(OCT) Meeting 14 Jun 2017. Mission East Takhar Office @09;30Am

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

(OCT) Meeting 14 Jun 2017. Mission East Takhar Office @09;30Am Takhar Operational Coordination Team (OCT) meeting 14 Jun 2017. Mission East Takhar office @09;30am Participants; # Agenda Discussions Action points 1 Welcome and introduction OCHA warmly welcomed the participants and participant introduced themselves to each other 2 Updates on conflict IDPs assessment and responds DoRR will contact with District Governors to report the real Based on Takhar screening committee meeting 2,520 individuals. (360 families) have been number of conflict displaced displaced from Kunduz and Takhar districts to centre of the province , Baharak ,Rustaq and families in their areas and DoRR Dashti Qala districts of Takhar province; 220 families have been displaced from Dashti-Archi will once filter the petitions district of Kunduz to Rustaq, Dashti Qala and Taloqan district of Takhar, 69 families have been before referring to conflict IDP displaced from Imam Sahib, Chardara, Khanabad and Ali Abad districts of Kunduz to Taloqan screening committee meeting. city, 20 families have been displaced from Darqad district to Taloqan city, 35 families have been displaced from Khowaja Bahawodin and Yang Qala districts to Taloqan city , , 8 families from Amber Koh areas of Baharak to Baharak IDP camp, 1 family from Dahana Ghori DACAAR and WASH cluster district of Baghlan to Taloqan city, one family from Shindan district of Herat to Taloqan city, one teams will get preparedness for family have been displaced from Qabri Qazi area of Taloqan to Taloqan city due to personnel the permanent solution of water dispute ,and 5 families have been displaced from Keshem and Baharak district of Badakhshan problems in Dashti Qala and to Taloqan. Baharak IDP camps. Conflict IDP assessment in Eshkamish district of Takhar province; District governor and DoRR reported that 300 families were displaced form remote village of ARCS will distribute WASH kits, the district and Koka Bulaq areas of Eshkamish district to center of the district, while the team Hygiene Kits, Dignity kits for the assessed and found only 46 families out of which verified only 26 families. The team asked women and clothes for the DoRR to contact the district governors to report the real number of IDPs. children for the 139 families in The Baharak and Dashti Qala 139 families are in urgent need to food and water; Dashti Qala and Baharak IDP Concern WW has committed to provide drinking water for the IDPs in Baharak and Dashti Qala camps. IDP camps for 20 days. Mission East will provide drinking water for the conflict IDPs in Dashti Qala and Baharak IDP camps after Concern WW. DACAA will take preparedness for solution of water problem in Dashti Qala and Baharak IDP camps after Concern WW and Mission East services. ARCS; will distribute WASH kits, Hygiene Kits, Dignity kits for the women and clothes for the children for the 139 families in Dashti Qala and Baharak IDP camps. The IDP camps latrines which was installed last year already damaged, the area is windy and need for construction of latrines ME will construct latrine in contribution of the communities 3 Updates on natural disasters assessment and responses. IOM plans to supply the ANDMA by office equipment, internet, computers, scanner and printers IOM provides training for the natural disaster affected families through its CBDRM project, IOM constructs protection walls in vulnerable areas. WFP and ARCS has responded the 46 flood affected families in Talqoan city. ME, Concern WW, WFP, UNHCR, ARCS, SFL and ACTED have actively participated in natural disaster assessment and responses. Clusters updates IOM; Displacement trucking matrix for returnees, natural disaster and conflict IDPs The people who have been resettled has started, IOM will follow the matrix one by in all 16 districts of Takhar province while IOM has already started 350 villages in 16 districts covered. The program is for two months. AOB .
