Tag: crowdfunding

  • Backlash In Indonesia Over Ramadan Raid On Frail Auntie, Over $20,000 Donations Raised

    Backlash In Indonesia Over Ramadan Raid On Frail Auntie, Over $20,000 Donations Raised

    JAKARTA: Indonesian netizens have reacted with fury and a flurry of donations after footage emerged of a frail food seller breaking down as her cafe was raided for staying open during the daytime in Ramadan.

    Video of the 53-year-old business owner desperately begging officials not to confiscate her food went viral at the weekend, and social media users have donated almost $20,000 to a crowdfunding site to help her and other vendors.

    It is common for food outlets in the world’s most populous Muslim-majority country that remain open during the daytime in the holy month of Ramadan, when Muslims are supposed to fast from sunrise to sunset, to be raided.

    But the case of food seller Saeni, who like many Indonesians goes by one name, has touched a nerve, with many criticising authorities for being heavy-handed during the raid in Serang, west of the capital Jakarta.

    “You should be tolerant towards those who are not fasting, cruel authorities,” wrote Facebook user Elisabeth Oktofani.

    The food seller was deeply in debt and so had decided to keep the cafe open during daylight hours to make extra cash, she was quoted by local media as saying.

    President Joko Widodo condemned the raid and ordered his staff to make a personal donation, with his spokesman saying that the action “cannot be justified”.

    In the footage, a group of public order officers, who assist police in maintaining order but have fewer powers, march into the small food outlet, which consisted of a few goods in a glass case and some shabby chairs and tables.

    Saeni, wearing a blue Muslim headscarf, begs them not to take the food but they put it into plastic bags and march off.

    Local authorities defended the raid, saying that the food seller was breaking the law. While many restaurants in bigger cities stay open throughout Ramadan, local bylaws in smaller places often forbid vendors to sell food during the daytime.

    A crowdfunding campaign launched in response to Friday’s raid has raised over 265 million rupiah ($19,900), with the organisers planning to distribute the money to Saeni and other food sellers targeted for staying open during daylight hours in Ramadan.

    Most Indonesians practise a moderate form of Islam, but the country is also home to a vocal, hardline fringe.

     

    Source: www.freemalaysiatoday.com

  • Cancer-Stricken Father Gets Only $5000 Out Of $36000 Raised So Far

    Cancer-Stricken Father Gets Only $5000 Out Of $36000 Raised So Far

    He said he felt compelled to help after reading a news report about a cancer-stricken father of three, Mr Goh Hoon Tiong.

    So Mr Martin Lim started two online campaigns to raise money for the 44-year-old man and managed to raise more than $36,000.

    But two months after the campaigns, Mr Goh has received only $5,000.

    Now, members of the public who had donated freely to the campaigns – which were set up on online crowdfunding platforms GIVEasia and Indiegogo – are asking for updates on the funds raised.

    They are also chasing Mr Lim to transfer the rest of the money to the cancer-stricken man.

    The New Paper on Sunday wrote about Mr Goh’s plight on Oct 4, following a report in Shin Min Daily News.

    The report struck a chord with many readers, who sympathised with Mr Goh, especially when the single parent revealed that he had to hold two jobs to raise his young daughter and two sons.

    Many netizens responded with words of encouragement when Mr Lim started his campaign. One wrote: “Stay strong Mr Goh and don’t give up! Best wishes for a speedy recovery!”

    A total of 170 donors donated $24,330 on GIVEasia. On US-based platform Indiegogo, 128 people donated US$8,330 (S$11,660).

    The campaigns closed on Oct 13 and Oct 22 respectively.

    On Mr Lim’s fundraising page on GIVEasia, he said that something about Mr Goh’s story made him pause.

    He wrote: “Maybe it was the single parenthood or his struggle with a failed business; maybe it was his holding two jobs to desperately feed his three children. Or maybe it was how touched I was with the plight of his kids.

    “Whatever the case, I decided to act in whatever little way I knew how. I turned to the Web.”

    There was also a note addressing concerns of whether he would give all the monies raised to Mr Goh.

    Mr Lim wrote: “I’ve promoted this fundraiser on 2 platforms using my personal profile to my family, friends AND business associates (sic).

    “My reputation is worth a heck of a lot more than what I’m trying to raise for Mr Goh.

    “I’m here to help, and all of this is voluntary. The only assurance I can give is my word.”

