Photo: Heba Aly/IRIN. Members of the Syria Woman Association at their office in Amman
Source: IRIN
Community-based organizations have arguably played the largest role in
helping thousands of Syrian refugees pouring into neighbouring Jordan.
Until recently, the response had been fairly ad-hoc, or as one aid
worker put it, “a mess”, with various players on the ground and many
Syrians simultaneously registering and getting assistance from various
organizations.
But these civil society organizations are increasingly trying to
coordinate, and despite the relative chaos, they have shone in recent
months, especially as the first point of contact for many Syrian
refugees arriving in Jordan.
“Community-based organizations are probably providing most of the
assistance going to the Syrians,” one senior international aid worker
said. “They should not be underestimated.
“But the government has very serious concerns about some of the groups
working there and about what some of their objectives may be,” he added.
Here is a sample of the players on the ground at the forefront of the effort:
Civil society: There was a sizeable Syrian community in
Jordan before the unrest, and it has been a starting point for many
fleeing Syrians. They stay with family or friends in extra bedrooms or
living rooms. Some Jordanian landlords have also been very generous,
allowing Syrian refugees to stay for free. In the northern Jordanian
border town of Remtha, a compound-turned transit facility donated by a
Jordanian landlord temporarily houses Syrians who flee to Jordan
illegally, until they can find a sponsor and a place to stay.
Muslim organizations: Many Syrians fled to Jordan after
their government crushed a revolt by the Syrian Muslim Brotherhood in
the central town of Hama in 1982. Some of the children of that earlier
wave of refugees formed the Syria Woman Organization in 2006 to help
Syrians in need in Jordan. While their children run around in their
office in the capital Amman, women in niqab register new Syrian arrivals
and provide them with furniture, medicine, baby food and cash with
which to rent apartments.
Another active organization with links to the Brotherhood is the Islamic
Charity Centre Society, which has also been registering refugees and
distributing aid in border regions. “The Muslim Brotherhood play a big
role in aid, but it’s hidden,” said one Syrian activist in Jordan.
Al-Kitab wal Sunnah Association is another active player. These
organizations appear to have the greatest reach, and certainly more than
the UN. (Some refugees fear registering with the UN Refugee Agency,
UNHCR, because they believe identifying themselves as having fled Syria
will put them in danger if they try to return; UNHCR can currently only
register refugees in Amman).
Syrian activists and diaspora: The Syrian diaspora has
played a large role, sending everything from cash to containers of
clothes from as far as the USA and Australia. Syrian activists in Jordan
receive the items, but they are so busy smuggling aid into Syria
that after the month-long shipping period, donations for refugees
sometimes end up sitting in warehouses, waiting to be sorted and
distributed.
The Gulf - The Red Crescent Society of the United Arab
Emirates has donated 6,000 food parcels, 1,000 hygiene kits, 1,000
heaters and 10,000 blankets. Societies from Saudi Arabia, Qatar and
Kuwait have also done assessments and are planning to help. While Red
Crescent aid has been coordinated through the Jordan Red Crescent and
the Jordan Hashemite Charity Organization, other assistance from the
Gulf has been less organized. In one case, a Gulf country set up a tent
and requested donations for Syrian refugees. What ended up in Jordan was
a container of unsorted items, with slaughtered chickens mixed in with
clothes, powdered milk, broken tea glasses and medication without an
expiry date.
Jordan Hashemite Charity Organization (JHCO) - Charged
by the government to coordinate the aid response to refugees, JHCO is
increasingly getting involved in the response. (Normally, it works
externally more than internally, “under Royal guidance”). It is trying
to create a master list of refugees registered with different
organizations to avoid “double-dipping”. It is too early to tell how
well they will play their new role, but they seem to have the respect of
international agencies.
International community: Arguably late to join the effort in a significant way, the UN and other international aid agencies are now gearing up a larger response, not only in Jordan, but also in Turkey and Lebanon, with an US$84 million appeal.
In Jordan, UNHCR is leading the charge, with strong involvement from
other agencies like the UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF), which has worked in
Jordan for decades. UNHCR’s main goal is to build the capacity of JHCO
to coordinate the community-based organizations. But the response plan
lays out projects ranging from cash assistance for vulnerable families
to psychosocial support for children. The international community is
also taking steps to better understand and tap into the activities of
the community-based organizations on the ground.