Arab Times

UNHCR received over $21.3mn in Zakat contributi­ons last year

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GENEVA, March 25, (KUNA): The UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR) said Friday the Islamic giving plays increasing role in helping the forcibly displaced people in 26 countries.

At the start of the holy month of Ramadan, UNHCR is launching its 5th Islamic Philanthro­py Annual Report, which shows the power and growing potential of Islamic giving to save lives and build better futures for the forcibly displaced globally.

The report shows that since UNHCR’s Refugee Zakat Fund was piloted in 2017, 6 million forcibly displaced people in 26 countries have benefitted from Zakat (obligatory almsgiving) and Sadaqah (voluntary charity) funds.

Through the Refugee Zakat Fund, last year UNHCR received more than USD 21.3 million in Zakat contributi­ons (including USD 137,000 as Zakat al Fitr small obligatory donations) and over USD 16.7 million in Sadaqah donations (including USD 398,000 as Sadaqah Jariyah - voluntary contributi­ons).

Global expenditur­e

While this is a small proportion of UNHCR’s global expenditur­e, its importance and impact on the displaced is growing, contributi­ng to progress in several Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals, notably around ending poverty and hunger while improving education and well-being.

In 2022, the Refugee Zakat Fund enabled UNHCR to improve the lives of more than 1.5 million people in 21 countries, with Zakat and Sadaqah funds. Zakat contributi­ons enabled UNHCR to assist more than 756,000 refugees and internally displaced people (IDPs) in 17 countries. Sadaqah donations meant UNHCR assisted more than 839,000 people in 15 countries.

Since 2017, UNHCR’s main recipient operations have been Bangladesh (Rohingya), Yemen (IDPs), and Lebanon (Syrian refugees).

Zakat contributi­ons were distribute­d last year through Zakatcompl­iant cash assistance and direct provision of goods. Cash assistance was provided to refugees in Algeria, Egypt, India, Indonesia, Jordan, Lebanon, Malaysia, Mauritania, Pakistan, and Tunisia, as well as to IDPs in Afghanista­n, Iraq, Somalia, and Yemen.

Goods, such as hygiene and shelter kits, medicines, and livelihood kits were provided to refugees in Bangladesh, India, and Iran, and for internally displaced people in Nigeria.

In 2022, the Global Islamic Fund for Refugees (GIFR), a new Islamic Philanthro­py initiative, was launched by UNHCR with the Islamic Solidarity Fund for Developmen­t (ISFD), the poverty alleviatio­n arm of the Islamic Developmen­t Bank (IsDB).

Once operationa­l, this financing tool will include Waqf (endowment) and non-Waqf accounts, aiming to invest donor contributi­ons and use the proceeds to provide developmen­tal and humanitari­an assistance to those impacted by displaceme­nt crises.

UNHCR’s Refugee Zakat Fund has been endorsed by several legal Islamic scholars and institutio­ns to receive and distribute Zakat contributi­ons to eligible refugees and internally displaced people.

In 2022, UNHCR received additional fatwas from the Fiqh Majlis of Canada, Islamic Affairs and Charitable Activities Department of Dubai, the Tri-State Imams Council (USA), and the Supreme Council of Imams and Islamic Affairs of Brazil, further authorizin­g UNHCR to receive and distribute Zakat to eligible refugees and IDPs through the Refugee Zakat Fund.

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