Recommended publications
  • AFGHANISTAN - Base Map KYRGYZSTAN
    AFGHANISTAN - Base map KYRGYZSTAN CHINA ± UZBEKISTAN Darwaz !( !( Darwaz-e-balla Shaki !( Kof Ab !( Khwahan TAJIKISTAN !( Yangi Shighnan Khamyab Yawan!( !( !( Shor Khwaja Qala !( TURKMENISTAN Qarqin !( Chah Ab !( Kohestan !( Tepa Bahwddin!( !( !( Emam !( Shahr-e-buzorg Hayratan Darqad Yaftal-e-sufla!( !( !( !( Saheb Mingajik Mardyan Dawlat !( Dasht-e-archi!( Faiz Abad Andkhoy Kaldar !( !( Argo !( Qaram (1) (1) Abad Qala-e-zal Khwaja Ghar !( Rostaq !( Khash Aryan!( (1) (2)!( !( !( Fayz !( (1) !( !( !( Wakhan !( Khan-e-char Char !( Baharak (1) !( LEGEND Qol!( !( !( Jorm !( Bagh Khanaqa !( Abad Bulak Char Baharak Kishim!( !( Teer Qorghan !( Aqcha!( !( Taloqan !( Khwaja Balkh!( !( Mazar-e-sharif Darah !( BADAKHSHAN Garan Eshkashem )"" !( Kunduz!( !( Capital Do Koh Deh !(Dadi !( !( Baba Yadgar Khulm !( !( Kalafgan !( Shiberghan KUNDUZ Ali Khan Bangi Chal!( Zebak Marmol !( !( Farkhar Yamgan !( Admin 1 capital BALKH Hazrat-e-!( Abad (2) !( Abad (2) !( !( Shirin !( !( Dowlatabad !( Sholgareh!( Char Sultan !( !( TAKHAR Mir Kan Admin 2 capital Tagab !( Sar-e-pul Kent Samangan (aybak) Burka Khwaja!( Dahi Warsaj Tawakuli Keshendeh (1) Baghlan-e-jadid !( !( !( Koran Wa International boundary Sabzposh !( Sozma !( Yahya Mussa !( Sayad !( !( Nahrin !( Monjan !( !( Awlad Darah Khuram Wa Sarbagh !( !( Jammu Kashmir Almar Maymana Qala Zari !( Pul-e- Khumri !( Murad Shahr !( !( (darz !( Sang(san)charak!( !( !( Suf-e- (2) !( Dahana-e-ghory Khowst Wa Fereng !( !( Ab) Gosfandi Way Payin Deh Line of control Ghormach Bil Kohestanat BAGHLAN Bala !( Qaysar !( Balaq
    [Show full text]
  • TAKHAR, V1, English Chapar Khvajeh ! Pahlavan !
    525000 530000 535000 540000 545000 550000 555000 69°17'30"E 69°20'0"E 69°22'30"E 69°25'0"E 69°27'30"E 69°30'0"E 69°32'30"E 69°35'0"E 69°37'30"E GLIDE number: EQ-2015-000147-AFG Activation ID: EMSR145 Product N.: 02TAKHAR, v1, English Chapar Khvajeh ! Pahlavan ! N Takhar - AFGHANISTAN " 0 ' N 0 " 5 0 ° ' Choqur 6 0 Earthquake - 26/10/2015 3 5 ° 6 3 Qeshlaq Reference Map K ! v a j e h Uzbekistan Kyrgyzstan g h China a Panj Tajikistan r - T 0 0 Turkmenistan a 0 0 l 0 e 0 Khatlon 5 q 5 7 a 7 0 0 Kabul n 4 4 -B r o ^ R a Afghanistan d Fayzabad Wochareq Iran ! !( Pakistan Takhar India Badakhshan Kondoz Kunduz Taloqan !( !( N " 0 3 N Tarmeh ' " 7 0 4 3 ° ' 6 7 3 4 Bay ° ! 6 3 Baghlan Badaleh ! !