action
Against Hunger (AAH)
(January 30, 2002)
AAH worked with Afghan refugees in Pakistan from 1979 to 1989
and has been operational inside Afghanistan since 1995. Close
to 30 AAH fieldworkers and 700 local staff are ensuring the
continuation of programs in Afghanistan. AAH teams are currently
present in Kabul, Hazaradjat (the mountainous region in central
Afghanistan), Pansheer (eastern Afghanistan), Mazar-I-Sharif
(north), and Herat (west).
Adventist Development
and Relief Agency International (ADRA)
(November 22, 2002)
Since October 2001, ADRA has been providing emergency aid
to four refugee camps along the borders of Pakistan and Tajikistan.
In addition, ADRA has distributed approximately 80 tons of
humanitarian products such as blankets, clothing, hygiene
kits, kitchen utensils and shoes to Badakshan Province in
northern Afghanistan; the agency is also building schools
in northern Afghanistan. Around Kabul, ADRA has been helping
people prepare for winter through the distribution of blankets
made in Afghanistan as part of an economic development project,
and ADRA is in the process of completing an assessment of
needs in preparation for long-term development projects.
Air Serv International
(September 13, 2004)
Air Serv maintains three King
Air 200’s in Afghanistan
to support the logistics needs of more than 300 international
relief organizations currently operating in the country.
Air Serv also provides emergency medical and security evacuation
of relief workers. Air transport services are needed because
surface transportation within the region remains extremely
hazardous due to banditry, unexploded ordnance and mines.
We are currently accepting donations for this program.
American
Friends Service Committee (AFSC)
(September 9, 2002)
The AFSC is constructing and repairing primary and secondary
schools in Afghanistan, providing playground equipment,
and supporting literacy and vocational training programs
for war widows. More detailed information can be found at: www.afsc.org/afghan.htm
American Jewish
World Service (AJWS)
(August 4, 2003)
AJWS has been supporting human rights programs in Afghanistan
since 1999. Prior to the fall of the Taliban, the agency's
work in women's education and health was done secretly. AJWS
continues to support schools and medical centers for women
and girls in Herat, Jalalabad, Kabul and Peshawar, Pakistan.
American Red
Cross
(March 22, 2004)
Since 2001, the American Red Cross has sent children's winter
jackets, hats and boots, blankets, children's gift parcels,
kitchen sets, tarps, winterized family tents, school supplies
for 80,000 children, and medical supplies to Afghanistan.
The American Red Cross is administering America's Fund for
Afghan Children in coordination with the White House. In addition,
the American Red Cross has supported initiatives to assist
the people of Afghanistan, including the WHO/UNICEF measles
vaccination program, the creation of libraries and support
for teacher training, extensive mother-child health programs,
therapeutic feeding programs for malnourished children, and
a malaria prevention program for women (through UNICEF).
American Refugee
Committee
(July 9, 2002)
The American Refugee Committee is providing health services
with UNHCR for Afghan refugees at Voluntary Repatriation Centers
(VRC's) in Quetta and Rawalpindi, preparing the refugees for
a return to their homeland.
AmeriCares
(March 1, 2004)
Since early 2002, AmeriCares has shipped supplies (via air
and sea) to address the humanitarian crisis in Afghanistan.
The ongoing humanitarian assistance to Afghanistan includes
medicines, medical supplies, and other relief materials (i.e.
blankets, children's boots, clothing, dental hygiene supplies,
nutritional supplements and school supplies). AmeriCares is
accepting gifts-in-kind for this emergency. More detailed
information can be found at: http://www.americares.org/international/country-921363.asp
Brother's Brother
Foundation (BBF)
(March 26, 2002)
BBF sent sent three tractor-trailer loads of requested medical
supplies for the Women's Hospital in Kabul and other medical
facilities earlier in March from its warehouse in Pittsburgh
and fourth shipment is planned for early April.
CARE
(November 29, 2001)
In Kabul, CARE has continued to supply clean water to approximately
245,000 men, women and children; CARE is also distributing
food to 50,000 destitute people and water and sanitation services
to tens of thousands of Afghans. In villages in Khost and
Gardez provinces, more than 5,000 boys and girls attend classes
at CARE-assisted primary schools. To assist displaced families,
CARE has been trucking in food from Peshawar, Pakistan to
Kabul and also is sending in winter kits for 30,000 people,
that include blankets, shawls, buckets and soap. In Tajikistan,
CARE is working with the UN and other international aid agencies
to meet the needs people on the border as well as planning
de-mining operations; in Iran, CARE is meeting with officials
to determine what role the organization can play in providing
food, shelter and other assistance for incoming refugees.
