rdfs:comment
| - Reinhard Erös visits projects several times a year to check the ongoing work and developments and personally pays the teachers, doctors, engineers, builders, carpenters and all others involved. This is the best way to ensure that the donations are put to economic and efficient use. Annette Erös and the adult sons Veit, Urs and Welf accompany Reinhard Erös regularly and support the work on location in Afghanistan. The 19-years old twins Cosima and Veda support from home. They do office work and help prepare lectures and exhibitions. The family’s work for Afghanistan is entirely honorary: no salary, no expenses, no allowance.
|
abstract
| - Reinhard Erös visits projects several times a year to check the ongoing work and developments and personally pays the teachers, doctors, engineers, builders, carpenters and all others involved. This is the best way to ensure that the donations are put to economic and efficient use. Annette Erös and the adult sons Veit, Urs and Welf accompany Reinhard Erös regularly and support the work on location in Afghanistan. The 19-years old twins Cosima and Veda support from home. They do office work and help prepare lectures and exhibitions. The family’s work for Afghanistan is entirely honorary: no salary, no expenses, no allowance. With the assistance of dedicated Afghan staff, they are building, running and supporting peace schools, mother-child hospitals, basic health units, orphanages, workshops for the production of solar panels and many other projects in the Eastern provinces of Afghanistan and in refugee camps near the Afghan border. All projects are established with the peaceful future of the country in mind. “Currently we are providing food rations including flour, oil, pulses, tea, sugar, milk and water. These are immediate steps to relieve some of the basic problems of hunger; however there is a need to look beyond the current catastrophe and see what is to be done for the rehabilitation of thousands of people.” added Dr. Reinhard Erös. The objectives of GAAC Relief Aid is to extend relief assistance to people affected by the 2010 floods in Pakistan by providing shelter – construction materials such as cement, brick or corrugated iron sheets including electricity and solar cooking equipment, and also helping farmers to restart their farming by providing goats, seeds, fertilizers etc, to them. The GAAC current aid package is to reach 1000 people in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa.
|