Brazil on Thursday marked World Humanitarian Day to honor those who died while providing humanitarian aid worldwide.
“These people who dedicated their lives to saving others deserve all our respect,” Brazilian Foreign Minister Celso Amorim said at a ceremony in Brasilia.
So far this year, Brazil has donated about 19 million U.S. dollars in humanitarian aid, according to the country’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
Andres Ramirez, representative of the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) in Brazil, spoke highly of Brazil’s efforts in providing humanitarian aid.
“The bad news is that the number of deaths involving people who work in humanitarian action is increasing,” Ramirez said at the ceremony.
According to Aid Worker Security Database, in 1999 about 65 humanitarians were involved in serious security accidents, 30 of whom died. Ten years later in 2009, 278 people were involved in serious security incidents while making humanitarian efforts worldwide, 102 of whom died.
World Humanitarian Day was established by the United Nations in 2008 in memory of those who died in a hotel bombing incident in Baghdad in 2003, which killed Brazilian diplomat Sergio Vieira de Mello, then Special Representative of the UN Secretary-General, and other 21 UN officials.