Aid Convoy
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Aid Convoy is a British charitable organisation running and supporting various humanitarian aid projects, mostly in Eastern Europe. Its aims are achieved primarily by means of running convoys.
Contents |
[edit] Projects
Aid Convoy's current projects focus on Albania and Ukraine. Past work has encompassed further Balkans countries, particularly Kosovo, and also Burkina Faso in Africa.
[edit] Albania
The organisation seeks to raise funds (and secure equipment and expertise) for the digging of a borehole to supply clean water to the residents of the Bathorë shanty town, just outside the capital Tirana.
[edit] Ukraine
Working primarily in the area affected by the Chernobyl nuclear disaster, Aid Convoy is closely partnered with the "Our Generation" youth group whose educational and welfare projects include:
- Providing a safe and alcohol-free social space for young people
- Volunteering at orphanages
- Running the Anomaly theatre group which runs drug- and HIV-awareness physical theatre productions at schools across the country and also in Poland
- Publishing the "BiT" newspaper
- Training and encouraging similar youth groups in other cities
The youth group, based in Chernihiv is also supported by other charitable organisations, and Aid Convoy is also involved with supporting a number of other initiatives including hospitals, orphanages, schools and universities.
[edit] Ethos and methodology
The organisation is entirely operated by unpaid volunteers, who are sourced both in the area which is the target of the assistance, and in the donor countries.
Funds and supplies are generally raised through special fundraising events and come from members of the public, private companies, and trust funds, but not from government nor major aid agencies. The organisation claims that its small scale and localised fundraising helps it to make its supporters feel empowered and involved, and also enables the provision of feedback with a high level of detail.
The small scale of the organisation and its policy of working directly with small local projects in its target countries are intended to reduce waste, inefficiency and potential for corruption, through local knowledge and the ability to quickly react to changing circumstances.
Supplies are delivered by volunteers in small convoys of vehicles, rather than by commercial freight methods, to allow for the volunteers from the UK to meet the people to whom they are delivering supplies.
[edit] History
Aid Convoy evolved from a community development group, The Kemptown Network, in the Kemptown area of the British town of Brighton. In early 1999 Kieran Turner (now Director of Aid Convoy) and Giles Hippisley, both founding members of the Kemptown Network, organised the first meetings to discuss supporting refugees from (and within) Kosovo. After discussion and investigations, which included consulting refugees in the UK at the Tinsley House Immigration Removal Centre, it was decided to send aid directly, using whatever vehicles were available, to refugee camps around Kosovo. It was decided at this very first stage that support must be equally offered to suffering civilians from both the ethnic Albanian and the Serb populations.
The first trip, consisting of five vehicles, was run in conjunction with Workers' Aid for Kosova, and delivered to a support organisation based in Tirana, Albania.
Immediately upon the return of the first convoy, it was decided to return, and the second trip was sent to a refugee camp in the Republic of Macedonia, on the border of Kosovo, with the support of the United Nations, and in conjunction with Canterbury-based Charity, British Humanitarian Aid, and Tewkesbury-based Charity Tewkesbury Independent Aid. In the event, the first vehicle specifically purchased for the group (privately, by Turner and Hippisley) broke down en route. However, the Dodge 50 Series 5.6 ton truck was rescued thanks to Simon Mayo of BBC Radio 1. It arrived in time to rejoin the rest of the forty-vehicle convoy in a United Nations compound in the Republic of Macedonia, but elected to deliver its load directly to a the village of Pirok (near Tetovo) rather than the neighbouring refugee camp, after meeting local officials who explained that the village was overrun with refugees and receiving no mainstream assistance.
By now the group was in need of its own identity, distinct from The Kemptown Network, not least because it had merged with a Brighton student-run group which had just sent six vehicles to Albania. The conjoined committees decided to adopt the name "Brighton Lifeline Humanitarian Aid".
The next convoy was one of the very first western charitable convoys to enter Kosovo itself after the NATO bombing campaign of spring 1999, and travelled with sponsorship from the University of Aberdeen Students' Representative Council (now Aberdeen University Students' Association), and in conjunction with Workers' Aid for Kosova. The convoy's six vehicles travelled to Priština and Kosovska Mitrovica, where the University of Prishtina Students' Union and various miners' trade unions were supported.
During this month-long project the team also developed contacts in Đakovica and Prizren, and in Rubik, Albania.
The group continued to travel to Kosovo, often in conjunction with British Humanitarian Aid and Tewkesbury Independent Aid. Successes of these combined convoys included the delivery of two ambulances and surgical equipment to a hospital in Gnjilane.
In Kosovo and Albania, the organisation has met and worked with representatives of other NGOs including CO-PLAN, the International Organization for Migration, the International Rescue Committee, and the British Council.
In 2001, with large amounts of international redevelopment support entering Kosovo, it was decided that the group's particular form of support would be of greatest value in Ukraine, working with colleagues from Charities met during the Kosovo work, including Tewkesbury Independent Aid again, and also Horsham-based Bear Essential Aid. The initial target for aid was the "Aratta centre for children and families" (Aratta, for short), a Ukrainian public organisation which supports people living with the legacy of Chernobyl.
During 2002-03 the organisation was renamed one final time, to Aid Convoy, in order to leave behind the association with only one British town.
The work with Aratta continued, and work was also done with the Our Generation youth group, as well as hospitals, orphanages and schools in the area.
A return to Albania began in 2003 following a special fund-raising event, "Canvas", which took the form of a raffle of works of art in Brighton and raised enough money to purchase a Land Rover Discovery which, combined with a 3.5 ton trailer, provided greater flexibility than the former combination of trucks and vans and enabled the research work required in the insecure environment in which the borehole was later projected.
The Albanian project remains subject to funding, and the work in Ukraine – primarily with the Our Generation youth group – continues as of 2007.
To facilitate work with other organisations, Aid Convoy moved from Brighton in 2005 and is now based in London.
[edit] References
- "Shelled, stranded and still hoping to return to Kosova"; The Argus (newspaper); Newsquest, Brighton, Thursday August 19, 1999
- RAC staff newsletter (autumn issue, 1999); The Royal Automobile Club; London, 1999
- Turner, Kieran: "Aid Convoy — humanitarian aid & community development"; Brighton Lifeline Humanitarian Aid, Brighton, 2003
[edit] External links
- Aid Convoy website
- Our Generation – Ukrainian youth group and a major partner of Aid Convoy
- Aratta – Ukrainian charity for families near Chernobyl (site in Russian)
- Details of UK Immigration Removal Centres (including Tinsley House, mentioned above)