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Duck out of buying chocolate eggs for Easter
03 Apr 2007 11:18:00 GMT
Christian Aid
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Christian Aid/John Ash
Instead of buying your nearest and dearest chocolate Easter eggs, this year Christian Aid is urging people to order a quacking gift from www.presentaid.org to help people living in poverty. For just £24 you can purchase 16 ducks that will make a real difference to a family in one of the poorest communities in the world.

Duck farming can help people rebuild their lives after disaster strikes. Climate change is causing natural disasters, such as floods and cyclones, to occur more frequently, destroying people's homes and farm land.

In Bangladesh, Christian Aid's partner organisation Friends in Village Development helps communities to prepare for disasters by building homes on stilts to raise them above the floodwater and providing ducks that give additional food and income. The ducks act a little like a savings account: people can breed from the ducks to increase 'savings' and sell them when money is needed. And of course families can eat or sell the ducks' eggs all year round.

The money Christian Aid receives from people who 'purchase' ducks from www.presentaid.org this Easter goes into a special agriculture and livestock fund, which is distributed to partner organisations in nearly 50 countries.

For more information contact Kati Dshedshorov on 020 7523 2452 or kdshedshorov@christian-aid.org

[ Any views expressed in this article are those of the writer and not of Reuters. ]

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Elephants sent by the police to Dulhazara safari park in the southern Cox's Bazar district are displayed to the media May 17, 2007. A Bangladesh safari park has called for urgent financial help from the government to feed nine elephants after their mahouts were detained for knocking down trees, officials said on Thursday.



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