Turkey’s Disaster and Emergency Management Authority (AFAD) reached out to at least 11 countries and spent $55 million on international humanitarian assistance in 2019.
AMOUNT SPENT ON AID EXCLUDES OPERATIONAL AND LOGISTIC COSTS
Last week, Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu announced that the country will continue to implement an entrepreneurial and humanitarian foreign policy in 2021 as well. Cavusoglu said that Turkey helped out 156 countries amid the pandemic.
Meanwhile, AFAD reported an increase in demand for international assistance due to natural disasters and further deterioration of conflicts in Syria and Yemen. “AFAD has been committed to healing the wounds of people across the world affected by war, famine and other disasters. In 2019 alone, AFAD reached out to 11 countries, responding to calls made by national governments calling for humanitarian assistance,” an AFAD report said.
“Rather than creating a cycle of dependency, Turkey’s approach to international humanitarian aid has been to provide the means for countries to develop and become independent of aid itself,” added the report.
Turkey through its aid organization also works with local non-governmental organizations. For instance, mobile health clinics were installed in Yemen for those who had no access to any health facilities.
Since 2009, AFAD has delivered at least $1.2 billion to Syria in the form of humanitarian assistance. According to a report by the UN’s Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, Syria’s Idlib currently hosts around 3 million people, with 1.8 million internally displaced people (IDPs).
Currently, AFAD coordinates four camps in the Idlib region. It is also overseeing the construction of 50,000 briquette houses that are expected to be completed by this year’s end.