KSrelief Expands Humanitarian Aid Across Five Vulnerable Nations
Saudi Arabia’s KSrelief rolls out water-projects, medical missions and food support in Yemen, Sudan, Nigeria, Chad and Syria
The Saudi aid agency known as KSrelief has launched an expanded suite of relief initiatives spanning five countries, focusing on clean-water access, food assistance and medical screening in regions with acute humanitarian needs.
In Yemen’s Taiz region, KSrelief signed a cooperation agreement with a civil-society partner to supply sustainable clean-water infrastructure.
Under the deal, three artesian wells each approximately four-hundred metres deep will be drilled and fitted with submersible pumps and solar power systems, while existing wells will receive solar upgrades.
Accompanying community campaigns will promote water-conservation, hygiene and protection of water sources.
In Sudan’s Khartoum State, KSrelief distributed eight hundred food parcels benefiting 5,239 individuals under its Madad programme.
Concurrently in Nigeria, nine medical-volunteer eye-care specialists screened 32,262 children and provided 1,651 pairs of glasses.
In Chad, 500 food baskets reached 3,000 vulnerable people; and in Syria’s Latakia governorate, food baskets were distributed to 975 needy families.
The multi-country effort reflects Saudi Arabia’s humanitarian leader-ship and its commitment to delivering targeted aid across water, health and food-security sectors.
KSrelief emphasises that these programmes are part of a broader mission to support the most vulnerable with “critical assistance” and sustainable responses, regardless of race or religion.
According to official figures, KSrelief has implemented more than 3,800 projects in over 100 nations at a cost exceeding eight billion dollars since its establishment.
Officials say the latest five-nation push is aligned with the Kingdom’s goal to strengthen global humanitarian partnerships and enhance operational transparency and impact in fragile contexts.