Beirut charity is lifeline for injured refugee children

Refugee children badly hurt in accidents occurring outside of war zones are being overlooked by charities whose funding criteria only allows them to offer free medical treatment to those wounded directly by war, a Beirut-based nonprofit has warned.

Children with complex and costly injuries are being excluded because they do not fit the funding criteria of mainstream NGOs, said Arwa Damon, founder of International Network for Aid, Relief and Assistance (INARA), which launched in August.

“There are a number of reasons why these gaps [in medical care] exist. Either because the parents don’t know how to navigate the system, or the NGO they are in touch with doesn’t provide certain services,” said Damon. “A lot of organisations won’t take on the cases because they don’t have the capacity or the mandate.”

There are more than 1 million Syrians in Lebanon registered by the UN’s refugee agency. A July report found only between 24 and 36 per cent of Syrian refugees thought medical care in Lebanon was affordable, and offered access to specialists and health information.

INARA seeks to offer free treatment to refugee children with overlooked injuries, often caused by the fallout of conflict, such as burns from exploding gas canisters in refugee tents. The nonprofit began taking on cases a year ago, before its launch in August.

The charity employs two full-time caseworkers to assess the needs of each child. This can range from connecting parents to existing health charities, to liaising with doctors to provide pro bono surgery, and funding the cost of transport and post-surgery care such as physiotherapy. The doctors give their time for free, while the American University of Beirut Medical Center provides the facilities at a discount.

To date, 28 cases have been referred to INARA, of which the nonprofit has taken on 15. Each caseworker handles around eight cases at a time, liaising with the doctors and hospitals and providing reassurance and support for traumatised children and parents, said Damon. Almost all the cases involve Syrian refugees; the majority suffering with burn injuries.

The treatment is funded by donations, and the cost can range from $200 to $20,000 per case, depending on the injury and aftercare needed. The average case is $3,800, according to the organisation. INARA estimates it will spend about $450,000 a year on medical treatment and care costs.

“There are severe gaps [in care] when it comes to burn cases,” said Damon, who is also a correspondent for CNN. “Many organisations won’t take cases that need reconstructive surgery, but it is vital to a child being able to live a semi-normal life.”

In one such case, a 12-year-old girl was left with such acute burns on her lower body she hadn’t gone to the bathroom on her own for three years. She had been standing next to a gas stove when a bomb hit her house in Syria and, a year later, boiling water was accidentally spilled on her in a refugee camp in Lebanon, making the injury worse. She stopped going to school. Her case was referred to INARA who funded the operations she needed.

“We’re never going to completely get rid of [the injury], but at the very least she can go to the bathroom on her own,” said Damon. “She has that dignity back.”

In another case, INARA funded eye surgery for 1-year-old Elena, born with severe cataracts because her mother had been malnourished during pregnancy, when their city fell under siege. If left untreated, the girl would have gone blind.

The charity hopes to grow to four full-time caseworkers, allowing INARA to aid 120 patients a year, and expand its work to Jordan and Turkey. Damon currently funds all the charity’s running costs herself, but is seeking donors to help support INARA’s annual $125,000 budget.

“You’re giving the children back dignity and the ability to function,” said Damon. “You’re never going to completely erase [the injuries], but it is our responsibility to come as close to it as possible.”

Saudi Prince pledges all his £20bn wealth to charities

Saudi businessman and philanthropist HRH Prince Alwaleed Bin Talal Bin Abdulaziz Alsaud has pledged to donate all his wealth to charities over the coming years. His $32 billion commitment is one of the largest philanthropic pledges to date.

Speaking as Chairman of the Board of Trustees of the Alwaleed Philanthropies Prince Alwaleed said that he wanted his gift to help build a “better world of tolerance, acceptance, equality and opportunity for all.”

A nephew to former king Abdullah, who died in January this year, Prince Alwaleed has been involved in philanthropic activities for 35 years. He has already donated $3.5 billion through the Alwaleed Philanthropies, one of the major philanthropic foundations in the Arab world.

He said:

“I now pledge to donate my entire wealth to the Alwaleed Philanthropies, which work in the main fields of intercultural understanding, supporting needy communities, through health promotion, eradication of diseases, provision of electric power to remote villages and hamlets, building orphanages and schools, and much more, as well as providing disaster relief and empowering women, youth and poverty alleviation. This donation will be allocated according to a well-devised plan throughout the coming years. It will be based on a strategy that is supervised and managed by a board of trustees headed by me to ensure that it will be used after my death for humanitarian projects and initiatives.”

Bill Gates, Co-chair of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, with whom the Alwaleed Philanthropies have partnered, welcomed the Prince’s decision, saying:

“Prince Alwaleed’s generous commitment promises to significantly extend the great work that his foundation is already doing. His gift is an inspiration to all of us working in philanthropy around the world.”

Gates is one of those philanthropists who have signed up to The Giving Pledge, promising to dedicate the majority of their wealth to philanthropy. Although Prince Alwaleed’s pledge is on that scale, his statement made no mention of that initiative.

The Alwaleed Philanthropies have supported projects in 92 countries. These include:

* promoting more sustainable communities in Saudi Arabia, through the Housing Initiative, which allows hundreds of thousands of eligible Saudi citizens to receive housing units.

* helping Afghani women by advocating literacy, via the Turquoise Mountain organisation

* supporting disaster relief in countries that have suffered natural disasters, including Egypt, Jeddah, Nepal and Turkey

* supporting education through six centres at the universities of Georgetown, Harvard, Edinburgh, Cambridge, and the American University of Beirut and the American University in Cairo; in addition to the Islamic Hall at the Louvre in Paris.