Edinburgh Direct Aid -
the Bonia and Kosovo charity
Edinburgh Direct Aidà is a
charity founded in Edinburgh, Scotland, in September 1992, with the stated aims
The first convoy was a
Volvo car with a 1 -ton trailer and a camper van carrying blankets and clothes
for refugee camps near Zagreb and some drugs requested by a Zagreb
hospital. It was realised then that
although refugees in Croatia needed help, the worst need was in Bosnia, so from
then on that’s where EDA went.
From Sept. 1992 to Sept. 1996 EDA took 33 different groups of volunteers from Edinburgh to former Yugoslavia, delivering over 2000 tons of aid in hundreds of separate sorties into Bosnia.
By mid '93 the convoys routinely comprised two or three 7.5 and one or two 17 ton vans - given outright or loaned indefinitely (notably a 17 ton furniture van from Halley Transport), lacking in mod cons but kept going by EDA’s devoted volunteer mechanics, over the roughest of Bosnian roads, the worst of the Bosnian winters and the long haul over Germany’s motorways. "Big Yin", our faithful 17 ton Bedford, was retired forcibly when hit by Serb mortars on Mt. Igman in May 95. The Halley truck and “Tango”, a 17 ton gift of Bass the Brewers were eventually given to Stevenson College, Edinburgh for their students to work on (they often service EDA vehicles). Replacements included vehicles donated by Land Rover Finance. Leyland Daf, Lex Transfleet, EDA South Coast and Heriot School: this eventually gave EDA a somewhat more modern fleet of five 13-17 ton trucks, two 7.5 tonners and a Land Rover.
Aid Destinations: each convoy delivered its initial load from Edinburgh, then took whatever loads needed shifting for other aid organisations, from Croatia into Bosnia, often for Feed the Children. Delivery targets were selected on advice of UNHCR, of Bosnian Government representatives, and of British Army liaison officers.
Aid workers as targets. Despite UNPROFOR escorts in sensitive areas, EDA and other aid workers
were fired on. Christine Witcutt was killed by a sniper when leaving Sarajevo
in July 1993. In the summer of 1994
Edinburgh Direct Aid convoys took advantage of General Rose’s newly opened
“Blue Route” over the airport, which
made it possible to reach Sarajevo over Mount Igman without crossing Serb lines
- but not without crossing their gun sights. From then until the opening of the
main road after the Dayton agreement, EDA ran regular convoys over the Mount
Igman track, in varying conditions of
hazard from rain, snow, ice, passing vehicles, and at times, mortar, tank and
machine gun fire. Eventually the shots found
their mark: Denis Rutovitz, EDA's chairman was wounded. A truck was hit
and went off the road, and Andy Sutherland, driving, escaped it seemed by
miracle. EDA suspended deliveries of a planned 11000 food parcels for school and hospital staffs. Glasgow based Convoy
of Mercy attempted to complete the delivery, but Neil Golightly, their
chief organiser, was killed and another
truck and load of parcels lost. EDA eventually took in the remaining 2000 parcels after the British-French Rapid
Reaction Force and US A10's silenced the besiegers’ guns in September 1995
From 1992 to 1997, EDA delivered hospital beds, theatre wear
and drapes, lab coats, nurses uniforms, sterilisers, X-ray and other equipment,
Intravenous fluids, giving sets, antibiotics and a wide variety of drugs, as
available or requested, directly to
hospitals, homes for disabled and chronic sick, clinics and laboratories in
Sarajevo, Gornji Vakuf, Goražde,
Bihaċ, Tuzla, Travnik,
Vitez, Zenica and Fojnica
The personal interest of EDA’s deputy chair, Prof. Jeanne
Bell, resulted in EDA becoming the only charity to deliver laboratory materials
and equipment to the diagnostic pathology labs in Bosnia during the war:
diagnostic services are the Cinderella of medical services during war, but the
illnesses of normal life do not abate on that account!
Four months after the signing of the Dayton Peace Agreement which marked the end of the conflict in former Yugoslavia, the first post-war pathology conference in Bosnia-Herzegovina was held in Sarajevo at the invitation of the Department of Pathology and the Faculty of Medicine. This meeting was sponsored by the Soros Open Society Fund Bosnia-Herzegovina, with generous additional support from the International Society for Neuropathology, the British Embassy in Sarajevo and Applied Imaging International (UK), and was held on 16-18th May 1996. The programme included keynote presentations from invited international speakers and situation reports from pathology departments in Bosnia. The major objective was for the participants to formulate a programme for reconstituting pathology services, both diagnostic and academic, which had been brought to the brink of total breakdown in the last four years. The resulting conference report was subsumed into the general plans for rebuilding medical services in BiH.
