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ACT News UpdateEMT02/02 Printer friendly versionParticipants from Africa and Indonesia attend EMT course in ZimbabweMutare,
November 20, 2002
Thirty-three participants from Africa and Indonesia - all of them staff
of members of the global alliance, Action by Churches Together (ACT)
International - attended the six-week course, which lasted from September
23 to November 2, 2002. The course, which offers comprehensive training
on disaster management, this time focussed specifically on the ACT appeals
process, budgeting and reporting and handling communication during emergencies. The course also forms part of a wider capacity building program that
enhances emergency preparedness and response within the ACT network.
Johnson said that the presence of staff members from the ACT Coordinating
office in Geneva, Switzerland, who conducted training sessions in finance,
appeals and communication, was important. "Now we feel like we are part
of the ACT family," he said. For the new executive director of Yayasan Tanggul Benkana (YTB) (Communion
of Churches in Indonesia) the training offered a "unique opportunity
to learn directly from ACT and our friends in Africa". Participants
from Eritrea in turn felt that "all the things we learnt here can be
applied at home" and were already planning a smaller workshop for their
ACT Forum in Eritrea. Peter Mbae who represented Norwegian Church Aid (NCA) Kenya, said that
the course strengthened his understanding of how ACT operates and that
an appeal is being prepared for the capacity building of the Eastern
African ACT members under the Nairobi ACT Forum. Thobekile Sibanda, a community worker with the Lutheran Development
Services (LDS) in Zimbabwe, found the course invaluable, as Africa is
a continent that has and continues to experience many emergencies. She
said for her it is important to learn new skills on how to relate to
beneficiaries appropriately. "We were not trained in counseling before,"
she says, adding that, "it is important for the community workers who
stay with the communities." Ghobogal Tarr who works with the Lutheran World Federation (LWF) in
Guinea also recounted his experiences as a refugee from Liberia. He
still does not know where his parents and other relatives are. The organizer of the course, Rev. Shirley Dewolf, a lecturer at Africa
University, said the engagement of the participants was really impressive.
Regional workshops are being planned as a follow-up to the training.
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