Aid supplies In February 2002, for the first time in almost 30 years, a commercial 747 aircraft landed at Kabul International Airport, carrying desperately needed humanitarian supplies for Afghanistan Relief. Teaming up with two nonprofit organizations,
Evergreen International Airlines' Evergreen Humanitarian and Relief Services Inc. and
Mercy Corps, and with the help of
Microsoft, $2 million worth of aid supplies, much of it collected by Afghanistan Relief Organization following an appeal, were shipped aboard the plane. Items included hygiene kits, newborn and baby kits, livestock feed, winter clothing and blankets, school kits, and medical supplies At a meeting hosted by
University of California, Los Angeles's International Institute on 7 February 2002, Noor Delawari, an advisory board member of the Afghanistan Foundation and chair of the ARO, spoke of the urgent need for aid in Afghanistan:
Education Afghanistan Relief Organization has also raised funds for the training of teachers and the construction of rural libraries in Afghanistan. The fundraising events have been supported by many celebrities, including
Halle Berry, former president
George H. W. Bush,
Cher,
Will Ferrell,
Jodie Foster,
Jake Gyllenhaal,
Kite Runner author
Khaled Hosseini,
Angelina Jolie,
Madonna,
Eva Mendes, Steve Nash and
Natalie Portman. Afghan Ambassador
Said Tayeb Jawad visited
Los Angeles,
California, on 23 February 2007 to deliver the keynote address at the ARO's annual fundraiser,
Peace Through Education. In 2007, Paramount Classics and
DreamWorks Pictures studios donated 500 laptop computers to schoolchildren in Kabul. The ARO distributed the computers, provided by the
One Laptop per Child initiative which is aimed at children in developing countries.
Kite Runner author Khaled Hosseini is quoted as saying that "Education of the general population is critical to the transformation of Afghanistan's political and economic condition."
Midwifery training With deaths in pregnancy or in childbirth so high in Afghanistan, and few trained women there to assist with childbirth, the training of midwives is another major project for the Afghanistan Relief Organization. In 2006, one in 60 Afghan women died of pregnancy-related causes, giving the country one of the world's highest maternal mortality rates, second only to Sierra Leone. The infant mortality rate was about 135 per 1,000 live births in 2006, which is an improvement from the 165 per 1,000 in 2001. ==See also==