Qatar Charity (QC) continues to prioritise raising awareness of refugee issues and mobilising support through integrated humanitarian campaigns, field interventions, and international partnerships.
According to the QC, such efforts aim to meet basic needs and help refugees restore stability and live with dignity.
This comes as part of the observance of World Refugee Day 2026, observed on June 20, which highlights the suffering of millions of refugees worldwide and emphasises that protecting the most vulnerable is a shared responsibility.
Millions of refugees and internally displaced persons (IDPs) benefit from the QC’s various campaigns, including seasonal and specialised initiatives.
Through campaigns such as Ramadan, winter, and Udhiyah (Qurbani), support is directed to countries most affected by displacement, particularly Palestine (including the Gaza Strip), Syria, Sudan, Yemen, and Somalia.
The organisation has also launched dedicated campaigns to support those affected by displacement, alongside initiatives to address drought in several African countries, helping to ease suffering and strengthen resilience.
In mid-June 2026, the QC launched a campaign titled “Every Refugee Tent Holds a Story” in conjunction with World Refugee Day, aiming to mobilise support through integrated interventions that include food, water, sanitation, shelter, healthcare, education, and livelihood support.
The campaign targets refugees from crisis-affected countries, including Afghanistan, Sudan, Somalia, Yemen, Myanmar, Syria, and Palestine, across Asia, Africa, and the Middle East.
Figures reflect the scale of the QC’s work.
In 2025, it implemented humanitarian projects worth QR645mn, benefiting more than 10mn people, mainly in countries affected by displacement.
The QC has maintained a strategic partnership with the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) since 2012, contributing over $60mn over the past decade to support its programmes in Africa, Asia, and the Middle East, helping more than 2.1mn forcibly displaced people.
The QC’s efforts extend beyond emergency relief to long-term, high-impact projects.
These include the Zaatari Health Centre in Jordan, which serves tens of thousands of Syrian refugees in the camp, and Al-Amal City in northern Syria, which comprises 1,400 housing units with integrated facilities and accommodates around 8,800 people.
The organisation has also rehabilitated approximately 1,800 homes in rural Hama and the Al Ghab Plain.
So far this year the QC also provided emergency shelter for Sudanese refugees in Chad through 600 tents, benefiting 4,200 people, as part of its rapid response to displacement crises.
The organisation further contributed to rebuilding 326 homes for Rohingya refugees following fires in Cox’s Bazar camp in Bangladesh, in addition to delivering hundreds of other housing units.
As part of strengthening partnerships, the QC is expected to sign a $10mn agreement with the Islamic Development Bank, in its capacity as Trustee of the Global Islamic Fund for Refugees (GIFR), to support sustainable financing and advance long-term solutions.