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| A Red Cross worker arranges boxes at a food distribution center in Villacanas, Spain. |
Needy families and individuals in the European Union are
becoming increasingly reliant on charity organizations like the Red
Cross for basic needs like food, water and shelter. While Germany is
relatively unaffected, unemployment and austerity in countries like
Spain are making the problem even more severe.
Two-thirds of national Red Cross societies within the European Union
have begun distributing food aid, according to the head of the aid
groups' international organization -- a sign that the economic crisis in
Europe is having an alarming effect on poverty.
Yves Daccord, Director-General of the
International Committee of the Red Cross, said on a visit to New Delhi
on Monday that the scope of food distribution had not been at its
current level since the end of World War II.
Germany's relative economic strength has made it mostly immune to the
rise in food need. In contrast, the Spanish Red Cross is supporting 3
million Spaniards with food aid. Daccord said the need in Spain was so great that the organization has begun soliciting donations for not just foreign, but domestic operations as well.
Middle Class Hard-Hit By Crisis
A document published by the International Federation of Red Cross and
Red Crescent Socities provides more detail on the food need. Last year
alone, the Spanish Red Cross provided 33 million kilograms (73 million
pounds) of groceries to the needy. It also supported 21,500 people with
water and electricity, or with financial aid in paying rent.
The organization's counterpart in Romania has been operating a
donation-based food distribution program since 2009. Three million
people live in absolute poverty, according to the aid group, a figure
that constitutes 14 percent of the country's total population. The
relative poverty rate in Romania is also shockingly high, at 40 percent.
Last year, the Romanian Red Cross distributed more than 500,000
kilograms (1.1 million pounds) of food to more than 81,000 needy
families.
The IFRC also noted a rise in poverty in previously middle-class
families and individuals. In Italy, the group noted a rise in the
homeless population to include single parents, "particularly separated
and divorced men who end up impoverished or on the streets as they
struggle to maintain themselves while keeping up child support and
alimony payments."
Source: Der Spiegel
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