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ADRA Kenya launches three-month project to assist 24,000 people

Silver Spring, Maryland [February 14, 2008]—The Adventist Development and Relief Agency (ADRA) continues working with its partners to expand its emergency response for those displaced or affected by the ongoing post-election violence in Nairobi and Kenya’s western provinces. With a three-month project launching next week, ADRA Kenya will further expand its assistance to 24,000 internally displaced persons (IDPs), providing essential supplies and services. The project complements ADRA Kenya’s other expanded responses to distribute additional shipments of pharmaceuticals, provide medical care in affected communities, and construct water and sanitation facilities for dozens of orphanages.

In coordination with its partners, ADRA Kenya is set to launch a three-month intervention in the Rift Valley to assist more than 24,000 internally displaced persons (IDPs) sheltering in temporary camps in Navaisha, Kipkelion, and Nakuru. ADRA Kenya will distribute non-food items such as kitchen sets, blankets, mosquito nets, clothing, and soap; help approximately 1,000 IDPs return home; and provide an estimated 2,000 IDPs with medical treatment. The project is scheduled to begin February 20 and will continue through April 20, 2008.

Additionally, at the request of ADRA Kenya, ADRA International has shipped containers of donated clothing and medical supplies donated by partner organizations. In addition, ADRA International has airlifted donated pharmaceuticals into Kenya for distribution at local clinics. A portion of the medical supplies and pharmaceuticals is being directed to Kendu Adventist Hospital, located in the Rift Valley near Lake Victoria. Medical teams mobilized by ADRA are providing treatment in dozens of affected communities, including Naivasha and Nakuru in the Rift Valley, and are working with the Ministry of Health to treat displaced persons sheltering at the Moi Stadium in Kisumu in Nyanza province.(more)

Alternative Energy Project in Somalia

Watford, England – Windmills, solar powered water systems and 10,000 cook stoves are among the schemes that will make a difference to people living in poverty in Somalia. The innovative project will benefit the states of Puntland and Somaliland in this country, where re-development has started after a long civil conflict.

With this project ADRA-UK has secured its largest project co-funded with European Commission to date. The ‘Somalia Energy and Livelihood project’ will start in Somalia on November 1 2007 and will last for three years. Valued at €2,000,000 (£1,370,000), 75% of the funding is furnished by the European Commission.

Somalia is classified as a ‘least developed country’. It is one of the poorest countries in the world with per capita income of less than £100 a year. 53% of the population live below the poverty line. The situation has been exacerbated by the effects of war and lack of state authorities. This has led to the total collapse of social services. (more)

ADRA starts new project in Zambia

One thousand chaka hoes*, 1,000 farmer tool kits and 50 treadle pumps for simple irrigation are just a sample of what ADRA will distribute in the project. Co-funded with the European Commission, the initiative starts on the Friday, 1 February and aims to provide three meals a day for the poor in the Senaga District of Zambia.

Pansi Katenga, ADRA-UK Programmes Officer, is in Zambia this week to help the local ADRA office launch a new poverty alleviation project.

Mrs Katenga reported, “This project will make a significant difference in the lives of many of the poorest people here. Just imagine what it is like to have only enough food for just half of the year. Most people have to survive on one meal of maize a day.”(more)

ADRA Provides Food to Flood Survivors in Zambia

1,200 people displaced by continued heavy rains receive aid

Silver Spring, Maryland—The Adventist Development and Relief Agency (ADRA) is providing emergency food packages for 1,200 flood survivors in Zambia after heavy rains and flooding washed away homes, crops, and livelihoods and displaced more than 334,000 people in Zambia as well as Botswana, Malawi, Mozambique, Namibia, and Zimbabwe.

ADRA Zambia will distribute maize meal, vegetable oil, salt, and Kapenta—a sardine-like fish—to 150 households, or approximately 1,200 flood survivors in the heavily affected Monze district, where more than 3,200 people have been displaced after flooding destroyed their homes.(more)

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