( R Cartographic Information - B 0 K 0 v 0 a 0 Full color ISO A1, high resolution (300 dpi) 0 je 0 1:50000 0 h 0 7 g 7 0 h 0 a 4 r 4 -T r 0 1 2 4 a le Baghak q ! km a ! n ro ad Grid: WGS 1984 UTM Zone 42N map coordinate system Khvajeh Tick marks: WGS 84 geographical coordinate system ± Sabz Push Badaleh ! ! Legend Qarandu "£ General Information Point of Interest ! Area of Interest ^ Religious N " 0 ' N 5 Settlements Transportation " 4 r 0 ° ' 6 5 3 4 ! ° Populated Place Aerodrome 6 K 3 han ! ab £ ad- Talo q £ Residential Bridge an r " oad " Hydrology £ Primary Road " River Secondary Road !Taloqan River Local Road 0 ^ £ 0 0 0 0 0 5 " 5 6 Chin 6 0 0 4 4 Za'i £ ! " Khanabad-Taloqan road N " 0 3 N ' " 2 0 4 3 ° ' 6 2 ^ 3 4 ° Qowl ^ 6 3 Braq R ! -B T a lo r q a e n - v K i e Burkah s Map Information ! h R i m A major earthquake hit Afghanistan, northern Pakistan and parts of India.
    [Show full text]
  • ERM Household Assessment Report
    ERM Household Assessment Report Assessment Location: Dashti Qala, khwaja Ghar, Taloqan districts of Takhar province. Type of crises: Conflict Darayem Kesham,districts of Badakhshan, khwaja Ghar, Dashti Qala, Namak Crisis Location: Aab,districts of Takhar, Qaysar district of Faryab province. Assessment Team: ACTED, DACAAR,IDS/WFP, SFL, ME, DoRR Crisis date: Month of January 2019 to February 2019. Date of Notification: 13.02.2019-and 07.March.2019 Date of Assessment: 03. March. 2019 to03. April.2019 HHs: Families: Individuals: Affected Population: 214 214 1277 1. Brief assessment’s findings and planned response. ALERT AND ASSESSMENT Cause of displacement: military operation conducted by ANSF/ by supporting airstrikes against to AOGs in, all villages of Dashti Qala, district of Takhar province, and also the AOGs attacked to the position of ANP in khwaja Ghar district caused the families displaced to secure villages of khwaja Ghar district and Taloqan district, the number of families displaced from Darayem and keshem districts of Badakhshan to Taloqan and some families displaced from Qaysar district of Faryab to Taloqan district, and displaced the high number of IDPs families to secure village of Dashti Qala district, Rustaq and Taloqan. Displacement data: Month of January and February 2019 from conflict areas to all secured villages of Dashti Qala district, khwaja Ghar district, Taloqan district of Takhar province. Number of households assessed: 980 Number of households eligible under ERM assistance: 214. COORDINATED RESPONSE: Food – WFP will provide two-month food ration in-kind to all 214 households NFIs– UNHCR will provide the NFIs kit for 214-households. Shelter– ACTED under ERM project will distribute 2,000 AFN per HH for all 204- families in this caseload and 10 families will not receive cash and will receive assistance from other partners.