Catholic Relief
Services (CRS)
(November 20, 2002)
CRS's ongoing development programs in Afghanistan include
school reconstruction, accelerated learning programs for out
of school youth, agriculture and livelihoods projects, as
well as continued provision of emergency winterization materials,
water and health and hygiene assistance in Afghan refugee
camps in Pakistan. CRS has been providing emergency assistance
to both Afghan refugees in Pakistan and vulnerable persons
inside of Afghanistan since November 2001, including food
and non-food distributions in various locations within Pakistan
and Afghanistan, reaching nearly 700,000 individuals. Additionally,
CRS has provided water, sanitation and health education for
Afghan refugees in Pakistan's Northwest Frontier Province.
CRS programming has also included the broadcasting, in 14
languages, of peace and reconciliation radio programs throughout
Afghanistan and Pakistan.
Childreach/Plan
International USA
(January 29, 2002)
In Pakistan, Childreach/Plan is working with thousands of
Afghan refugees arriving through Chaman, on the Pakistan-Afghanistan
border; lining with local companies, Childreach/Plan supplies
clothes, blankets and water drums to more than 3,000 families
living in refugee camps. Childreach/Plan is also working with
the International Federation of Red Cross (IFRC), World Health
Organization (WHO) and the government of Baluchistan province
to establish a health care system to provide for the immediate
needs of the refugee families and Plan has started non-formal
schools for Afghan children in the camps. In Islamabad, Plan
is working with the government to determine the refugees'
needs in the areas of education, health, livelihood, and habitat.
More detailed information can be found at: http://www.childreach.org/news/pakistanupd.html
Christian Children's
Fund (CCF)
(June 10, 2004)
CCF, working in Afghanistan since December 2001 as ChildFund
Afghanistan, is working primarily in Northern Afghanistan,
providing a wide range of programs including: demobilization
of underage ex-combatants; construction and reconstruction
of schools; agricultural development for Afghanistan farmers;
creating local grassroots governance through 40 community-based
Child Well-Being Committees, mobilizing villages around child
protection issues; micro-enterprise development for women;
water/sanitation with the construction of more than 100 new
wells and repair of more than 200 wells; providing shelter
assistance in the Takhar Province; literacy training, among
others. CCF's programs in Afghanistan covered $3.1 million
in projects in fiscal 2003.
Christian Reformed
World Relief Committee (CRWRC)
(January 14, 2004)
CRWRC is contributing to a distribution of food, led by MEDAIR,
for more than 2000 people in a tuberculosis (TB) prevention
program for 1 year (the program started in March of 2003).
CRWRC is also the lead partner in a northern Afghanistan seed
and fertilizer project, which also includes nutritional and
health aspects, implemented in collaboration with ZOA. CRWRC
is also taking the lead in a food and nutrition program, implemented
by CRWRC's partner agencies, CADA/FHI, in which 32,000 people
received, in total, 3,500 MT of wheat, beans, and oil while
a nutritionist determined the nutritional impact of the food
program.
Church World
Service (CWS)
(November 28, 2001)
CWS is has distributed 6,000 Family Shelter Kits and food
parcels to internally-displaced Afghan families in central
and northern areas of Afghanistan, and 3,000 to Afghan refugee
families in Pakistan. The shelter kits and food are part of
a CWS plan to assist 17,000 Afghan families, some 119,000
people in all, as part of a $6.28 million shelter assistance
and food program. In addition, some 400 Afghan refugee women
in Pakistan are earning a small income in a CWS-sponsored
project to make 60,000 quilts for distribution to refugee
families. CWS is using 20,000 of the quilts in Family Shelter
Kits; the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees and
UNICEF are purchasing the other 40,000 quilts for use in their
emergency programs
Concern Worldwide
US
(December 21, 2001)
Concern Worldwide has now established an office in Taloqan
and survey teams are currently assessing IDP numbers and
need as people begin to return to their homes. Concern's
emergency distributions of shelter materials and non-food
items such as blankets, clothes kitchen sets, and fuel continue.
