War Child UK helps war child victims to recover, by working with local communities, their organisations and local authorities in both conflict and post-conflict areas to support children and the people they depend upon. War Child UK currently works in
Democratic Republic of Congo,
Central African Republic,
Uganda,
Afghanistan,
Iraq and with
Syrian refugees in
Jordan.
War Child UK benefit concerts, albums, Real War is Not a Game campaign with
Luciano Pavarotti during the 1996
Pavarotti & Friends concert for War Child in
Modena, Italy During the war in the Balkan, War Child worked together with the media, music and entertainment industries to raise funds and public awareness of the daily struggle for survival facing children in war zones. Artists including
Brian Eno,
David Bowie,
Bono,
Luciano Pavarotti, and
Tom Stoppard backed the War Child UK cause at the start-up of the organisation. In 1995, the record-breaking release of
The Help Album made it possible for War Child UK to start major projects in the
Yugoslavia. Since 1993, artists including
Paul McCartney,
Paul Weller,
Oasis and
Radiohead have joined the War Child cause. In 2005, to mark the 10th anniversary of
The Help Album, War Child UK launched
Help!: A Day in the Life. In addition to
Radiohead and
Manic Street Preachers, the new album featured artists such as
Coldplay,
Bloc Party,
Gorillaz,
Elbow, and
Kaiser Chiefs, along with
Keane who are current patrons of War Child UK. Another album,
Heroes, was released in February 2009. The video game
This War of Mine was released on November 14, 2014, by
11 bit studios in partnership with War Child as part of the "
Real War is Not a Game" campaign. The goal of the campaign is to halt the perpetuation of
war crimes, such as
hostage taking or other breaches of the
Geneva Conventions, in video games. On March 9, 2015,
downloadable content for the game was released on
Steam, titled "War Child Charity DLC", the proceeds of which were donated to War Child. A bundle of 12 games called
HELP: THE GAME, also available on
Steam, donates all of its proceeds to War Child as well. Released on July 28, 2016, this bundle is the result of various well-known game developers taking part in a 6-day-long game jam.
Creative Assembly said it would donate 25 percent of pre-order profit from
Total War Saga: Thrones of Britannia sales on Steam. On December 4, 2020,
Arctic Monkeys released a live album,
Live at the Royal Albert Hall, with all sales from the album being donated to War Child UK. The original concert, in 2018, was also a fundraiser, with all money from tickets sold being donated to War Child UK. On January 22, 2026, War Child UK announced
Help(2), an album inspired from
The Help Album, which will be released on March 6, 2026. This album featured artists such as
Arctic Monkeys, as well as
Olivia Rodrigo,
Depeche Mode,
Black Country, New Road and
Beabadoobee. This album was recorded in November 2025.
War Child UK patrons War Child has historically been supported and endorsed by numerous influential patrons. However, it lost support from
Luciano Pavarotti,
Brian Eno, and three other celebrity patrons, along with 11 trustees, after it was discovered that in 1995 co-founder
Bill Leeson took a bribe from contractors building a music centre in Bosnia. In 2001 when the story broke, War Child said that any financial mismanagement in the charity occurred "years ago" and they are "dealing properly with these historical charges". The UK Charity watchdog, the
Charity Commission for England and Wales stated that they had been involved with the trustees regarding the matter since 1998.
Bill Leeson is now a director at GardenAfrica, a charity he co-founded in 2002. In 2018,
Lady Amelia Windsor donated twenty percent of the proceeds from her shoe line collaboration with Penelope Chilvers to War Child UK. == War Child Australia ==