CCC Assisted Over 2,000 Destitute Displaced Liberians With 'Back-to-Camp'
Relief
The Inquirer
Monrovia, Liberia
Distributed by
The Perspective
Atlanta, Georgia
Posted October 7, 2003
The Concerned Christian Community (CCC) last week, distributed food and non-food
items to more than two thousands internally displaced persons (IDPs) sheltering
at three IDP centers in Montserrado, Margibi and Lower Bong counties.
The donations distributed to the IDPs came from DORCAS AID International,
based in Netherlands and the Church World Service.
The beneficiary IDP centers included the Samuel K. Doe Sports Complex, Paynesville;
Kakata, Margibi County and Totota, Lower Bong County. The direct beneficiaries
are vulnerable women and family members, girls and elderly persons.
According to CCC's National Executive Director, Mrs. Mariama Z. B. Brown,
the food and non-food items included rice, health kits, blankets and beef.
She added that the continued distribution of rice is the way of showing DORCAS
AID International's support to the war-wearied population of Liberia.
She told The INQUIRER that the exercise is notwithstanding, CCC's way
of empowering the IDPs as they return to their previous camps. The CCC is
one of the leading and respected humanitarian and relief groups in the country.
Meanwhile, an international humanitarian relief agency based in the Netherlands
has been assessing the pressing humanitarian needs of the affected population
of war-torn Liberia to identify ways of providing relief.
ZOA Refugee Care is presently operating in more than 11 countries in the Balkans,
Africa and Asia, providing a wide-range of humanitarian assistance which includes
emergency relief to IDPs and refugees, and their rehabilitation and reintegration
through requisite programs.
Relief aid, psycho social assistance, primary health care, rural enterprise
development, mobilization and rebuilding of social structures, among others
are the sectors emphasized by the ZOA Refugee Care programs.
Presently, the presence of the agency in Liberia which is the first in West
Africa is seen as the start of a new ZOA/CORD country program, which they
believe is to stay for a long term of at least eight years.
In a bid to commence operations in the country, the agency recently dispatched
a consultancy team to the country to appropriately assess the needs of the
destitute population and make recommendations.
The ZOA assessment team is headed by Mr. Wim Franken. And it includes Ms.
Sue Cutter, Messrs Guido Reinier van Westerlaak, Timotheus Johannes Gaasbeek
and Bernard Jaspers Faijer. The team is guest of the Concerned Christian Community
(CCC).
In his assessment report, Mr.Franken who departed the country yesterday for
Netherlands said their assessment confirms that both uprooted and non-rooted
need support, saying that in the emergency phase, their primary focus will
be on the internally displaced persons (IDPs) and new arrivals to IDP campsites.
The short term which is the initial emergency response is expected to take
about 6-12 months while the overall goals include responding rapidly, effectively
and appropriately to the most urgent needs identified, establishing credibility
with key actors in Liberia, initiating partnership relations and continued
assessment, planning and fund-raising locally for subsequent phases.
The medium term which might take 24 months, focuses on preparations for the
return of IDPs' to their home areas, facilitation of their resettlement,
support of local rehabilitation initiatives, the continued local capacity
building, actualizing assessments, planning and local fund-raising and the
assessing appropriate options for a regional orientation
The long term, scheduled for six years, takes into account the continued facilitation
of the resettlement process, continued support of local rehabilitation initiation,
continued local capacity building, introduction of integrated, development-oriented
activity planning, actualizing assessment, planning and local fund-raising
and the introduction of regional initiatives/networks, DDR and peace building
initiatives.