After Haiti, Donors Give to Aid Group’s General Emergency Fund
January 22, 2010 | Read Time: 1 minute
Last Friday, Doctors Without Borders began asking donors to make contributions to its general emergency relief fund rather than earmarking them for Haiti – and it appears that many contributors have heeded the group’s call.
Since the January 12 earthquake, Doctors Without Borders has received $34-million for its relief efforts in Haiti and an additional $11.9-million for its Emergency Relief Fund.
“Our immediate response in the first hours following the disaster in Haiti was only possible because of private unrestricted donations from around the world received before the earthquake struck,” the organization wrote in a statement on its donation page last week.
The group added: “These types of funds ensure that our medical teams can react to the Haiti emergency and humanitarian crises all over the world, particularly neglected crises that remain outside the media spotlight.”
The move mirrors a decision Doctors Without Borders made a week after the Asian tsunami in 2004 when the organization announced that the organization had raised as much money as it could use for its operations in South Asia.