Lithuania joins other un members in the commemoration of World Humanitarian Day

Published: 19 August 2010 y., Thursday

Rankų paspaudimas
The 19th of August marks the World Humanitarian Day, which is designated by the United Nations (UN) to honour international humanitarian aid workers who were killed or injured in the cause of of duty. By commemorating this day, the UN wishes to draw public attention to humanitarian aid and to get more support from countries. The first World Humanitarian Day was marked in 2009, on the sixth anniversary of the bombing at the UN headquarters in Baghdad. During this incident, 22 humanitarian workers were killed.

The European Union (and Lithuania as the EU member state) is firmly committed to foster core humanitarian principles of humanity, neutrality, impartiality and independence, and to encourage to respect them.

The aid is provided without any discrimination of the victims, regardless of political, economic or military objectives. These principles aim to ensure the primary objective of humanitarian aid - to save human lives and to ease the suffering of victims, to prevent casualties and to preserve human dignity.

In order to contribute to the international efforts in managing the consequences of humanitarian crises, Lithuania also provides financial humanitarian aid to the countries that have been affected.

Since 2004, Lithuania has already provided financial aid to Georgia, Iraq, Iran, Pakistan, Sudan, South-East Asian region, devastated by the earthquake and tsunami (Burma/Myanmar, Indonesia), as well as Afghanistan, Haiti, China, Lebanon, Macedonia, Moldova and Ukraine. Overall aid amount is more than 2.7 million litas (about 782 thousand EUR).

Šaltinis: urm.lt
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

Malawi gay couple face jail

Tiwonge Chimbalanga and Steven Monjeza are married, but in Malawi homosexuality is banned. more »

Life After Conflict: Surprising Opportunities for Poor People to Escape Poverty

The World Bank today launched the fourth book in the critically acclaimed Moving Out of Poverty series, which provides bottom up perspectives on poverty and local realities by over 60,000 people living in 500 communities in 15 countries. more »

Helping the poor at home

Ten years ago, European leaders pledged to end poverty in the EU by 2010. As this deadline approaches, the goal is still some way off. more »

9 things 2009 will be remembered for

For many 2009 will be a historic year with the coming into force of the Lisbon Treaty, the outcome of the Copenhagen summit and the inauguration of the first black US president. more »

Members share their Christmas traditions with us

Not answering the phone, celebrating Hogmanay and reading Dickens' Christmas Carol are just three seasonal traditions that MEPs shared with us. more »

The EU in our daily lives: Simpler processing of cross-border succession cases

More and more people make their homes and own property in EU countries other than the one in which they hold citizenship. more »

Buzek to citizens: end of year assessment and 2010 outlook

European Parliament President Jerzy Buzek has made an televised Christmas and New Year address to European citizens, looking ahead to the challenges of the coming year. more »

Lithuanians are very eager to learn Europeans

Lithuania takes the 1st position in the EU by the number of students in the country. more »

Russia's Memorial accept Sakharov human rights prize

Sergei Kovalev, former political prisoner turned activist for Russian human rights group Memorial gave an emotional and heartfelt address to the European Parliament on Wednesday 16 December. more »

Council to agree on passenger rights for travel by bus

Strengthened passenger rights for travel by bus are an important item on the agenda when the Transport, Telecommunications and Energy Council (TTE) meets on 17–18 December. more »