Mountains of clothes, food and other donations to tsunami
victims lie unwanted in storage rooms of relief organisations.
This has been the case after many of them have stopped
accepting donations in kind due to the high cost of
shipping and the logistical nightmare of the task.
So just what will become of them?
While aid organisations are rejecting these donations,
one humanitarian group has decided to take them all
in.
Mercy Relief has turned 'karang guni', or rag-and-bone
man, and is mobilising over 100 volunteers to sort and
pack these donations.
Lorries transport the items from their collection centres
islandwide to an abandoned school-turned-warehouse.
The speed of the collection has simply been staggering;
in just over two days all 13 classrooms have been filled
with clothes, water and donations of all sorts.
The group estimates the donations to be worth over
S$700,000 and believes they will come in handy in the
longer term.
Mercy Relief chairman Zulkifli Baharudin said, "We'll
be involved in building schools, building homes, building
communities, hospitals and this is where some of the
gifts that come from Singaporeans become very useful."
Volunteers are, however, asking that Singaporeans be
more considerate when making donations.
Said volunteer Grace Chong, "Some of the clothes
that come are not in good condition; they're torn, they're
broken. I think we all should be a little bit more conscientious
when we want to donate something."
Meantime, Mercy Relief is sending supplies and volunteers
to the tsunami disaster sites and will hold an islandwide
collection drive on January 15.
The group is also appealing for more volunteers to
step forward.
Enquiries can be sent to Mercy Relief by e-mail at
query@mercyrelief.org.
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