UN and Turkish charity provide 17,000 Syrian refugees with financial aid


Date posted: January 23, 2014

 

ANKARA

In a project jointly carried out by Turkish charity Kimse Yok Mu and the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), 2,900 Syrian families comprising some 17,000 people, most of whom are women and children who fled the civil war in Syria and sought refuge in Turkey, are being provided with financial aid totaling TL 3.5 million ($1.5 million).

The families in need, who live in Gaziantep, Kilis, Nizip, Reyhanlı and Yayladağı, will be able to receive the financial assistance through special bank cards.

Up to 17,000 Syrian refugees living in difficult conditions, some of them begging on the streets, outside of camps established in Turkey for Syrians will be able to benefit for two months from the project Kimse Yok Mu is conducting in cooperation with the UNHCR.

TL 100 ($44) of a total of TL 200 per person will be deposited in the bank cards in January to be distributed to the Syrian refugees, with the second half to be deposited in February. When the first phase of the project is completed, a family of five will have received a total of TL 1,000 ($441), while a family of eight would have received $707.

Each of the families receiving the financial assistance will be given an ID number and will be registered in the Kimse Yok Mu project system, which is a reporting system that keeps track of what those benefitting from the financial aid spend their money on. By providing information about what refugees need, the project will be the foundation of further steps to be taken as part of the aid project.

Thanks to face-to-face discussions with and comprehensive surveys of 2,900 families who were seen to be unable to earn a living, the needs of these families were determined. The research found that most of those in need were women and children below the age of 12. The refugees, who are unable to meet their basic needs such as housing and clothing, also face the risk of falling ill with the arrival of cold winter weather.

Savaş Metin, the coordinator of the project and Kimse Yok Mu secretary-general, who noted that they have extended efforts to help Syrian refugees from the moment the civil war in Syria started, said in a written statement that under the scope of the project in which the charity is a solution partner to the United Nations, those in need were identified with the help of volunteers who serve Kimse Yok Mu, the municipalities of the towns where refugees live and nongovernmental organizations. “This project will pave the way for refugees to spend [the money] based on their own needs,” Metin added.

Nedra Katib, a 55-year-old widow who lives with her five children in a house in Kilis province, is one such refugee. Her husband died in a bomb blast while selling sahlep on the streets of Syria. Telling her story to officials from the charity, she said: “I have lost everything: my husband, my house. Suffering from hunger and thirst, we managed to somehow cross the border on foot. We sought shelter in this house with my five children. It is only my son who can work. He earns TL 20-30 [$9-13] a day.”

The family has their meals at a soup kitchen run by Kimse Yok Mu in Kilis. Katib, who said she was paying TL 700 ($308) in rent for the house, expressed her happiness with the project, saying, “With the card you gave, I will first buy shoes for my children.”

The total aid, financial and in kind, Kimse Yok Mu has provided so far to Syrian refugees in Turkey is worth TL 42 million ($18.5 million).

Source: Todays Zaman , January 23, 2014


Related News

Filling the gap left by Gulen

Erdogan and Gulen shared the goal of creating a “devout generation”. Yet despite their similar outlook on life and objectives, the Gulen movement never merged completely with the AKP. However, Gulen was never willing to subordinate himself to Erdogan, which is why the two men fell out in 2013 and the informal coalition with the Gulen movement collapsed.

Gulen movement sympathizers committed to interfaith dialogue, charity and nonviolence

George Mason University professor, Jack Goldstone, shares his view of Fethullah Gulen and Gulen Movement. Goldstone says he is particularly glad that Gulen has such a remarkable influence over his sympathizers who are committed to the promotion of interfaith dialogue, charity and nonviolence. Speaking of Gulen’s anti-violence stance, Goldstone recalls Gulen’s touching statement, as he […]

Turkish minister: Gulenists are more dangerous than ISIL because they’re well-educated

Berat Albayrak, Turkish energy minister and son-in-law of President Tayyip Erdoğan, has said at a conference that people affiliated with the Gülen movement are more dangerous than Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) militants because they’re well educated and have “higher IQs” than his own.

Turkish engagement with Southern Africa depends on the Turkish attitude towards Hizmet

Turkish engagement with Southern Africa will not be without challenges. The success of this engagement will depend on the Turkish attitude towards the Hizmet Movement. If Turkey decides to tackle the Hizmet Movement head on as it has done in Turkey and in other countries, it will risk alienation in South Africa and the wider region. The Hizmet Movement is generally popular in Southern Africa, with long standing ties to civil society and the political elite.

PM Erdoğan has one tone for Brussels, another for Turkey

Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan shifted his rhetoric on his official visit to Brussels, dropping talk of a “parallel state” that is trying to unseat him when addressing European Union officials and foreign journalists — although he continued his defamation campaign against the Hizmet movement in meetings where he addressed Turkish audiences.

Istanbul police display hundreds of books among evidence of ‘terror’

Police seized Gülen’s 1,500 books; 24 CDs featuring Gülen’s speeches; TL 435,200 ($148,000) along with $99,200 and 700 euros; several laptops; two guns and some digital data, during operations targeting the alleged terrorist network of the movement.

Latest News

Fethullah Gulen – man of education, peace and dialogue – passes away

Fethullah Gülen’s Condolence Message for South African Human Rights Defender Archbishop Desmond Tutu

Hizmet Movement Declares Core Values with Unified Voice

Ankara systematically tortures supporters of Gülen movement, Kurds, Turkey Tribunal rapporteurs say

Erdogan possessed by Pharaoh, Herod, Hitler spirits?

Devious Use of International Organizations to Persecute Dissidents Abroad: The Erdogan Case

A “Controlled Coup”: Erdogan’s Contribution to the Autocrats’ Playbook

Why is Turkey’s Erdogan persecuting the Gulen movement?

Purge-victim man sent back to prison over Gulen links despite stage 4 cancer diagnosis

In Case You Missed It

What’s Friendship Got to Do With [Mr. Gulen’s] Extradition?

Ex-diplomats detained over Gülen links subjected to severe torture, says deputy

Head of Azerbaijan’s Çağ Education Company denies authenticity of letter to Gülen

Peace Islands Massachusetts bestows Friendship Awards

Sabotage: government-Gülen movement relations

Candidates on ‘red list’ denied jobs despite high test scores, Taraf reports

Despite obstacles, Kimse Yok Mu delivers aid to thousands worldwide

Copyright 2025 Hizmet News