Fojnica is a small town about 40 kilometres to the West of Sarajevo. In its outlying villages of Drin and Bakovići there are two residential homes each looking after about 300 handicapped children and adults, and psychiatrically disturbed adults respectively.
1993 – horror During the fighting between the Croat militias and the Bosnian government forces April 1993/April 1994, these homes were on the confrontation lines. At Drin at one time the fighting was so intense that the staff, normally devoted, were to terrified to come in to work, and the handicapped children and adults there were left untended for over 48 hours, with appalling effect. Alerted by one of the nurses who walked over the mountains through the fighting lines and the minefields, UNHCR sent a party with an UNPROFOR escort to investigate. Maureen Lyons, Edinburgh Direct Aid’s representative in Sarajevo, was one of the first on the scene in her capacity as a UNHCR social services officer. She stayed with the children though 10 dreadful days until the UN succeeded in establishing an agreement to respect the neutrality of the hospitals, and medical teams from the Canadian and British forces arrived.
Progress, but...
There is no longer any threat to the physical security of inmates or staff, services have been restored, central and cantonal governments provide a modicum of support. But staff numbers are much lower than they should be, with pay meagre and irregular. Home and patients are kept clean, care is regular and loving, but opportunities for exercise, play, development of potential, and therapy are sadly limited. Food supplies, clothing, footwear, sanitary supplies, toiletries and fuel have been very short indeed at times, and are still short now: - enough to keep alive but not much more.
Edinburgh Direct Aid had made regular deliveries to Drin and Bakovići since September 1994. These comprised family parcels for staff, food supplements, toiletries, basic medical supplies, footwear, materials for writing and drawing, basketballs and other sports goods, winter cloths and shoes.
Following a week-long assessment visit to Fojnica by a party from Moray House and Gogarburn, in May 1996 7 senior staff from the two institutions visited Edinburgh on the invitation of Edinburgh Direct Aid and Edinburgh Healthcare Trust, with support from the Soros Foundation Open Society Fund. The object of the visit was to enable the visitors to see at first hand the possibilities for improving care and enabling progress to independence of handicapped children and adults that modern methods, new approaches and adequate staff numbers can bring
Over the 1996 Christmas/Hogmanay period, Alastair Murdoch, senior physiotherapist at Gogarburn, rendezvoused with the Christmas convoy in Sarajevo. He and Angus Greensleaves spent two weeks working at Fojnica, helping to train staff in the use of newly acquired physiotherapy and generally assisting with the care of patients. In October 1997, Alastair Murdoch led an EDA group going to Fojnica, to deliver and install a complete Snoezeln room (a specially equipped relaxtion-stimulation therapy room), and to institute a program of volunteer support for the two institutions.
Physiotherapy programmes are up and running at both homes, largely equipped by Edinburgh Direct Aid working with Edinburgh Healthcare Trust. Care has moved beyond mere physical maintenance, to positive encouragement of development. Games rooms, art rooms, occupational therapy, and a music therapy programme now exist. Smiles break out! There is still a long way to go, but largely inspired by experience of the possible in Edinburgh, the directors and staff have put together their own development plan, and found further backing from other donors.
To the present day:
EDA’s support for Fojnica has continued, with many
deliveries of food, clothing, footware, furniture and toys. In 1999 a sorely
needed visit by a dentist was arranged.
Also in that year, two trained EDA volunteers spent some months
assisting the overburdened and seldom paid staff in their daily chores. EDA is
currently (2001) sending a engineer and technician from its building team in
Bihać to assess the
possibility of reducing overcrowding by building another floor on the top of the
main building.
EDA is committed to the support and restoration of the richness and diversity of the sporting, artistic and intellectual life of multi-ethnic, multi-cultural Bosnia. To this end EDA has brought art exhibitions from Sarajevo to the Edinburgh festival, taken art works from the UK for exhibition in Sarajevo, and helped restart the Sarajevo music library. At the height of the siege, EDA conveyed 22 tons of newsprint from Split to Sarajevo to help newspapers keep publishing - and with the help of General Sir Michael Rose brought an FCSarajevo/Railway Club football team to Scotland to play exhibition and fundraising matches!
