Turkish aid relief in northern Iraq. Photo: Daily Sabah |
NEWS/TURKEY
A combination of new and old conflicts in Central African Republic , Palestine, South
Sudan and Syria , along with natural
disasters such as the Typhoon Haiyan in the Philippines , led to global
emergency aid soaring to a record $22 billion (£12.93bn) last year, which includes both government and private donations. It marks a $2.5 billion increase
on the previous record of $19.4bn in 2010 – the year of the Haiti
earthquake.
The Turkish government’s aid budget last year was £1.6bn – up 597%
from 2012. In comparison, America
donated $4.7bn, Britain
$1.8bn, Japan $1.1bn and Germany spent $949
million in aid in 2013. Much of Ankara ’s
humanitarian relief went to helping the Syrian crisis: over 1 million Syrians
have taken refuge inside Turkey .
The country’s policy
towards humanitarian aid has changed dramatically under the leadership of Recep
Tayyip Erdoğan. Presiding over a growing and prosperous economy, and exhibiting
a clear desire to expand its sphere of influence, over the past decade the Turks
have massively increased
their aid donations, up from $73m in 2002 to its current
peak of $1.6bn.
Türk Kızılayı distributing aid in Pakistan |
In recent years, AFAD – the country’s disaster management agency – and Türk Kızılayı (Turkish Red Crescent) have also played a leading role in providing relief to regions affected by national disasters and conflict. According to GHA, in 2005, Turkey
was the largest government donor to channel humanitarian assistance to Pakistan
(US$147 million) following severe flooding. The
Turks were the first international rescue service to reach typhoon victims in
the Philippines, while also responding quickly to humanitarian crises in the
Central African Republic, Afghanistan, northern Iraq, and Gaza.
Among the major beneficiaries of Turkish aid are
African countries. Since 2011 for example, Ankara
has spent some $400 million in Somalia ,
spearheading the country’s reconstruction by building wells, roads and a
hospital, as well as boosting agricultural output.
“The Turkish are giving
the kind of support we have never seen before,” Somali President Hassan
Sheikh Mohamud told the website Quartz last year. “They are changing the face of Mogadishu .”
Last year, Turkey
was selected as the host of the United Nations’s first-ever World Humanitarian
Summit, to be held in Istanbul
in 2016. Various stakeholders, from governments, to aid organisations, the UN,
civil society, and the private sector will take part. The summit will consider humanitarian
effectiveness, reducing vulnerability and managing risk, serving the needs of
people in conflict, and transformation through innovation.
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