Asyut, in the south of the country was hit by flooding caused by heavy rain at the end of 1994. This was followed by an explosion at an oil depot. Both these incidents caused massive loss of life and many thousands of people lost their homes. SOS-Kinderdorf International reacted immediately by setting up an SOS Emergency Relief Programme. An emergency village was erected to house 42 families and both a medical centre and social centre were set up to help people affected by the disasters. These were handed over to the Egyptian government later on and are not run by SOS anymore.
Egypt's First Lady, Suzanne Mubarak, helped lay the cornerstone for an SOS Hermann Gmeiner School in Cairo in 1995. The school was opened in time for the new school year in 1997 and has the capacity to take in 3,000 pupils.It is run by the “Futures Language School” group.
In mid-2003, a joint project with the UNHCR was undertaken to care for unaccompanied minors in Cairo who are refugees from various African countries at war. The aim is to either repatriate them after the respective conflict has been resolved or to resettle them abroad.
In late 2004, SOS Children’s Villages started to operate a Family Strengthening Programme in the Cairo Area, which enables children who are at risk of losing the care of their family to grow within a caring family environment. In 2006.a similar programme was started in Alexandria. To achieve this, SOS Children’s Villages works directly with families and communities to empower them to effectively protect and care for their children, in cooperation with local authorities and other service providers.
At present there are three SOS Children’s Villages in Egypt, three SOS Youth Facilities, two SOS Kindergartens and three Social Centres.
Contact:
Egyptian Society for SOS Children's Villages
2 El Maraghy Street
El Agouza
Cairo
Egypt
tel. +20-2 7625941
fax +20-2 7625940