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New corporate investment
scheme to support UNHCR's earthquake relief efforts in Pakistan
GENEVA, Apr 5 (UNHCR) – The UN refugee agency has teamed up with Société Générale Corporate & Investment Banking based in Zurich and derilab s.a., a Swiss derivatives company, to launch an investment scheme which will help raise funds for UNHCR's earthquake relief operation in Pakistan. The scheme, the Kashmir Relief Note, will allow investors to participate in a financial product which gives them a unique opportunity to support UNHCR's reconstruction and relief effort in Pakistan-administered Kashmir, hit by a devastating earthquake on 8 October 2005. Moreover, because the investments will be based in Asia, it will for the first time enable people investing in one area to support a humanitarian emergency taking place in the same region. At inception, 2% of the investment is automatically donated to UNHCR's earthquake relief operations. This means that for the relatively small minimum investment of US$10,000, the UN refugee agency will receive $200, which is enough to buy two tents for two families of five.
The rest is invested through a basket of funds in the Indian
sub-continent. At maturity, the investor will receive 100% of his
invested capital and participate in the positive performance of the
underlying basket.
"As UNHCR is 97 per cent funded by voluntary contributions, every single
year we have to go out to donors and find US$1.5 billion of
contributions in order to keep refugees alive. That's a big job, a big
challenge and companies like derilab s.a. and Société Générale Corporate
& Investment Banking are helping us find new ways to do that," said
Pierre-Bernard Le Bas, Head of UNHCR's Private Sector Fund Raising Unit. With the arrival of spring, many thousands of families are leaving these camps and returning to their home villages. Still living in tents, they sleep each night beside the huge piles of rubble which are all that remain of their former homes. Rebuilding these mounds of stone and brick into new houses is part of the enormous challenge they now face. To help people survive the tough conditions, UNHCR has distributed blankets, plastic sheeting, tents and stoves. But much more is needed to assist survivors in the reconstruction phase and in their return to normality.
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