---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: IRIN <[email protected]>
Date: Thu, 1 Sep 2011 15:49:18 -0000
Subject: HORN OF AFRICA: Thinking outside the traditional funding box
To: Jean-Francois Darcq <[email protected]>

HORN OF AFRICA: Thinking outside the traditional funding box

NAIROBI, 1 September 2011 (IRIN) - The race to feed more than 12
million people facing severe food shortages in the Horn of Africa has
seen humanitarian agencies make several funding appeals. Donor
governments have contributed US$1.46 billion out of the required $2.48
billion.

 So far, so traditional. What has not been counted has been the
response of ordinary people to the disaster unfolding on their TV
screens. Here is a round-up of some initiatives that have tapped into
popular philanthropy.

 Kenyans for Kenya - One of Kenya's most successful funding drives
ever, the campaign [ http://www.kenyans4kenya.co.ke ] aimed to raise
500 million shillings - about US$5.28 million - in one month; that
target was reached in 10 days. The initiative then aimed for one
billion shillings - $10.56 million - and by 1 September, had collected
more than $7 million. The money has been used to send tonnes of food
to crisis-affected areas through the Kenya Red Cross Society (KRCS).

 Corporate sponsors have been conspicuous givers, but private citizens
contributed more than $1.6 million using MPESA, a mobile phone money
transfer service run by telecoms firm Safaricom.

 FeedKE - A separate campaign started by a Kenyan Twitter user, Ahmed
Salim [ http://twitter.com/#!/ahmedsalims ], gained some popularity
among internet users. Using the Twitter hashtag #FeedKE, the campaign
also used mobile money transfers to raise more than $15,000, which was
also channelled through KRCS.

 Telethons - A three-day telethon organized by the United Arab
Emirates Red Crescent Authority in August raised more than $17
million. The Red Crescent has also collected more than 400 tonnes of
food for the drought and set up clinics in Somalia.

 Another telethon, organized by the South African NGO, Gift of the
Givers, and the South African Broadcasting Corporation, raised more
than $170,000. This was just a fraction of the nearly $3 million that
Gift of the Givers says has been raised by South Africans.

 The diaspora - Millions of people from the Horn of Africa live abroad
and regularly spend a portion of their earnings sending remittances to
their families; Ethiopians and Somalis living abroad send more than $1
billion home annually. According to media reports, remittances from
the Somali diaspora to the worst-hit areas in the south of the country
are up by 10 percent.

 The US Agency for International Development [
http://blog.usaid.gov/2011/07/meeting-with-somali-americans-about-the-crisis-in-the-horn-of-africa
] says several Somali NGOs in Minneapolis have joined forces with the
American Refugee Committee in an initiative called Neighbours for
Nations that unites and mobilizes diaspora community efforts to
provide relief and development services in Somalia.

 Celebrity buzz - From Bono to Beyoncé, celebrities have thrown their
weight behind the campaign to feed millions in the region. Bob
Marley's family released a new video for the legend's song, High Tide
or Low Tide, to help raise awareness and money for the drought in East
Africa as part of the 'I'm gonna be your friend' [
http://imgonnabeyourfriend.org ] campaign in conjunction with Save the
Children.

 Jay Z and Kanye West courted controversy when they destroyed a
$350,000 Maybach Mercedes for the video of their track, Otis [
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BoEKWtgJQAU&ob=av2n ], but the two
artists say the vehicle will be auctioned and the proceeds used to
assist the drought response.

 In August, Canada-based Somali musician K'Naan - whose hit, Waving
Flag, was the World Cup 2010 anthem - visited his homeland for the
first time in decades to raise awareness about the food crisis.

 kr/oa/mw[END]

This report online: http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?reportID=93633



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