For immediate release
20 June 2014
On World Refugee Day, Kiwis finance school for refugee children in Bhutan
It’s Friday the 20th June. World Refugee Day. Around the world, awareness is being raised for the marginalised and
soul-destroying living conditions of 14 million refugees around the world. Yet, here down-under, an initiative is being
spearheaded by Kiwis to make the world a better place for some of its refugees.
A community of impoverished refugee families in the land-locked Bhutan (South Asia), have had their cries for help
answered. New Zealand charity Orphans Aid International, have begun a project to build a school and centre to help
members of this desperate people-group.
The children of the outcast refugee group are at high risk of trafficking and abuse – not to mention malnutrition and
illiteracy. Founder and chief executive of New Zealand’s Orphans Aid International, Sue van Schreven says the situation
had been “desperate”. As well as managing projects caring for orphans and abandoned children in India, Russia, Romania
and Uganda, the charity had asked Kiwis to give towards building a school in a recent appeal.
“The response was over-whelming, and we’ve been able to raise enough money for the initial build” van Schreven says. She
has recently returned from the region with foundation work having begun.
The school, set to open later this year, will not only serve to educate, but also to feed the children, and provide
medical help through a Doctor the charity employs in the area. The initial roll would be 60 children, but this would
soon grow.
The recent building progress was captured on video with New Zealand film-maker and journalist Rob Harley already working
to bring the story to our national television screens later in 2014.
This isn’t the first time New Zealand has stepped in to help Bhutanesse refugees. In fact with 100,000 Bhutanese
refugees having lived in United Nations refugee camps in Southeastern Nepal since the early 1990s, New Zealand has been
part of a resettlement programme for the refugees and has accepted more than 330 of the Bhutanese refugees since 2007,
settling them in Christchurch and Palmerston North.
It’s the efforts of Kiwis in New Zealand, and those working abroad which today have received praise from New Zealand
Immigration Minister Michael Woodhouse, “It’s appropriate today to reflect on the global refugee challenge, and
acknowledge the number of Kiwis who are helping in different ways, both in New Zealand and around the world”. Something
Orphans Aid International chief executive Sue van Schreven is so pleased her charity and its supporters are a part of.
This year is the significant 10th anniversary year for Orphans Aid International, now caring for around 700 orphans and
abandoned children every day. The home-grown New Zealand charity is making its mark around the world – thanks to its
generous supporters and advocates. To learn more about this project or to make a contribution towards the work, please
visit the www.orphansaidinternational.org website.
ENDS