    [Show full text]
  • Infrastructure and Water Distribution in the Asqalan and Sufi-Qarayateem Canal Irrigation Systems in the Kunduz River Basin
    A Service of Leibniz-Informationszentrum econstor Wirtschaft Leibniz Information Centre Make Your Publications Visible. zbw for Economics ter Steege, Bernie Working Paper Infrastructure and water distribution in the Asqalan and Sufi-Qarayateem canal irrigation systems in the Kunduz River Basin ZEF Working Paper Series, No. 69 Provided in Cooperation with: Zentrum für Entwicklungsforschung / Center for Development Research (ZEF), University of Bonn Suggested Citation: ter Steege, Bernie (2007) : Infrastructure and water distribution in the Asqalan and Sufi-Qarayateem canal irrigation systems in the Kunduz River Basin, ZEF Working Paper Series, No. 69, University of Bonn, Center for Development Research (ZEF), Bonn This Version is available at: http://hdl.handle.net/10419/88342 Standard-Nutzungsbedingungen: Terms of use: Die Dokumente auf EconStor dürfen zu eigenen wissenschaftlichen Documents in EconStor may be saved and copied for your Zwecken und zum Privatgebrauch gespeichert und kopiert werden. personal and scholarly purposes. Sie dürfen die Dokumente nicht für öffentliche oder kommerzielle You are not to copy documents for public or commercial Zwecke vervielfältigen, öffentlich ausstellen, öffentlich zugänglich purposes, to exhibit the documents publicly, to make them machen, vertreiben oder anderweitig nutzen. publicly available on the internet, or to distribute or otherwise use the documents in public. Sofern die Verfasser die Dokumente unter Open-Content-Lizenzen (insbesondere CC-Lizenzen) zur Verfügung gestellt haben sollten,
    [Show full text]
  • Sub-Basin Working Groups in Kunduz River Basin, Afghanistan
    View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE provided by Wageningen University & Research Publications Water & Development Publications - Helsinki University of Technology MUCH ADO ABOUT NOTHING – SUB-BASIN WORKING GROUPS IN KUNDUZ RIVER BASIN, AFGHANISTAN Manijeh Mahmoudzadeh Varzi & Kai Wegerich Irrigation and Water Engineering Group, Wageningen University, The Netherlands This chapter critically evaluates ongoing processes within preliminary sub-basin working groups in the Kun- duz river basin. These working groups were set up in the context of Afghan water management reforms. The reforms aim to promote integrated water resource management and user participation in decision making. It is shown that the working groups are very far from their official aim of introducing a decision-making role for participants in the Kunduz sub-basins. To date, three years after formation of the working groups, meetings are more influenced by outside agendas. Even the invited stakeholders do not represent all the stakeholders of the basin but rather the stakeholders within local-level project sites. 1 Introduction In Afghanistan, the water sector is in process of river basin approach, the splitting of functions reform. In May 2004, the Supreme Council for from central management to a decentralized Water Affairs and Management developed the management and operation of water resources, Strategic Policy Framework for the Water Sector, and the participation of stakeholders in planning, providing principle directions for the water sector decision making and management at basin and in Afghanistan (Government Islamic Republic sub-basin level. of Afghanistan, 2008a). These policies are based on the principles of integrated water resources To start the implementation of this new policy, management (IWRM), the application of the the European Commission as donor and the Government of Afghanistan as implementer initiated the Kunduz River Basin Program (KRBP).
    [Show full text]
  • DEWS-WER-22-2012.Pdf (English)
    th June 4, 2012 DISEASES EARLY WARNING SYSTEM WER-22 (6P PYr) DEWS WEEKLY EPIDEMIOLOGICAL REPORT SUMMARY: th st This report includes surveillance data from 26 May to 1 June 2012. Out of 305 functional Sentinel sites(SS), 303 (99) have sent their reports in Week-22 of 2012; Out of total 302,409 Consultations recorded in week-22 of 2012, 98,290 (32.5%) consultations were reported due to DEWS target diseases. Main causes of consultations this week are Acute Respiratory Infections/ARI (18.1%) and Acute Diarrheal Diseases/ADD (12.9%) from total clients in a continuing trend from the week before. 47 deaths caused due to Pneumonia, Diarrheal diseases and Meningitis/Severely ill children, so that 25 deaths due to pneumonia, 8 deaths due to diarrheal diseases and 14 deaths reported due to Meningitis and Severely Ill Children. In this reporting week, seven Measles outbreaks reported and investigated in Paktya, Oruzgan and Ghor provinces. Two suspected Poisoning in Logar and Takhar provinces, one ertussis, one Scabies and one CCHF outbreaks have been reported and investigated in Hirat province. REPORTSU RECEIVED FROM REPORTING SITES: st As of June 1P ,P 2012, 305 sentinel sites were functioning in eight epidemiological regions, in 34 provinces of Afghanistan . In this reporting week, 303 sentinel sites have sent their reports on new cases of DEWS target diseases , recorded during the reporting. Out of all events recorded in DEWS sentinel sites, 15 target diseases (priority diseases) are included in DEWS weekly epidemiological reports. TableU -1:U Status of Reports Received from DEWS Regions during Epidemiological week-22, 2012 Central Central East Central West North North East West South East South East Total No.