Through its Food for Work Program Concern is building and
entire network of roads in Khost wa Fereng district in the
North East, which will allow greater access for food delivery
through the winter. In Quetta, Pakistan, Concern is managing
two camps for Afghan refugees who have crossed the border.>
Direct Relief
International (DRI)
(August 7, 2002)
To date, DRI has provided 21 tons of pharmaceuticals, medical
supplies, and comfort items, including antibiotics, analgesics,
oral rehydration salts, first aid supplies, blankets and personal
care kits, to emergency medical teams and established health
facilities in Afghanistan and for those working with Afghan
refugees in Pakistan. DRI works in partnership with local
and international aid agencies involved in providing services
to the people of Afghanistan. DRI is accepting contributions
and gifts-in-kind from medical product manufacturers. For
product contributions contact: arandopoulos@directrelief.org.
Doctors Without
Borders/Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF)
(October 2, 2001)
Present in Afghanistan since 1979, MSF is currently assisting
Afghan refugees in Iran and Pakistan, as well as running extensive
medical, nutritional, and water and sanitation programs throughout
both the Northern Alliance-controlled northeastern part of
Afghanistan and the Taliban-held regions of the country. MSF
teams in neighboring Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan, and Tajikistan
are also preparing for a possible influx of additional refugees.
Food for the
Hungry, Inc.(FHI)
(February 1, 2002)
Since October of 2001 FHI and its partners CADA, World Concern
and NWMTI, have been working in the Northern Afghan province
of Takhar. Distributions have included blankets and winter
clothing to over 35,000 people, along with shoes for 2,900
children; distributions of blankets and clothing are continuing
as supplies become available. As Spring approaches, FHI and
its partners hope to shift the focus to food security, including
seed and tool distributions, rebuilding or establishing irrigation
systems, and animal husbandry projects.
International
Aid
(November 7, 2001)
International Aid plans to ship relief items such as food,
blankets and medicines to Pakistan for the Afghan refugees,
and is exploring other ways of providing assistance.
International
Catholic Migration Commission (ICMC)
(January 29, 2002)
ICMC is currently working in 20 refugee camps and five urban
centers providing individualized and urgently needed assistance
to the most vulnerable refugees (female heads of household,
widows, the physically and mentally disabled, and the frail
and unaccompanied elderly) as well as implementing skills
training, nonformal education, and managing Refugee Legal
Assistance Centers to address issues of detention, deportation,
access to health, education, and shelter as well as repatriation
support. Nearly 250,000 refugees are benefiting from ICMC's
services.
International
Medical Corps (IMC)
(May 13, 2004)
IMC has worked in Afghanistan since 1984 and today provides
a combination of primary, secondary, and tertiary health care,
comprehensive health care training and integrated development
programs, with a focus on women and children, as well as other
displaced and vulnerable populations. With the support of
its donors and the Ministry of Public Health, IMC operates
361 health posts, 40 comprehensive health centers, six basic
health centers, four district hospitals and two emergency
obstetric centers for more than 700,000 beneficiaries in nine
provinces. In addition to providing health care directly,
IMC trains Afghan health professionals, creating a pool of
skilled Afghan health care workers who provide primary health
care and education in such topics as pre- and post-natal care,
immunizations, breastfeeding and nutrition. IMC complements
these programs with numerous cash- for-work projects, employing
nearly 4,500 local laborers, both men and women, to maintain
roads, build bridges and make quilts.
International
Rescue Committee (IRC)
(August 18, 2004)
With offices in Kabul, Mazar-e-Sharif, Herat, Jalalabad and
Gardez, the IRC supports major programs in protection, reintegration
of returnees and emergency infrastructure support (shelter/water
and sanitation), vocational training, education, child protection,
health, security, capacity building and community development.
The IRC is also sponsoring the Afghan Non-Governmental Organization
Security Office which provides concise, up-to-date security
information for the humanitarian community. In Pakistan, the
IRC provides comprehensive assistance to hundreds of thousands
of Afghan refugees while working to protect the rights of
Afghan refugees and IDPs and those returning to their homes
in Afghanistan. For more detailed information visit: http://www.theirc.org/afghanistan/.
Latter-day Saint
Charities (LDSC)
(November 7, 2001)
Latter-day Saint Charities is providing 19 shipping containers
of relief supplies for Afghan refugees. The supplies provided
include clothing, wool blankets, quilts, newborn kits, dry
milk, hygiene kits, plastic sheeting (for shelter and ground
cover) and water pouches, totaling 376,000 pounds.
Life for Releif
and Development
(April 21, 2003)
Life for Relief and Development USA has been helping the poor
and war hit people of Afghanistan and Afghan refugees in Pakistan
since October 2001. Life has distributed food, clothing and
Blankets to Afghan refugees in five refugee camps in Peshawar
and Bajaur Agency in Pakistan and to IDPs and local communities
inside Afghanistan. Life has distributed thousands of medical
textbooks to medical colleges and nursing schools in Afghanistan
and is running two orphan high schools in Laghman and Jalalabad.