EDA’s 1’st REFUGEE RETURN PROJECT (1996/7)
By 1995 there were thousands of refugees from Bosnia in the UK. Most were Moslem or of mixed descent and marriages and were forced from their homes in circumstances of unbelievable horror. Many lost all their family in massacres. Nevertheless, the vast majority longed to go back to their homes. In 1996 and 1997, Edinburgh Direct Aid helped 370 brave men and women, and their children, to return to Bosnia to try to rebuild their lives and communities there.
EDA
· worked in co-operation with the International Organisation for Migration (IOM), United Nations High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR), the BiH Ministry of Refugees, and the local authorities in Ključ and other Bosnian towns.
· picked up the refugees from wherever they lived in Britain.
· looked after them on the way (we send a trained nurse and counsellor with the coach, and arrange accommodation at overnight stops).
· took with each family the furniture and other possessions which they had managed to acquire in the UK so that they were not returning in a state of utter destitution.
· saw them through customs, passport, visa and registration problems.
· helped them to move back in to their houses, by clearing up rubble and mess, and trying to make at least a few rooms of the usually wrecked houses weatherproof.
· kept in touch, and tried to maintain the sense of those over there being cared for by those over here
EDA was the only
organisation offering help of this kind and quality to Bosnian refugees in the
UK wanting to return home
Through the length and breadth of Bosnia, the eye was – and in some places still is - assaulted by broken houses: skeletal roofless walls, shells of buildings with gaping window sockets, or simply piles of rubble.
In one small group of villages near the town of Ključ in N. West Bosnia, nearly 3500 of a total of 4000 houses had been damaged to significant degree. Some of those who returned to their homes with the assistance of Edinburgh Direct Aid were forced to spend a winter in houses with only remnants of a roof, walls with plastic sheets over windows, and a cold water hose for water if they were lucky.
In July 1997, with funds granted by the European Commission, EDA launched a project to repair 150 houses in the villages mentioned. The programme focused on those least able to help themselves, particularly the many women who had lost brothers, husbands, sons in the massacres of July 1992 . In about two thirds of cases, only materials and some skilled help were supplied. But in the case of women alone, or the elderly or infirm, EDA did the whole job using local building contractors.
By March 1998 all was complete. In passing, with some help from Scottish Power, Liz McLaughlin and her team had turned the lights back on in one of the villages where the supply had been destroyed.
1998: REBUILDING
COMMUNITY AND CIVIC LIFE IN KLJUČ
AND ITS VILLAGES
Education Support Programme: EDA supplied writing materials, school furniture, sports equipment, refurbished computers and other teaching materials. A series of English language courses were given by TEFL-trained volunteers .
Local Clinic: EDA brought equipment and supplies. An ambulance was purchased and delivered by Rotary District 1140.
Employment Opportunities: practical steps included
1. setting up of a woodworking business for manufacture of flooring and other joinery products.. In 2001 its still going strong, with 7 men employed in the Joinery shop.
2. smallholdings: These are crofting villages. EDA supplied two 36 HP tractors, to help cultivate the land, and with Rotary 1140, help establish egg-production for income.
3. sewing room: with help from Monmouth Aid, Malteser and the Office of Overseas Development, EDA equipped a women’s co-operative sewing group with 12 industrial sewing machines and table, two industrial cutters, and many pallets of cloth (mostly donated by June Cormy’s Edinburgh-based Cloth Shop). This employment for 12 women for some years.
4. Fire engine and Rubbish Truck: with the help of the Scottish Office and Sterling Council, EDA has supplied a Green Goddess fire engine and a rubbish compactor - both sorely needed.
1999-2000: Reconstruction in Bosnia
ECHO the EC’s European Community Humanitarian
Organisation awarded Edinburgh Direct Aid
three contracts (total value nearly £1,000,000) to rebuild 142 severely
war-damaged houses in the north-western part of Bosnia. Of these, 67 are for
Bosnian Serbs while 75 are for Muslim families. Work went well and thanks to
the good management of Liz McLaughlin in the field, and George McNeill on the
financial side, EDA was able to complete some 10% more houses than originally
contracted for, while remaining within budget.
