Social Entrepreneurship Roundup

February 9th, 2007

I’m not sure how regular this will be, but when I have a moment I’ll try to mention some other social entrepreneurship, non-profit and charity blogs and some of the subjects they cover.

One exceptionally interesting article which caught my eye is by Sandeep Junnarkar. This incisive piece describes the process of fundraising for his Lives In Focus multimedia blog project and proves what can be achieved.

Closer to home, another inspiring story (registration required) is that of Irish Independent Business Editor Tom McInerney’s project to support orphanages in Chernobyl, Belarus.

It’s encouraging to know other journalists have been moved so much by what they have seen first-hand or read about that they decided to get involved in the story rather than just report it.

The chief executive of Britain’s largest insurer, Aviva is stepping down from his post and taking off to Africa. He’s keen to see what he can do to help.

Interestingly enough, according to the School for Social Entrepeneurs’ website, courses run in Belfast to support budding social entrepeneurs are fully subscribed at the moment.

Here in southern Ireland, University College Cork run an MBS degree in Co-operative and Social Enterprise. In Dublin, both the Trinity MBA and the Dublin Institute of Technology MBA feature strong social entrepreneurship elements.

A Social Entrepreneurs summit took place recently in Zurich recently, just before the World Economic Forum in Davos.

I would’ve loved to have gone to meet other like-minded people and more importantly to see if I could pick up any badly-needed tips or advice on one or two things in particular: time management and management and co-ordination of volunteers.

Meanwhile, in The Guardian, neuroscientists reckon they’ve found the brain’s charity spot.

In Business 2.0 magazine, Richard Branson has some tips on being a great leader - if you’re a fan of Branson, also see the website of Virgin Unite, ‘the independent charitable arm of the Virgin group’ – and several other top business brains have some advice on how to do well by doing good.

And finally, in Fortune magazine, the resident ‘Ask Annie’ writer gives advice about what non-profits are looking for in new staff.

$12bn vanishes in Iraq

February 9th, 2007

$12 billion (or about €10 bn / £6bn).

It’s a sickening number. Particularly when you read this is the amount the US threw at Iraq (or flew in by the pallet-load, to be more accurate).

This amount of money would more than pay for 20 state-of-the-art 400 or 500-bed hospitals.

In the context of the current situation in the country, it really beggars belief that someone somewhere took this insane decision.

The Big Issue article that raised €500

February 3rd, 2007

Thanks to four donors (who know who they are!), this is the article in the UK’s Big Issue which raised €500 which will help the children with congenital heart defects.

More news soon…

Big Issue: Basra  

As Christmas 2006 approached, Dr Laura Schmidt, who leads a tiny European NGO, learned of a group of 22 children with congenital heart defects aged between 6 months and 14 years old. Unable to find specialists in the southern Iraqi city of Basra who could even assess their children, let alone treat them, their desperate parents hoped help would be found outside their war-ravaged country. 

Although Dr Schmidt’s efforts – supported by several larger international aid organisations – have greatly improved conditions in the hospital they attend, the parents were only too aware of the risks doctors and nurses take just going to work in what should be a sanctuary for the sick and injured.

One Tuesday in November, Dr Youssra Hashem, a well-known gynaecologist in the city was killed on her way to work, shortly after leaving her home. Another female doctor in the city defied threats from extremists. Then one day a man walked into her hospital and murdered her. 

When Dr Schmidt had first visited the hospital back in 2001, she had been able to walk around the city, talk to people and dress as she pleased, all in relative safety. Today she cannot enter the city. Even heavily armed security contractors in bulletproof vests refuse to escort trucks into Basra carrying supplies for the hospital.    With this in mind, it was too dangerous for the already fragile children and their parents to travel by road to see a specialist in congenital heart defects anywhere outside Iraq. They would have to fly from Basra airport to another city.   Aid organisations Terre Des Hommes in the Syrian capital, Damascus and Caritas in the Jordanian capital, Amman were notified of the children’s plight. A team of French specialists – visiting Damascus in the first week of January – said that if the children could travel from Basra, they would assess them and consider funding life-saving treatment for the children in France later this year. It was perhaps a once in-a-lifetime opportunity. 

With only weeks to go, a multinational effort begun to look into travel arrangements to and from Damascus. Volunteers helping Dr Schmidt contacted various airlines, the British Embassy in Jordan and a number of other contacts. They found that the only option was a civilian or military flight from Basra to Amman. From there Caritas could organise a coach for the four-hour onward journey to Damascus.   A small charter airline in the region offered to do it but needed to cover their costs: just over £5,000, but their plane could only safely accommodate 23 passengers. This was clearly not an option. 

A larger airline flying regularly between Basra and Amman looked a better option. Being a major airline with a larger plane, perhaps they would assist a humanitarian effort and show a bit of seasonal goodwill. The airline’s senior management responded saying their policy is not to assist humanitarian efforts in Iraq. The group from Basra were asked to pay regular fares amounting to just under £24,000.

On the afternoon of December 28, when all concerned were beginning to fear their efforts had been in vain, a promising telephone call came through. Ten days earlier, Dr Schmidt had appealed to the King of Jordan’s office and after considering her request, he now offered to help. 

King Abdullah II, who has four young children of his own, studied at Oxford and retains close links with the British Army. He trained at Sandhurst military school and then served in one of the Queen’s regiments as a young man. 

Before he could confirm his offer, first the King’s fears had to be allayed. The British Army initially wouldn’t guarantee the safety of one of his military planes. Thankfully an hour or so later, there was no longer a problem. It was a very welcome Christmas present for all concerned. 

Although a breakthrough was achieved on this occasion, the Basra hospital supported by Dr Schmidt – and our volunteers in Ireland and the UK – remains under increasing pressure. 