Life is accepting donations of medical supplies for this emergency.
Lutheran World
Relief (LWR)
(July 3, 2002)
LWR is supporting local and international NGOs with more than
$1.4 million in material aid and cash grants to help assist
the most vulnerable people, both within Afghanistan and in
camps on the border of Pakistan and Iran. In the last six
months, LWR's partners have provided monthly food packages
to 28,000 families, installed water and sanitation systems
in refugee camps, and distributed more than 37,000 hand-made
quilts, 8,000 baby layettes, 13,000 school and health kits,
and clothes and soap shipped from LWR warehouses. LWR's partners
are beginning longer-term rehabilitation efforts, including
vocational training and quilt-making projects for women to
help generate income for their families. More detailed information
can be found at: http://www.lwr.org/emergencies/01/afghan.html
MAP International
(November 26, 2001)
MAP International is coordinating the delivery of essential
medicines and medical supplies to the Afghan refugees living
in the bordering countries of Uzbekistan and Tajikistan. In
cooperation with other InterAction members, MAP has been working
to deliver WHO Emergency Health Kits and additional GIK medicines
and medical supplies critical for the treatment of the many
people displaced over the past years by drought and war. Efforts
continue for the delivery of goods to workers within the more
secure areas of Afghanistan. MAP International is accepting
cash contributions and donations of health and medical related
gift-in-kind for relief efforts.
Mercy Corps
(March 5, 2002)
Mercy Corps is responding to immediate relief needs in Afghanistan
while supporting long-term development; programs include agriculture/crop-substitution,
water management, health, infrastructure, education, and economic
development. A network of 10 offices and a staff of more than
200 in Afghanistan and Pakistan are administering food security
programs, stimulating the health and economic prospects of
recent returnee communities, involving local participation
in long-term rehabilitation strategy, and targeting improved
welfare and educational opportunities for Afghan children.
Mercy Corps has worked in the region since 1986. Mercy Corps
accepts gifts-in-kind on a limited basis, when the item is
culturally relevant, approved by field staff, and unavailable
locally.
Northwest Medical
Teams International (NWMT)
(March 14, 2002)
NWMT has transitioned from the IDP camps to providing curative
care, non-food distribution, and public health interventions
in the Kudibarkh region, 20kms NE of Mazar-e-Sharif. Working
in the Kudibarkh Hospital as a base of operation, additional
objectives include Afghan medical worker training, the re-supply
and re-equipping of Kurdibarkh Hospital. Medical teams conduct
mobile clinics in 16 local villages, along with non-food and
supplementry food distribution where necessary.
Operation USA
(December 13, 2001)
Operation USA is working with an Afghan and American NGO to
provide medical supplies to health workers serving the needs
of Afghan refugees. Operation USA requests donations of pharmaceuticals,
medical supplies, nutritional items and shelter goods. Operation
USA is in discussions with UNICEF concerning use of a new
technology to which Operation USA has exclusive access to
search for ground water in Afghanistan.
Oxfam America
(October 2, 2001)
Working through long-term development partners and established
feeding centers, Oxfam is currently supplying food assistance
to the displaced inside Afghanistan. In addition, Oxfam is
setting up water and sanitation at camp sites along the Pakistani
border.
Refugees International
(May 12, 2004)
Refugees International continues to conduct assessment missions
to Afghanistan. Refugees International monitors the extent
of the local level integration of returning refugees and
internally displaced persons and the overall impact of the
international relief and development program for the country.
Refugees International has also provided training in advocacy
to a network of women’s
organizations that are working for greater inclusion of women
in the political and economic life of the country.
Relief International
(June 15, 2004)
Relief International (RI) assists Afghan men, women, and
children through a variety of education, health, infrastructure
rehabilitation and business development programs. In 2003
RI initiated over 200 infrastructure rehabilitation projects
and provided health care, literacy classes and vocational
training to hundreds of women in 2 of RI’s Afghan Women’s
Development Centers. Additionally, RI provided 200 books
for each of the 71 libraries it rehabilitated or constructed
over the past year, with plans for the total number of libraries
serviced to reach 300. RI also furnished several Afghan schools
with computers and access to the internet. Relief International
is accepting in-kind donations of computers.
