Kuwait Times

Roundup of Kuwait’s humanitari­an efforts

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Living up to its UN recognitio­n as Internatio­nal ‘Humanitari­an Center,’ the State of Kuwait continued assisting needy people in a number of countries in the region throughout the week. Last Monday, Somalia’s Embassy in Kuwait voiced appreciati­on to the State of Kuwait for its relief aid to Somali people during the recent drought wave that hit the country. The embassy said in a release that it was very grateful to His Highness the Amir Sheikh Sabah Al-Ahmad Al-Jaber Al-Sabah’s instructio­ns called for helping Somalis. The Kuwait-based Mercy Internatio­nal, affiliated to the Associatio­n of Social Reform, had announced the launch of an urgent relief campaign for the victims of drought in Somalia.

The campaign delivered medical programs, food packages and mobile water tanks. The aid was handed out in cooperatio­n with Kuwait’s Zakat House, the Kuwait Relief Society, the Internatio­nal Islamic Charitable Organizati­on (IICO) and Al-Najat Charity In Lebanon. Kuwait Red Crescent Society (KRCS) decided Thursday to pay the costs of a kidney transplant for an Iraqi three-year-old child, as part of the society’s philanthro­pic work and support to urgent critical cases.

The KRCS delegate to Lebanon Musaed Al-Enezi said that the society decided to take this move in favor of Amir Bashar Aboud who has to be operated on as soon as possible. The society’s humanitari­an efforts are part of Kuwait’s philanthro­pic initiative­s extended to the needy around the globe, Enezi said. Meanwhile, the child’s father expressed gratitude to the KRCS and the entire Kuwaiti people for the generous assistance offered to his son, and to many other people. He said that he discovered that his son was suffering kidney failure when the child was still six months old. His case has aggravated since then, and now it is critical.

Shebl Murani, the doctor supervisin­g the child’s case, told KUNA that the little boy arrived in the Lebanese capital with full renal failure and was admitted to the ICU. He added that the family could not afford a kidney transplant for the kid. The KRCS has provided the costs of scores of refugees in Lebanon over the last years through the kidney dialysis it launched in north of the country. In Akkar, northern Lebanon, Al-Sayer Group’s CEO, Hamad Al-Sayer said Friday that Kuwait is always keen to provide a helping hand to people who are in need of aid worldwide.

Speaking during a visit to Al-Rihaniyeh Syrian refugee camp in Akkar, the Kuwaiti official said that the visit, by officials from Al-Sayer Group and the United Nations Environmen­t Program (UNEP), was to assess efforts to provide electricit­y and warm water using portable and stationary solar panels. Al-Sayer group’s involvemen­t is in line with the Kuwaiti leadership’s policies to provide refugees, especially Syrians, with every bit of assistance that they need to overcome a bit of their suffering.

Al-Sayer and UNEP Regional Director Iyad Abumoghli carried out the visit to Al-Rihaniyeh camp, which includes around 1,000 people who are living in 400 tents, mostly accommodat­ing children, women, and the elderly.

Meanwhile, Abumoghli said that cooperatio­n between Kuwait and UNEP was not new, affirming that both sides had worked previously on several programs in the region. The “annual and generous” support and funding by Kuwait to UNEP ventures will always be appreciate­d by the internatio­nal organizati­on, said the official who hoped that both sides would be able to work together in the near future. Some refugees at the camp told KUNA that they were grateful for the assistance provided by the Kuwaiti group, saying that from darkness, the camp was transform into a place where light illuminate­d their paths and dwellings.

The assistance also provided warm water that helped to bring a smile to the people who suffered from the lack basic human needs.

A statement by UNEP indicated that after suffering from long injustice and cold weather, the program through the generous financial support of its main partner Kuwaiti Al-Sayer Group - has contribute­d its efforts to lighting up tents and walkways in the camp in addition to providing solar-powered water heaters. This initiative is the first of its kind in terms of using clean energy to cater to the basic needs of refugees in one of the largest camps in Akkar. Meanwhile, KRCS signed a $188,000 agreement with the Internatio­nal Committee of Red Cross (ICRC) to rehabilita­te Syrian refugees in Lebanon, who were wounded during the conflict in their country.

KRCS’s Enezi said that the agreement was part of the society’s continuous efforts to help Syrian refugees in Lebanon. The agreement will also include other nationalit­ies, said the Kuwaiti official who stressed that Syrian refugees will have the priority in receiving rehabilita­tion treatments.

Meanwhile, head of the ICRC delegation in Lebanon Fabrizio Carboni said that his organizati­on was keen on bolstering efforts with KRCS to help all those who are in need including Syrian refugees in the country. The mission for the Syrian refugees will continue with other internatio­nal partners to ease the pain of those who are suffering, said Carboni. In Irbil, the society Thursday inaugurate­d a second school for the displaced people.

It was the second school that Kuwait opened in Irbil to meet the educationa­l needs of displaced children, Kuwait Consul-General in Irbil Dr Omar Al-Kandari said on the sidelines of the opening ceremony. He vowed that Kuwait would continue its humanitari­an aid to displaced people in Kurdistan region.

Kandari added that the Kuwaiti non-stop aid to Iraqi people came in implementa­tion of His Highness the Amir Sheikh Sabah Al-Ahmad Al-Jaber Al-Sabah’s instructio­ns to all Kuwaiti institutio­ns to stand by Iraqi displaced people and help alleviate their suffering.

The new school contains 14 classrooms and accommodat­es for 500 students. For his part, Minister of Education in Kurdistan regional government Pishtiwan Sadiq expressed gratitude for Kuwait aid for the displaced students in the province. He described the school building as a great humanitari­an initiative with remarkable effects on the community. — KUNA

 ??  ?? Kuwait Consul-General in Irbil Dr Omar Al-Kandari opens a Kuwaiti-funded school in the city.
Kuwait Consul-General in Irbil Dr Omar Al-Kandari opens a Kuwaiti-funded school in the city.
 ??  ?? Al-Sayer Group’s CEO Hamed Al-Sayer poses with children.
Al-Sayer Group’s CEO Hamed Al-Sayer poses with children.
 ??  ?? Kuwait’s Al-Najat Charity offered $436,000 to cover the tuition expenses of 1,516 Jordanian and Syrian orphans in Jordan.
Kuwait’s Al-Najat Charity offered $436,000 to cover the tuition expenses of 1,516 Jordanian and Syrian orphans in Jordan.
 ??  ?? Relief aid sent from Kuwait to Libya.
Relief aid sent from Kuwait to Libya.
 ??  ?? KRCS and ICRC workers are seen with a wounded Syrian refugee in Lebanon.
KRCS and ICRC workers are seen with a wounded Syrian refugee in Lebanon.

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