    [Show full text]
  • Highlights Displacement Needs and Response
    Afghanistan: Kunduz Emergency Situation Report No. 2 (as of 09 October 2016) This report is produced by OCHA Afghanistan in collaboration with humanitarian partners. It covers the period from 03 to 09 October 2016. Highlights Fighting in Kunduz city between NSAG and Afghan government forces, supported by international military forces, continued for a sixth day. The government reportedly controls more than half of the city, but the situation remains volatile and in flux. Initial reports indicate that nearly 24,000 IDPs have fled Kunduz and are arriving in Taloqan (highest number of arrivals), Kabul, Pul-e-Khumri, Taloqan and Mazar-i-Sharif. These figures are likely to increase. Main needs include shelter, food, wash and medical support. MoRR estimate up to 100,000 individuals could be displaced and anticipates a 3 month response. Kunduz city: the humanitarian situation continues to deteriorate; needs include food and medical supplies. Coordination: OCTs and assessments have started in Kabul, Mazar-i-Sharif and Taloqan Displacement As of 8 October 2016, initial reports indicate that around 24,000 IDPs have arrived mainly in Taloqan, Kabul, Mazar- i-Sharif and Pul-e-Khumri, with numbers steadily increasing. Around 10,000 people have been assessed so far, and with assessments ongoing, this figure is likely to change. Taloqan is receiving the highest number of arrivals, most probably due to the security concerns on the road crossing Baghlan (particularly Baghlan-e-Jadid). In general, IDPs are reported to have fled quickly, some on foot to avoid checkpoints, and were unable to take possessions. MoRR have advised they expect displacement to last longer than the 2015 crisis and with larger areas impacted by fighting, more people are expected to flee.
    [Show full text]
  • Proquest Dissertations
    Saving Grace: Saqshbandi Spiritual Transmission in the Asian Sub-Continent, 1928-1997 Item Type text; Dissertation-Reproduction (electronic) Authors Lizzio, Kenneth Paul Publisher The University of Arizona. Rights Copyright © is held by the author. Digital access to this material is made possible by the University Libraries, University of Arizona. Further transmission, reproduction or presentation (such as public display or performance) of protected items is prohibited except with permission of the author. Download date 04/10/2021 09:49:29 Link to Item http://hdl.handle.net/10150/270114 INFORMATION TO USERS This manuscript has been reproduced from the microfilm master. UMI films the text directly from the original or copy submitted. Thus, some thesis and dissertation copies are in typewriter face, while others may be from any type of computer printer. The quality of this reproduction is dependent upon the quality of the copy submitted. Broken or indistina print, colored or poor quality illustrations and photographs, print bleedthrough, substandard margins, and improper alignment can adversely affect reproduction. In the unlikely event that the author did not send UMI a complete manuscript and there are missing pages, these will be noted. Also, if unauthorized copyright material had to be removed, a note will indicate the deletion. Oversize materials (e.g., maps, drawings, charts) are reproduced by sectioning the original, beginning at the upper left-hand comer and continuing from left to right in equal sections with small overlaps. Each original is also photographed in one exposure and is included in reduced form at the back of the book. Photographs included in the original manuscript have been reproduced xerographically in this copy.
