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Update on Lebanon activities

Geneva, 04/12/2006: Among the greatest needs currently being expressed in villages in Lebanon are non-food relief items. DanChurchAid in Lebanon supports approx. 3,000 families with non food items and is also clearing mines and unexploded ammunition.

© Hege Opseth, NCA-ACT International

Source: ACT International

Activities of ACT members working under the appeal:

Non-food relief

Among the greatest needs currently being expressed in villages are non-food relief items. The Middle East Council of Churches (MECC), through its humanitarian relief arm, Inter-Church Network for Development and Relief (ICNDR) in Lebanon, has outlined a distribution plan that includes agriculture assistance and essential winter supplies.

Beginning in early December, 32,750 seedlings will be distributed to 1,310 people, and 1,250 beehives will go out to 250 people in villages in South Lebanon and the Bekaa. ICNDR, with the help of municipalities and local non-governmental organizations, will also distribute 990 heaters and 6,000 blankets (two per family).

International Orthodox Christian Charities (IOCC) is also continuing its work in the area of non-food relief, and is currently carrying out distributions to 95 families. Hygiene kits, heaters or gas stoves, cooking pans, bed covers and blankets are being distributed during November and December. More than 3,000 additional families are being assisted in the same manner through IOCC with funding from the U.S. government.

© Hege Opseth, NCA-ACT International

Moussa, 6 years old, tells about his drawing: "This is a building - a new building - and a new start." Lebanon, 2006

Psychosocial assistance

Another huge need identified is in the psychosocial sector. ICNDR, in collaboration with the Church of Sweden (CoS), will provide a range of services throughout Lebanon from now until January. Equipment will be provided for children with mental and physical handicaps, and entertainment events for children ages 3 to 6 are planned. Vocational training is also planned.

Earlier in November, ICNDR and CoS held a daylong training session for ICNDR staff devoted exclusively to community-based psychosocial services. Staff became familiar with a facilitator’s guide and talked about ways of implementing this work in the field. A follow-up is planned for early December.

Water and sanitation

December and January will see the continuation of water and sanitation work implemented by Norwegian Church Aid in support of ICNDR. When work is completed, which is expected to be by the end of January 2007, the joint team will have:

  • distributed 5,000 water-storage tanks
  • repaired, laid and fitted water pipes in 10 villages
  • trucked water into 11 villages
  • provided 15 generators
  • distributed 10,250 hygiene kits
  • provided other general services such as emptying septic tanks and purifying water

In all, water and sanitation efforts are being completed in more than 80 Lebanese villages by NCA and ICNDR.

Work with the disabled

Christian Aid (CAID) has identified work with the physically disabled as a main area of focus during this post-crisis phase and beyond. Through one of its local partners, the Lebanese Physically Handicapped Union (LPHU), CAID is working with 485 beneficiaries and their families from South Lebanon, Bekaa and Beirut who were affected by the conflict. Health and medical support, as well as livelihood rehabilitation, is being provided for women, children and the elderly with disabilities, and families with a disabled member.

Livelihood restoration

CAID’s work also continues in the area of livelihood restoration through another of its local partners, Mouvement Social. The goal is to reach 300 small farmers, small shop owners, craftsmen and craftswomen living in South Lebanon (in particularly Saida and Nabatieh) and Bekaa. Indirectly, the project is expected to reach about 1,500 people, namely the families of the beneficiaries and others who may work with or benefit from the income-generating activities. Priority will be given especially to:

  • widows and women on whose income the family partially or completely relies upon
  • men who have to support their families
  • senior farmers or owners of small business
  • disabled people
  • victims of the war
Lebanese child is showing the remains of injuries he received when an unexploded bomb went off
© Toya Hill, ACT International

Hussein Sultan, 10, shows the remains of injuries he received when an unexploded bomb went off while he and his friends played near a house in the Souane area that was destroyed in the fighting. Lebanon 2006

Activities of ACT members working outside the appeal:

Relief work of ACT members working outside the appeal has also progressed. Key areas of focus have been mine removal, mine-risk education and mine-victim assistance - all grouped under the category of humanitarian mine action - and additional non-food relief.

Humanitarian mine action

DanChurchAid (DCA) has established a multi-person staff contingent on the ground in Lebanon that is tasked with helping rid the country of the scores of cluster bombs and unexploded ordnance that litter the land. With funding from the European Commission Humanitarian Aid Office (ECHO), DanChurchAid will engage in battle-area clearance to remove the bombs. DanChurchAid’s demining work is expected to be operational by early January and continue through December 2007. More about humanitarian mine action...

Non-food relief

DanChurchAid is also engaging in non-food relief, again with European Commission funding. Beginning the second week of December, DanChurchAid will distribute heaters and fuel supplies for three months to 3,000 families in South Lebanon. The distribution will also include blankets and diapers. ICNDR assisted DanChurchAid during the assessment phase of the non-food relief efforts.

DanChurchAid also conducted a two-day training workshop in November for ICNDR staff on the Sphere Humanitarian Charter and Minimum Standards in Disaster Response.


Information compiled by Toya Richards Hill, ACT communicator who was working within the Middle East Council of Churches’ Inter-Church Network for Development and Relief (ICNDR) in Lebanon.

DanChurchAid is a member of ACT International - a global alliance of churches and related agencies working to save lives and support communities in emergencies.