100 million people already taking part in World Humanitarian Day campaign – UN
August 15, 2012: The United Nations campaign highlighting the work of the world’s
humanitarian workers has reached 100 million people through social media so far, the
world body announced on Tuesday, describing it as its “first milestone” that gets
it closer to the one billion mark, which it aims to reach by World Humanitarian Day
on 19 August. The campaign, ‘I Was Here,’ allows transmission of messages of support
from people who have registered online across the world pledging humanitarian action,
however big or small. Members of the public can then share their individual acts of
good through the interactive website www.whd-iwashere.org.
Organized by the
UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), the campaign has gained
momentum in the past few days following the video recording – in front of more than
1,200 fans, celebrities, humanitarian workers and dignitaries – on Friday night, at
the General Assembly Hall at UN Headquarters in New York, of US performing artist
Beyoncé singing the song “I Was Here.’
The video of the song, which Beyoncé
and songwriter Diane Warren donated to the campaign, will premiere globally on 19
August, with displays on big screens in the cities of Dubai, Geneva, Addis Ababa,
as well as in New York City’s Times Square, among other locales. “Everyone can
be a humanitarian. All it takes is one act to help someone else,” the UN Under-Secretary-General
for Humanitarian Affairs, Valerie Amos, said during the Friday night event, which
was hosted by television journalist Anderson Cooper. “That’s the spirit of people
helping people.”