    [Show full text]
  • South-West Asia Has Left Very Limitedresourceshas Leftvery Fortherehabilitation Ofsocial However, from Thenorth)
    Recent Developments The civil war in Afghanistan intensified throughout 2000 with the Taliban gaining control of strategically located towns and areas in the north-east, including Tangi, Farkhar, Taloqan and Namakaab in Takhar province and parts of Kunduz province previously under the control of the opposition. The fighting has pushed the opposition deeper into the Farkhar district and Badakhshan province, the last strongholds of the forces led by ousted President Burhanuddin Rabbani and former Defence Minister Ahmed Shah Masood. About 60,000 civilians are believed to have been forced into remote and mountainous areas of Takhar and Badakshan provinces. The UN and NGOs have been distributing food and non-food items to the affect- ed people, who are living out in the open air or in make-shift shelters. Countries in Central Asia have made preparations for a possible influx of up to 100,000 Afghans who are reported to have fled towards the border with Tajikistan. Some 28,000 refugees have recently crossed from north-eastern Afghanistan into Pakistan. The Taliban now control almost 95 per cent of Afghan terri- tory and the security situation in most areas is relatively calm (apart from the north). However, heavy spending on the war has left very limited resources for the rehabilitation of social infrastructure and economic development. Health and educational services are few and far between, potable water is in short supply, and there are intermittent power cuts (where there South-West Asia Afghanistan Islamic Republic of Iran Pakistan 142 — UNHCR 2001 Global Appeal South-West Asia is any electricity at all).
    [Show full text]
  • Takhar Operational Coordination Team (OCT) Meeting
    Takhar Operational Coordination Team (OCT) meeting ANDMA Takhar office 17 December 2018 Participants; ANDMA, IOM, DACAAR, ACTED, DoRR, Concern WW, ME, UNHCR/ORD, MAAO, ASLO, SFL, ARCS, and UNOCHA # Agenda Discussions Action points 1 Welcome and introduction OCHA warmly welcomed the team and the team introduced themselves to each other. Clusters updates (WASH, 2 FSAC, ES/NFI, Protection). SFL updates: SFL currently implements three projects in Takhar province: Asset creation Vocational training and emergency responses: in four districts of Takhar namely Warsaj, Rustaq, Taloqan and Kalafgan districts, rehabilitation of 3 km. road in Rustaq, establishing one irrigation canal, 210-meter protection wall, 100-meter stone masonry and cleaning 3 km of an irrigation canal. In Kalafgan district construction of one water reservation with solar system in Gram-Sir village of Kalafgan district. establishing of 3km road and 210 protection wall in Dandan Shah village of Kalafgan district. Rustaq: construction of 120 m RCC beach for the canal of Baghi Sha village. Water reservation 13/18 in Dashti Qazi Rustaq. Baghi shan, kitchin garden for 90 families and the canal which established by SFL the canal irrigates about 2000 Jereeb lands. One nursery in Baghi-Zakhira and rehabilitation of 3 km road in road in Qara Tash village. Vocational training in Taloqan city for six months provided for 600 poor families, Through Emergency for the conflict and natural disaster affected families SFL had distributed On 18 December 17, 2018 286 MT food for conflict IDPs in Takhar for 2018. MAAO, Mission East and MAAO and ACTED, ME will have a meeting to coordination between the beneficiaries.
