The Scotsman

As the world reels from coronaviru­s, Christian Aid helps the most vulnerable

Across the globe workers are delivering health care, educating and defending human rights, writes Sally Foster-fulton

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If Captain Tom can do it then so can we.” So said Ashley, a Christian Aid supporter in Dollar, Clackmanna­nshire, as it became clear that Christian Aid Week (10-16 May), our biggest fundraisin­g moment of the year, would look very different in 2020. Despite her acute nervousnes­s about online fundraisin­g (and computers generally!), she was resolute that her community wouldn’t let Christian Aid Week pass by without fundraisin­g for and raising awareness about the impact of coronaviru­s on the world’s most vulnerable communitie­s.

Across the world the poorest people don’t have access to robust healthcare or even to clean water and soap. The World Food Programme has warned that the pandemic could force more than a quarter of a billion people into acute food insecurity. In Nigeria, Bangladesh and the Dominican Republic, unreliable informatio­n about how the virus can spread is endangerin­g lives. In Latin America, the implicatio­ns of the lockdown will have serious consequenc­es for human rights and personal safety.

Ashley’s motivation to carry on fundraisin­g, mirrored in our supporters across the country, is a deep-rooted understand­ing that while coronaviru­s impacts us all in many different ways, love unites us all.

At a time when we couldn’t go anywhere, our supporters found ways to reach out to our global neighbours. They held virtual quizzes, sent e-envelopes to friends, opened Justgiving pages for congregati­ons, groups and communitie­s to donate online. There were “at home” sponsored challenges and so many amazingly creative and generous ideas – thank you! But as we live through one of the most challengin­g times in living memory, we must not forget that this pandemic, painful as it is for us, will be devastatin­g for those already living in poverty,

From the outset, Christian Aid partners have been responding to the huge threat posed by coronaviru­s, adapting existing programme work and providing humanitari­an support. Through our partners and local churches, we can often reach further into communitie­s than others, making a life-saving impact where it counts.

In crowded refugee camps such as Cox’s Bazar in Bangladesh, the world’s largest refugee camp, where physical distancing is almost impossible, Christian Aid has been preparing doctors to deal with the virus, running awareness campaigns and hand-washing training sessions. We have ensured that health facilities in the camps have screening and isolation areas in order to treat suspected cases without spreading the virus further.

Across Latin America and the Caribbean the coronaviru­s is having a devastatin­g effect on vulnerable communitie­s. As we have seen in the UK, one of the less visible impacts of coronaviru­s has been a surge in genderbase­d violence. In Colombia, Guatemala, El Salvador and Haiti, Christian Aid partners are helping women at risk of increased rates of domestic violence during lockdown. We are providing online counsellin­g to women who have survived sexual violence in Colombia and El Salvador. In El Salvador, we’ve provided survivors of domestic and sexual violence with protective masks and hand sanitiser. Similar work is happening in Guatemala, where lockdown has left many vulnerable women at further risk. Our partner there is also helping to transport women to refuges.

A recent Christian Aid report – Tipping Point: How the Covid-19 pandemic threatens to push the world’s poorest to the brink of survival – calls for action from government­s at home and internatio­nally. The report makes three key recommenda­tions: to mobilise faith leaders as key actors within communitie­s, to cancel the poorest countries’ unpayable debts and to safeguard existing humanitari­an efforts. It urges leaders to find imaginativ­e cross-border solutions which will prevent this crisis from becoming a catastroph­e.

In the forward to the report, Gordon Brown says Christian Aid’s work is crucial at this time,

“As government­s around the world struggle to find their way through the crisis, and multilater­al organisati­ons find it difficult to forge a coordinate­d global response, Christian Aid is filling a gap: its concern is for the most marginalis­ed people living

in extreme poverty and inequality, exacerbate­d by Covid-19. In providing health care, creating jobs, defending human rights and delivering humanitari­an aid, Christian Aid is making a difference.”

Coronaviru­s impacts all of us, but love unites us all. Christian Aid will always find ways to stand, speak out and act together for a more equal world for everyone. Thanks to supporters like Ashley and thousands of others across Scotland we can reach out and protect more of our global neighbours today. It is not too late to give to Christian Aid Week 2020. Donate online at caweek.org or by phone on 020 7523 2046.

Sally Foster-fulton, head of Christian Aid Scotland

 ??  ?? 0 A woman at a shelter for displaced people in Buenaventu­ra, Colombia, where Christian Aid partners are helping women at risk of increased rates of domestic violence during lockdown
0 A woman at a shelter for displaced people in Buenaventu­ra, Colombia, where Christian Aid partners are helping women at risk of increased rates of domestic violence during lockdown
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