North Dakota Farmers Help Afghans
April 20, 2002
WASHINGTON (Agencies): A German businessman and a North Dakota farmer are working
together to deliver 2 million pounds of flour to widows and their children in
Afghanistan, where food staples are badly needed. Klaus Zumwinkel, chairman
of Deutsche Post, and Robert Carlson, president of the North Dakota Farmers
Union, say they were prompted to help by their own childhood memories of relief
efforts.
Zumwinkel recalls US aid arriving in Germany just after World War II. Carlson
remembers standing in the fields of his familys farm, watching his father
harvest wheat that was donated to India. Carlson urged fellow North Dakota farmers
to donate wheat to the Afghan relief effort.
Sen. Kent Conrad, D-N.D., got the farmers together with CARE, the international
relief agency, and Deutsch Post. We have 16,000 people, direct employees,
in the United States, said Zumwinkel, whose company owns DHL International,
the U.S.-based parcel delivery company.
We should not only do business here, we should be good corporate citizens.
The plan is for DHL trucks to pick up the bagged, milled and fortified flour
in Grand Forks, N.D., during the first week of June.
The wheat will be loaded onto a ship sailing to Karachi, Pakistan. From there,
it will be trucked into Kabul, Afghanistan, where CARE will see that it goes
to widows and their children. The flour should feed about 8,500 people for a
year, according to CARE.
Karen Robbins, a fund-raiser and manager for CARE, returned from a trip to Kabul
in March. She said more than 40,000 widows live in the impoverished Afghan capital.
In many cases, what we give these families is the only food they get,
Robbins said. These people, they tell you their stories, and you just
want to break down.
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