Mon, 9 Mar 12:59:00 GMT17

 
Jasmine Whitbread
Jasmine Whitbread was appointed Chief Executive of Save the Children UK in November 2005, and is also a board member of the International Save the Children Alliance, a confederation of 30 member organisations working in over 120 countries. Before joining Save the Children, Jasmine spent six years with Oxfam GB, first as regional director in West Africa, and then as international director responsible for Oxfam's programmes worldwide. Prior to that, she was managing director of a U.S.-based Thomson Financial business. Jasmine has a background in international marketing in the high-tech sector. She also spent two years as a VSO volunteer with an organisation of disabled people in Uganda.
Gaza: What harm can paper do?
03 Mar 2009 16:25:00 GMT
Author: Jasmine Whitbread

I walk out of the building at the crossing into Gaza. As far as the eye can see everything has been flattened. Houses are reduced to rubble and twisted metal. I thought this was from the recent fighting but I later learn this is from previous insurgence. My colleagues who have been waiting for hours for me to get through the crossing are relieved to see I have made it.

We drive through residential areas, some houses are totally untouched, others with windows blown out but I would say three quarters of the houses have been flattened. Amongst the rubble I spot a little boy, maybe only 3 years old, just like my son when he was a toddler. He was playing amongst the rubble. Seeing that little one, on his own, that was shocking to me.

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FILM: Why cash benefits trump food handouts
10 Jul 2007 13:08:00 GMT
Author: Jasmine Whitbread

Dawn from Wales, in Britain, and Asemu from northern Ethiopia have more in common than you might think. Both are 22, and both have a child under the age of two. What you may be surprised to learn is that they face a similar financial struggle to feed their children a healthy diet. And even though one lives in a rich country, and the other in a poor country, the answer to their problems may lie in the same solution: benefits paid to them in cash.

A half-hour documentary called Running on Empty - co-produced by Save the Children UK and Television Trust for the Environment (TVE) - shows how cash benefits are vital in helping Asemu and Dawn feed their families, although they're not always enough.

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Blair's foreign policy and the children of Gaza
02 Feb 2007 17:55:00 GMT
Author: Jasmine Whitbread

The verdict of Britain's International Development Committee (IDC) on the international community's policy towards the occupied Palestinian Territory, released on Wednesday, was suitably damning. As they did with a similar report in 2004, the IDC put the development situation at the centre of their analysis. Unfortunately, in our experience, British Prime Minister Tony Blair and his government tend to let humanitarian imperatives in this region play a very weak second fiddle to a foreign policy that many, including many of us in the humanitarian community, are longing to see the back of.

The report documents a humanitarian crisis that was triggered by the election of Hamas and the type of blunt reaction that we have become accustomed to from the international community since 9/11: the freezing of aid. Israel took the cue to freeze tax revenues. So Palestinian children and their families have, for over a year, been without the life preserving aid that they need because their ability to develop and sustain a working economy is critically hampered by the restrictions placed on them by Israel, and without the money that they should surely be able to rely on, their own taxes.

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