Salvation Army
World Service Office (SAWSO)
(December 7, 2001)
SAWSO (The Salvation Army World Service Office) in cooperation
with the Salvation Army's International Headquarters and in
partnership with its Pakistan affiliate, is supporting a program
to provide assistance to Afghan refugees in the border community
of Peshawar in the North West Frontier Province of Pakistan.
Initially food, tents,and supplies such as sweaters, blankets,
and cookware will be provided to new and old caseload Afghan
refugees as well as other invisibles disbursed throughout
the community.
Save the Children
(September 3, 2002)
In addition to its ongoing work to provide health, education
and economic-opportunity programs throughout the region, Save
the Children is delivering food, educating women in economic
self-sufficiency and training local health workers to care
for malnourished children.
United Methodist
Committee on Relief (UMCOR)
(July 2, 2002)
UMCOR has designed an integrated multi-sectoral approach to
address the long-term needs of individual communities in Afghanistan
through more than US $1.5 million generated by constituents
of the United Methodist Church. UMCOR plans to focus its programs
in: 1) Return and Reconstruction; 2) Agriculture/Food Security/Drought
Alleviation; 3) Education; 4) Income Generation/Micro Credit;
5) Community Development; and 6) Capacity Building. UMCOR
is accepting health/hygiene kits designated for displaced
Afghans; for instructions on assembling and shipping kits,
please call the UMCOR Depot at 800-814-8765, or visit: http://gbgm-umc.org/umcor/kits.html.
USA for UNHCR
(October 2, 2001)
UNHCR is providing food, shelter, and water, and meeting the
basic sanitation and health needs of the refugees in Pakistan,
Iran and Tajikistan who have fled from Afghanistan. The agency
is also preparing to accommodate as many as 1.5 million Afghans
who may attempt to leave Afghanistan during the next several
weeks. UNHCR is also working with the governments in the region
to ensure open borders and identify possible refugee sites
near the borders. Many relief supplies are being airlifted
to border areas in Pakistan and Iran.
US Fund for
UNICEF
(June 30, 2004)
UNICEF provides emergency relief work in Afghanistan. UNICEF
is partnering with Afghani and international organizations
to provide humanitarian aid, help rebuild the country’s
schools, tackle malnutrition and immunize children against
preventable diseases. Emphasis is placed on the promotion
of children’s rights and the advancement of girls’ education.
UNICEF facilitates rehabilitation programs for underage soldiers
so that they may re-enter the educational system or obtain
vocational training.
United Way International
(UWI)
(October 24, 2001)
UWI,is dividing its funding evenly between food aid and medical
assistance for Afghan IDPs in Northwest Pakistan (NWFP and
Baluchistan). UWI is channeling 100% of disaster relief donations
to two responsible local organizations.
Women's EDGE
(EDGE)
(January 29, 2002)
EDGE is mobilizing its 70 organizational members, many of
whom have operations on the ground in Afghanistan and Central
Asia, to take action on behalf of women in Afghanistan. Specifically,
EDGE is working on Capitol Hill to develop and promote development
assistance legislation that focuses on women's economic development,
leadership and participation in Afghanistan. Most notably,
we are working with offices in the House and Senate on the
Access for Afghan Women Act, HR 3342. More detailed information
is available at: www.womensedge.org/septtragedy/accessafghan.htm
World Concern
(November 21, 2002)
World Concern has worked in Afghanistan for more than 22 years
and is currently focusing on relief and reconstruction efforts
in northern Afghanistan. In the northeastern province of Takar,
more than 10,000 families are receiving food assistance, thousands
have received warm clothing, shoes and blankets, and seed
distribution remains a top priority. World Concern is now
beginning to refocus on reconstruction in the Mazar region.
World Concern is accepting clothing, blankets, seeds and medical
supplies for this emergency.
World Relief
(October 16, 2003)
World Relief has completed clinic construction, immunization
campaigns and community surveys. The organization is continuing
activities such as training of community health workers through
IAM. World Relief is also installing bore pumps in some of
the clinics where wells ran dry.
World Vision
(December 7, 2001)
World Vision is setting up a food distribution program targeting
360,000 people in the Herat region and in two northern districts
in collaboration with WFP. World Vision is also setting up
a nutrition program in Herat, Ghowar, Badghis, and Farah in
conjunction with UNICEF. World Vision continues its partnership
with Mercy Corps and Ockenden International through its teams
in Pakistan, Iran, and Uzbekistan in which emergency supplies
are distributed to Afghan IDPs and refugees.
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