In October 1998, EDA invited all Scottish
charities with an interest in the Balkans to a conference in the City Chambers.
The majority agreed that some form of co-operation was desirable. The first practical
step resulting from the conference, in Feb 1999, was a volunteer convoy taking
9 donated caravans to Kukes on the Albania/Kosovo border, for use of Kosovan
refugees.
Next, in Feb. 1999, a number of concerned Scottish
Charities joined together to form the Scottish Charities Kosovo Appeal, with
Edinburgh Direct Aid as the Coordinating Charity.
Shortly after SCKA’s first appeal was launched by
Radio Forth, the Sunday Mail took it up, and Sir Tom Farmer offered the support
of the logistic, financial and administrative services of Kwik-Fit. This
resulted in an eventual inflow of over £500,000 of donations to SCKA, and a
huge volume of goods – clothes, bedding, food and toiletries to Kwik-Fit
centres across Scotland.
SCKA was formally constituted as comprising the
following 6 charities:
Shetland
Aid
Edinburgh
Direct Aid
Connect
Humanitarian Relief
No
Frontiers Humanitarian Aid
Blytheswood
Care
New
Hope Trust
Dumfries and Galloway Aid were formed specifically to
get the relief effort launched, but later disbanded; Scottish International
Relief participated for a few weeks then withdrew. Later, Mission East Trust
joined the consortium. Legally the association is constituted as a part of
Edinburgh Direct Aid, but with an independent management committee. The
chairman of SCKA is, by the agreement, Nigel Griffiths MP. The management
committee consists of representatives of each charity, a representative of
Kwik-Fit and the chairman. Later SCKA
was joined by LASEDAK (London and South East Direct Aid), technically another
subsidiary of EDA.
Macedonia,
April 1999:
Tens of thousands of refugees forcibly ejected from
their homes in Pristina and elsewhere found their way to the Macedonian border,
and also to the border with Albania at Kukes in the North. Initially not
allowed in to Macedonia they spent days and weeks in atrocious conditions – in
the open in sleet and snow, without food, sanitation or clean water, and
always, behind them, the Serb paramilitaries.
Helped by the generosity of Virgin Atlantic and
Direct Holidays SCKA sent 70 tons of food, clothes and toiletries by air to
Skopje airport in Macedonia and to Thessalonika in Greece. These were met by
the first SCKA party on the ground, and distributed by the British troops
responsible for Stankovac camp near the border.
Responding to an urgent need which had not been met,
and in collaboration with International Medical Corps, a dental clinic was
established in Stankovac camp. This clinic saved 30 patients daily from the
misery of untreated dental abscesses and rotting teeth,
Albania,
May-June 1999
12 large truckloads of aid were despatched overland
using a mix of donated vehicles with volunteer drivers, and commercial trucks.
They went to Korca in Southern Albania, where refugees from Kosovo were
arriving in increasing numbers.
SCKA chartered
a 1500 ton vessel to load at Leith Port and sail directly to Durres in
Albania. The ship carried 30 truckloads of clothes and bedding, 50 tons of
mixed food, 100 tons of flour, and 20 tons of toiletries for Kosovar refugees
in Albania. Stephanie Wolfe Murray (of Connect Humanitarian Aid) established an
SCKA team in Albania to receive the ship and distribute the goods to the
refugees.
Conditions in Albania were not easy… there was a
constant battle against petty theft by dock workers, neighbourhood children,
petty Mafiosi and bureaucratic encroachment on everything; but there was a lot
of help too from good neighbours, from Greek and Italian NATO troops (AFOR),
from other NGO's.
The majority of the goods were distributed to
refugees staying with host families, with a proportion going to the hosts, who
were almost always in equal need. Day after long hot dusty thief-fighting day,
SCKA volunteers delivered clothes, food, toiletries in Tirana, Skodra, Korca……
June 1999
Edinburgh Direct Aid received £200,000 from a concert organised by the Sunday Mail:
these and other funds collected by the constituent charities went to support
the SCKA Kosovo project
July 1999
SCKA was one of the first NGO’s to arrive in
Pristina on the heels of NATO
SCKA decided to "adopt” 10 villages clustered
around Polac and Qirez in the hard-hit Drenica valley, near Mitrovica. A team
was established there, led again by Stephanie Wolfe-Murray with occasional
management support from EDA, and staffed by volunteers from the constituent
charities.