    [Show full text]
  • Full Map with Province Borders
    Darwaz Darwaz Bala 25,278 28,869 Map of Afghanistan indicating districts controlled by the Afghan government Shaki 28,743 and districts controlled by the Taliban Yangi Qala Kof Aab Khwaja Bahawudin Badakhsan 24,379 Sheghnan Dashte Qala Khwahan Darqad Shahre Buzurg 30,411 109,215 18,093 Charbolak 29,384 57,099 Arghanjkhwah 88,408 Registan Khani Char Bagh Deh Dadi Chah Aab 17,578 25,278 Kham 73,652 Mazar e Sharif (center) 43,243 Qarqin Khwaja Ghar 86,587 yab 454,457 Yawan 15,269 27,168 Shortepa 43,24 73,426 Rustaq Shuhada Kaldar Imamsaheb 35,414 Mingajak 3 179,591 37,724 Jowzjan Mardiyan 220,256 Wakhan Qurghan 46,835 Dawlatabad 21,814 Dashte Archi Hazar Sumuch Eshkashem Khwajah Aqcha 42,088 Kunduz Gultepa Kohestan 16,296 51,455 Andkhoy 114,853 Nahre Khulm 92,576 15,013 15,141 dohKoh 83,930 Qala-e-Zal 10,337 Takhar 18,092 Qaram 44,715 Shahi 79,471 Khanabad Keshm Faizabad 29,385 Faizabad Marmul 76,616 Baharak Qul21,428 Balkh131, 49,016 Kunduz 150,544 Yaftale Soa Warduj Khanaqah 45,424 12,447 Namak Aab (center) 218 347,765 33,746 Argo 361,977 Chemtal Aqtaash Bangi Chaal 74,031 23,8 Dawlatabad 25,406 Chardara80,196 Darayem Faryab Sheberghan 100,086 Feroz 26,629 38,367 44,140 66 Muqur 53,226 Hazrat Sultan Teshkan 184,964 Sholgara Charkent Nakhchir Baghlan jadid Aliabad Eshkmesh Taloqan 25,919 45,167 Tagab Yamagan Sare Pul Gosfandi 124, 48,502 14,243 190,604 51,455 64,415 248,830 Zebak 49,913 Shirin Tagab Aybak (center) Burka 28,101 Qushtepa Sayaad 170,499 61,847 697 Guzargah Kalafgan 38,494 8,598 Qala-e-Now (center) 88,922 114,061 Nahrin 57,485
    [Show full text]
  • Interaction Member Activity Report Afghanistan a Guide to Humanitarian and Development Efforts of Interaction Member Agencies in Afghanistan
    InterAction Member Activity Report Afghanistan A Guide to Humanitarian and Development Efforts of InterAction Member Agencies in Afghanistan May 2002 Photo by Pieternella Pieterse, courtesy of Concern Worldwide US Produced by Yoko Satomi With the Disaster Response Unit of 1717 Massachusetts Ave., NW, Suite 701, Washington DC 20036 Phone (202) 667-8227 Fax (202) 667-8236 Website: http://www.interaction.org Table of Contents Map of Afghanistan 3 Background Summary 4 Report Summary 6 Organizations by Sector Activity 7 Glossary of Acronyms 9 InterAction Member Activity Report Action Against Hunger USA 11 Air Serv International 13 American Jewish World Service 14 American Refugee Committee 16 AmeriCares 17 America’s Development Foundation 18 Catholic Medical Mission Board 19 Catholic Relief Services 20 Childreach/Plan 21 Christian Children’s Fund 23 Church World Service 25 Concern Worldwide 28 Direct Relief International 30 Doctors Without Borders/ Médecins Sans Frontières 31 HALO Trust 33 International Aid 34 International Rescue Committee 35 Jesuit Refugee Service/USA 38 Lutheran World Relief 39 InterAction Member Activity Report for Afghanistan 1 May 2002 Mercy Corps 40 Northwest Medical Teams 44 Oxfam America 46 Refugees International 48 Relief International 49 Save the Children 52 United Methodist Committee on Relief 54 USA for UNHCR 55 U.S. Fund for UNICEF 57 World Concern 60 World Vision 61 InterAction Member Activity Report for Afghanistan 2 May 2002 Map of Afghanistan Map courtesy of Central Intelligence Agency / World Fact Book InterAction Member Activity Report for Afghanistan 3 May 2002 Background Summary After twenty years of war, including a decade of Soviet occupation and ensuing civil strife, Afghanistan is in shambles.
    [Show full text]