Dubai: Global displacement of people is a phenomenon that has come to stay in our age. With the current global conflicts and wars and natural catastrophes such as tsunamis, earthquakes, wildfires and floods, over 65 million people have been displaced. Of these 25 million are refugees and 40 million are internally displaced within their own countries. How can the world recognise the challenge and sustain humanitarian aid to billions of people needing homes, food, water, shelter and health care.
Sustainability of humanitarian aid is the main theme of the 15th edition of the Dubai International Humanitarian Aid Conference and Exhibition (DIHAD) from March 5-7. Inaugurating the three-day event on Monday, Her Royal Highness Princess Haya Bint Al Hussain, wife His Highness Shaikh Mohammad Bin Rashid Al Maktoum, Vice-President and Prime Minister of the UAE and Ruler of Dubai, and UN Messenger of Peace and Chairperson of International Humanitarian City, emphasised the need to adopt a two-pronged approach to tackle the scale and volume of the humanitarian crisis and make aid sustainable in the long term.
She said, “We need to rethink what is emergency and we need to put in a joint effort to tackle it.”
Referring to the sources available for aid, she said, “We seem to be emptying our cups faster than we fill them.”
She commended the fact that countries like UAE, Sweden and Norway were giving away at least one per cent of their Gross National Income to global humanitarian aid which was far above the stipulated expectation of the United Nations but called upon all the global players to fully collaborate and extend cooperation in making humanitarian aid more sustainable.
In his keynote address, Pierre Krähenbühl, Commissioner-General of the United Nation’s Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA), emphasised the importance of the human face of humanitarian aid. “No matter how much we professionalise humanitarian aid, it finally boils down to the courage of the person on ground,” he said.
Krähenbühl pointed out that it was important to be inclusive in spirit about people displaced. “Don’t call them victims or refugees,” he said.
He also added that in the light of the withdrawal of $300 million aid by the United States, a huge deficit had been created. He urged people to generously donate to the UNRWA fund which had now been made Zakat eligible. “Over 525 million students need education, 3 million patients need health care, so there is a need for global mobilisation of funds.”
The Dubai Corporation for Ambulance Services (DCAS) displayed three new additions to their workforce at the Dubai International Ambulance Conference being held under the aegis of the Dubai International Humanitarian Aid Conference on Monday.
Female first responders:
Hydraulic stretchers
Polaris first responder bikes
The snazzy new first responder bikes which can accelerate up to a speed of 220km/h have been acquired by the DCAS and will be deployed at popular areas such as City Walk, JBR and Jumeirah, said Mohammad Mohsin, a first responder with DCAS. “The bikes are equipped with a boot that carries smart luggage and this will have the sophisticated life-saving equipment that first responder vehicles carry. Our job will be to arrive before the ambulance, provide immediate help to a victim and mobilise an ambulance to save precious time,” he said.