August 1999 –
Summer 2000
By agreement with UNHCR and the main local aid
organisation, the Mother Theresa Society, SCKA took responsibility for delivery
to the adopted villages of all supplies
from the World Food Programme and UNHCR , and
for provision of winter shelter.
September-October
1999
Delivery of winter clothes held back from the Spring
collection began.
Scotland clothed Kosovo! – nearly 50 maximum-size
articulated lorries brought clothing, bedding, food and toiletries from SCKA
warehouses all round Edinburgh, with contributions from Aberdeen and Inverness.
Distribution was not only by the SCKA transport team on the ground, but by British and other KFOR units, and many other
NGO’s
September-December
1999
Christian Aid supported SCKA’s shelter work by means
of a £360,000 grant (via EDA). DfiD (the UK Department for International
Development) made grants totalling £220,000 for purchase of tools, chickens and
tractor parts for the villages (via Connect Humanitarian Aid) and a vehicle for
the project. Shelter work proceeded in the adopted and neighbouring villages.
SCKA surveyed eventually 400+ houses and issued vouchers for supply of building
materials from a local timber merchant: eventually over 200 roof timber
structures were permanently repaired and the roofs temporarily covered with
heavy duty plastic. Over 500 warm and dry rooms were created. Because SCKA was
not locked into a system of predefined "roof-kits" it could respond
flexibly to need: using a local supplier, SCKA’s programme was more successful
than was the case with some other NGO's. USAID made additional timber and other
supplies available.
LASEDAK (London and South East Direct Aid) brought
in funds for school repairs and supplies.
December-February
Christian Aid granted a further £40,000 for
emergency shelter work.
SCKA joined UNHCR and Malteser in a programme to
supply 400 weather-proof and well-insulated prefabricated container-size
shelters for families without proper winter accommodation. Malteser
prefabricated the units, SCKA and UNHCR field officers assessed need and
selected beneficiaries, SCKA and Malteser teams delivered and assembled the
units.
April-May -
a 3 year old restored to life
SCKA (through No Frontiers) arranged transport to UK
(Mission East) for a surgical operation in Aberdeen which saved the life of a 3
year old boy, Visar, wasting away with an oesophageal obstruction. The
operation was wholly successful. A crisis on the return journey was resolved by
LASEDAK
March-May
SCKA assisted with preparing business plans and
obtaining credit for small businesses: a e.g.: repair of a destroyed flour
mill, purchase of a combine harvester, purchase of diesel-test equipment. Some
of these were LASEDAK projects.
World Food Programme deliveries and UNHCR deliveries
were scaled down, but SCKA continued to delivery to sensitive areas using
international drivers. LASEDAK made further funds available for school repairs.
IOM (International Organisation for Migration), acting at the request of the UK government, asked EDA to arrange for uplift, despatch and delivery of personal possessions and furniture of Kosovo refugees in the UK returning home by air under the UK voluntary return programme. There were over 300 families to be repatriated, scattered over the length and breadth of the UK.
The scheme: EDA volunteers would collect the furniture from
wherever it was, take it to suitably located warehouses. Long haul would be
done a commercial carrier, John Shirley Ltd. At the far end, trucks would be
received by the SCKA/EDA team in Mitrovica and contents delivered by local
drivers using SCKA trucks. Overall cost was estimated at EDA’s traditional £50
per cubic meter, and each family was theoretically allowed up to 12 cu. Meters.
Doing it:
West Lothian
Council
Edinburgh Direct Aid has co-operated with many
agencies and civic authorities, but with none so closely as with West Lothian
Council.
June 1999
EDA/SCKA was awarded an EAR (European Agency for
Reconstruction) contract for permanent repair of over 400 houses (including
replacement of plastic roofing previously supplied). The contract value was 600,000 Euro. + materials.
2000/2001
In Bosnia we completed the ECHO contracts engaged on in 1999/2000, and signed up to a new program, for minority return, in Ključ and Bosanski Krupa.
In Kosovo working as SCKA/EDA, we applied for and
obtained an E.A.R. (European Reconstruction Agency) grant for house repair and
reconstruction in the Skenderaj municipality: that is in the area of our “adopted”
villages. Some in SCKA felt that the contract should have been applied for
jointly by the Scottish Charities: but prior experience indicated that in view
of the magnitude of the financial
responsibilities we would have to bear, it would be best as an EDA venture.
