The United Nations, short of funds to support millions of displaced
people in the Middle East, has begun a scheme that would let Muslims
make donations from the alms they typically pay state bodies for the
benefit of the poor. Muslims around the world are expected to pay
“zakat,” typically 2.5 percent of any savings accumulated over the year,
generally via state institutions that collect funds for aid to
impoverished citizens.
The U.N. High Commission
for Refugees said it had obtained religious rulings from top Muslim
preachers in Egypt, Morocco and Yemen as well as a senior preacher in
Saudi Arabia, that it hoped would persuade wealthy Muslims, especially
in oil-rich Gulf countries, to donate their alms for relief work.
“It is an innovation in our efforts to raise funding,” said Mohammad Abu Asaker, a UNHCR Middle East spokesman.
The UNHCR posted the rulings on its webpage that appeals for zakat contributions to aid programs.
The amount of zakat money distributed each year in Muslim countries ranges from $20 billion to $30 billion, experts say.
The
United Nations has projected it will need a total of $8 billion this
year to provide life-saving assistance to millions of Syrians inside
their shattered homeland and to refugees and their host communities in
neighboring countries.
UNHCR has also called
for $2.1 billion to provide food, and medicine for Yemen, where 12
million people are at risk of famine and cholera brought on by two years
of civil war.
Millions
of Syrians, Iraqis and Yemenis have been displaced by civil war,
sometimes to neighboring countries, straining the hosts’ resources and
the United Nations.
UNHCR said it would use
some of the additional funds it expects from the project to help some
30,000 of the most vulnerable Syrian refugee families in Jordan, with
around $180 in monthly cash support per family.
“The
needs of these people increase daily and because the crises are
ongoing, for example, the Syrian crisis is entering its seventh year,”
Abu Asaker said.
“So anything these people had
is not completely gone and they need continuous support. So this
requires us as an organization to search for creative ways that go in
parallel with governmental support, which has become insufficient given
the rising number in refugees and [internally displaced people].”
Zakat
payments can be a matter of personal choice in many Muslim countries,
though it is a religious obligation under Islamic law. Governments in
some countries deduct payments from savings accounts on a predetermined
day. The funds tend to be used to help those in poverty, in debt or
refugees.
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