As well as looking after the sick and injured among the 3 million people living there, many Basra hospitals are being overrun by patients fleeing for their lives from Baghdad, where many hospitals have been invaded by death squads. 

While 30 armed guards patrol outside, doctors and nurses struggle to work in overcrowded wards, operation rooms and corridors where many of the sick and injured are sharing beds or lying on the floor due to the influx of extra patients. Supplies and medicines are being used up faster than ever.    Sourcing these essential medicines and supplies is another challenge. 4Basra volunteers have located a source of a vital Leukaemia drug, the generic version of which costs one eighth of the branded version. Although this will be a huge benefit, the 3,000 tablets – which will last the hospital about 6 months – will cost over £5,000. 

Washington is due to announce a further £500 million reconstruction effort, but the US track record on reconstruction suggests this will have little effect. According to the campaign group Medact, one project to build 142 primary care centres ran out of cash early in 2006, leaving just 20 on course for completion. 

In the midst of the chaos and the failure of much larger reconstruction projects, Dr Schmidt and her supporters have achieved remarkable results. One hospital ward whose walls were once dull and dirty – and where an obligatory portrait of Saddam Hussein hung – is now bright, modern and airy, like any modern European hospital ward. 

Another has been transformed from a hygiene and health safety risk, where flies constantly hovered over old drains, dirty damp walls, floors and overflowing bins, to a clean, modern one with bright colourful curtains, new beds and mattresses. The mortality rate for one serious illness is now 25 per cent, reduced from 100 per cent. 

A children’s playroom, along with toys, games and a TV with cartoons playing on it, has been a huge psychological boost. A teacher now works there and the room also functions as a makeshift school. The children can play and learn as children should, and forget about their illnesses and the trouble around them, if only momentarily.

Dr Schmidt has so far raised £40,000 towards the next consignment of medicine and supplies for the hospital she supports in Basra, which will cost £100,000. 

Names have been changed and details omitted to protect the hospital and its staff. 

The Independent: Letter published

January 24th, 2007

Sick children trapped in Iraq

Sir: In his response to your story about the plight of Iraq’s children (19 January), the tone of which suggested this government is preparing to wash its hands of the situation, Hilary Benn (letter, 20 January) did not address one point that I’d like to raise again.

The UK and US could do a lot more to assist children with the most serious medical conditions requiring urgent attention. By not doing so, both governments are reinforcing their own negative image not just in the region, but throughout the world.

Laying on helicopters or planes to ferry the most acute medical cases to neighbouring countries would be a life-saving measure where visa restrictions and huge air fares (a return air fare from Basra to Amman costs over £400), added to an already perilous security situation make it almost impossible for parents seeking to find specialists who can treat their children.

One of my colleagues recently appealed to the King of Jordan for assistance in this regard, which turned out to be unsuccessful. My own appeal to airlines in the region also saw us facing a bill of over £20,000 to fly 22 children, each accompanied by a parent, to the Jordanian capital of Amman. Road travel through much of Iraq to the surrounding countries is simply too dangerous for sick children whose conditions make them doubly vulnerable.

The Labour party in particular have always been proud of the NHS, and Tony Blair has in the past said it underpins Labour’s political ideology. However, when it comes to the health of Iraq’s most innocent and vulnerable citizens, he and Hilary Benn could make a small gesture and in some small way uphold that ideal in Iraq.

JOHN REYNOLDS

FOUNDER, 4BASRA, DUBLIN

Postscript: Only a few of the children with congenital heart defects were able to make it to Damascus to see the specialists who were visiting from France. Their parents had to borrow money from relatives and my colleague who works for our European partner NGO paid for a ticket for one child out of her own pocket.

Detailed medical reports were given to the French team and they agreed that even though they hadn’t been assessed in person, they can still travel to France for treatment.

My colleague has secured treatment in her country for several children whose conditions required urgent attention, and they are being treated and looked after there at the moment, receiving the best of care.

Even so, when the remaining children travel to France, they will first have to reach Damascus, and so there will be costs associated with this. Any donations will be put towards their travel from Basra so that they can reach France safely and receive the care and attention they need.

Donations

January 23rd, 2007

If you’re visiting this site after reading the Big Issue article and would like to make a donation, please email for further details or use the Paypal link on the right hand side.

Old-fashioned cheques will be gratefully accepted. They can be made payable to me and posted to the address here on the site.

I’ve been pleasantly surprised by the response and would like to thank everyone who has emailed. I was unprepared for such a response but Eoghan, our web designer has saved the day and added a Paypal link. (Thanks Eoghan!)

The group of children with congenital heart defects will be travelling to France later this year for treatment. A couple of urgent cases were brought to Europe by our partner there very recently, partly at her own considerable expense.

Your money will help the children and a parent accompanying them to reach Damascus so that they can travel to France from there.

I will try and email all donors a thank you letter with a few more details.

As one or two of you have pointed out, we’re not a registered charity and don’t have a registration number anywhere on here.

I’m hoping to tackle that one as soon as I can by finding some volunteers on Boardmatch Ireland who will help with management, co-ordination and time management. If they can help us register as a charity, then that would be great. (Get On Board seems to be the equivalent in the UK from their recent ads I’ve seen)

I’m trying to think of a way to further publicise the fact that many parents with children who have serious medical conditions cannot find anyone to treat them in Iraq, and they face various hurdles and pitfalls – not least their own safety in much of the country if they travel by road – which are very difficult and expensive to overcome.

One or two ideas are in the pipeline and I’m hoping to find time to see them through to completion amidst the dozen or so other tasks piling up as I write.

Finally, The Independent published this article and a letter from nearly 100 leading doctors in the UK about the health conditions facing Iraqi children. I’ve written a letter too which I’ll publish on here shortly if they don’t publish it.