Management was initially entrusted old friend Jonathan
Dames: but after a few months Jonathan moved on, and the only course seemed to
be to bring in Liz McLaughlin to manage both the Kosovo and the Bosnia
projects. This was duly done, with great success:
Results:
EDA was often top of the EAR NGO performance league in Kosovo!
In Bosnia, EDA was the sole NGO invited to a presentation to EU
ambassadors in Krupa , resulting in £75,00 grant from Portuguese Embassy for
rebuilding a school!
A further contract has just awarded by the US Bureau of Refugess and
Migration, for reconstruction and
minority return, Krupa – Srebrenica. Value, $700,000
January 2001: a
three-way contract was signed with Vladimir Nazor special needs School and
Municipality of New Sarajevo. The contract specifies (1) that the Centre should
be housed in a purpose-built but vacant building in the Vladimir Nazor school.
(2) that the School should manage and run the Centre under the superivision of
a Management Committee representing all parties. (3) that EDA will meet all
running costs for 5 years (4) the municipality will take over financial
responsibility after five years. The Center opened in September 2001.
Meanwhile, EDA volunteers continue to raise funds and deliver aid: In 2000/2001, this comprised
The West Lothian connection:
School exchange visits: football teams and
young musicians.
London and South East Aid – a subsidiary of Edinburgh Direct Aid - have
built several schools in Kosovo: their programme continues
Moderators Visit:
One of the high points of 2001 was the visit of the Right Rev. Andrew McLellan, EDA’s long standing patrion, Moderator of the Church of Scotland in 2000/2001. The visit encompassed EDA’s projects in Ključ, the mass graves in the Sanica valley, and to the Christine Witcutt centre..
PATRONS
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Trustees:
Rev. Andrew McLellan, Mr. John Innes, WS., Mr Alan
Witcutt, Dr. Denis Rutovitz
Management Committee (March 2002): Edward Aikman, Lisa Anderson, Jeanne Bell, David Hamilton, Liz McLaughlin, George McNeil, David Reeks, Denis Rutovitz, Des Stewart, Sandy Taylor, Alan Witcutt
MAJOR DONOR - FUNDED
PROJECTS
|
Short description of the project |
Donor |
Budget |
Completion date |
|
Supply and delivery of 12,000 parcels to
Sarajevo |
SOROS
foundation |
500,000
DM |
Sept
1995 |
|
Refugee Return |
IOM/ODA |
60,000
£ |
Feb
1997 |
|
Reconstruction of 150 houses, electrical
network and job creation |
EU |
530,600 ECU |
April
1998 |
|
Reconstruction of severely damaged homes for
DPs and IDPs. |
EU |
560,000 ECU |
November
1999 |
|
Emergency Shelter, Kosovo, winter of
1999/2000 |
Christian
Aid |
400,000
£ |
December
1999 |
|
Reconstruction of severely damaged dwellings
for DPs. Sustainability component. |
EU |
510,000 ECU |
March
2000 |
|
Refugee Return |
IOM/DfID |
80,000
£ |
|
|
Reconstruction of 513 dwellings in Skenderaj Area
of Kosovo |
EU |
1,051,000 EURO |
October
2001 |
|
Reconstruction of dwellings for Minority
return in Kljuc and Bosanska Krupa Municipalities |
EU |
1,002,000 EURO |
Sept
2001 |
|
Reconstruction of 450 houses in Skenderaj
Municipality, Kosovo |
EU |
1,000,000 EURO |
November
2001 |
|
Reconstruction of 35 dwellings for minority
returnees, Bosanska Krupa |
U.S
. |
700,000 EURO |
March
2002 |
|
School rebuild, Bosanska Krupa |
Portuguese
Embassy, Sarajevo |
150,000 DM |
Jan
2002 |
|
School rebuild, Kozarac (RS) |
Portuguese
Embassy, Sarajevo |
180,000 DM |
Sept
2002 |
HEAD OFFICE
29 Starbank Rd., Edinburgh, EH5 3BY, Scotland. Tel 0131 552 1545, Fax 0131 552 7205
REGISTRATION
Edinburgh
Direct Aid is registered in
Scotland as a charity, number SC021007,
tax ref ED1098/92