Humanitarian Emergencies Victims Benefit from Church Organisations

Church and non-governmental organisations are aiding some 53,000 victims of 2006's fourth quarter humanitarian emergencies in Bicol, Philippines.

Christian Aid, an official agency of 40 churches abroad, extended necessary assistance to the typhoon victims in Sorsogon through its local partner organisations, the Coastal Community Resources (Coastal CORE) and Livelihood Development, Inc, and the Community Organisation of the Philippine Enterprise (COPE), Inc.

Materials and psychological assistance went to some 3,500 families of the fisherfolk and homeless residents from the coastal areas of this city and the municipalities of Prieto Diaz and Gubat. More than 6,000 families in the province of Albay were affected by the successive typhoons, including some 1,000 fishers affected by red tide.

Myrna Abella-Llanes, COPE coordinator for Bicol, said that the Disaster Management Programme of the three organisations do not only delve on giving the victims immediate assistance like food. They also provide psychological and psychodynamic rehabilitation counselling for affected individuals by assessing the victims' level of stress and their ability to manage it.

"Our common goal is to help the victims cope with trauma and problems that affect their physical and emotional well-being," she explained.
News
SNP 'conversion therapy' ban would be 'fundamentally illiberal'
SNP 'conversion therapy' ban would be 'fundamentally illiberal'

SNP support has dropped, but they are still the frontrunners for next month's elections.

Franklin Graham pushes back against Pope's war comments amid war of words with Trump
Franklin Graham pushes back against Pope's war comments amid war of words with Trump

Graham told Piers Morgan that while he did not want or support war, there was justification for it "when you're fighting evil".

Archbishop of Canterbury joins Pope in call for peace
Archbishop of Canterbury joins Pope in call for peace

The Pope has been outspoken against the latest war in the Middle East.

Church warden murder conviction quashed as Court of Appeal orders retrial
Church warden murder conviction quashed as Court of Appeal orders retrial

The Court of Appeal has overturned the murder conviction of Benjamin Field, the former church warden jailed in 2019 for the death of university lecturer Peter Farquhar, in a significant ruling that reopens one of the UK’s most complex criminal cases.