    DIFFICULTIES

    TNP understands that GIVEasia transferred a sum of about $23,700 – after deducting some bank charges – into Mr Lim’s personal account on Oct 20, a week after he closed the campaign.

    In an interview on Dec 17, Mr Lim confirmed with TNP that the monies raised had been transferred to his bank account.

    But he said he faced difficulties in transferring the monies to Mr Goh.

    He transferred $5,000 to Mr Goh on Monday. (See report below)

    TNP also spoke to a family service centre (FSC) officer in charge of Mr Goh’s case. She declined to be named.

    The officer said Mr Goh informed her that by late October, he still had not received any money.

    She contacted GIVEasia, who linked her to Mr Lim via e-mail.

    She managed to contact Mr Lim on Nov 13 and informed him that Mr Goh had yet to receive any money.

    Mr Lim told her that he had been too busy on work trips to transfer the money.

    He also said he would settle the matter with Mr Goh directly.

    Said the officer: “I did not want to interfere because it dealt with money, which is very sensitive. And since I was told that the money would have gone directly to Mr Goh, I thought it would be okay.”

    Responding to TNP’s queries, GIVEasia co-founder Aseem Kumar Thakur said they were “very disappointed and concerned that there has been a delay in the funds being sent by (the) campaign organiser to Mr Goh”.

    He said: “While GIVEasia makes no representation about the accuracy, safety or legality of any of the campaigns or user content posted on GIVEasia, which is clearly stated upfront in GIVEasia’s ‘Terms of Use’, our team is nevertheless committed to providing information and taking reasonable actions to help the groups that have come forward to assist Mr Goh and his family with this case.”

    Lawyers whom TNP spoke to said that in an instance where a crowdfunding campaign fails to deliver, donors should make a police report.

    Mr Justin Tan, an associate lawyer at Trident Law, said: “If the money has not gone to where it is supposed to go, then the first course of action would be to make a police report.”

    Mr Tan said that donors should be discerning when it comes to such campaigns and that it should be made sure that the money goes into the intended recipient’s bank account.

    Another lawyer, Mr Bryan Tan from Pinsent Masons, agreed.

    “Essentially, a crowdfunding campaign is like a contract and you have to adhere to the contract made to the site.

    “Donors who feel that their money has not been used properly should make a police report,” he said.

    “It is also important to make sure the money collected goes to an individual or organisation before donating online.”


    I did not want to interfere because it dealt with money, which is very sensitive.

    – An FSC officer

     

    Source: www.tnp.sg

  • A Mother’s Crowdfunding Attempt To Raise US$1.7 Million For Toddler

    A Mother’s Crowdfunding Attempt To Raise US$1.7 Million For Toddler

    The sum of US$1.3 million (S$1.7 million) is an astounding amount to be asking strangers for.

    But the kindness of strangers is exactly what Madam Jamie Chua is banking on to pave the way for her toddler to have the surgery she needs.

    At just 21 months, Xie Yujia has suffered multiple operations, a collapsed lung, a seizure and a detached retina.

    Her biggest problem is a congenital defect – her oesophagus, or food pipe, is not connected to her stomach.

    Madam Chua, 30, has started a crowd-funding effort on Indiegogo to raise the necessary funds for Yujia to have reconstructive surgery at the Boston Children’s Hospital in the United States, which specialises in treating such defects.

    “I was told before delivery that the baby might have a block in her food pipe, as she couldn’t swallow amniotic fluid,” recalled the housewife.

    Tests revealed the far more serious problem of oesophageal atresia, which happens in about one out of 2,500 births.

    A day after she was born, she was wheeled into the operating room for surgery, but her oesophagus was too far from the stomach to be joined to it.

    For the next five months, Yujia was fed through a tube to her stomach and needed another down her throat to remove the saliva which might choke her.

    She had corrective surgery in February last year and went home a month later for the first time, but complications, such as infections, continued to dog her.

    That April, after a second procedure to widen her oesophagus, it ruptured and the gastric juice that leaked into her lungs caused her left lung to collapse.

    Back into hospital she went. Finally, in February, she was well enough to go home with her mum and dad, Mr Xie Wen Long, 40, a self-employed event organiser.

    Madam Chua said the dreaded process of sticking a tube down Yujia’s throat every few hours is the main reason she would like her daughter to have reconstructive surgery.

    “Feeding her through a tube to her stomach is okay, but I can’t see her go through the suction process,” she said.

    When she heard the amount needed for the surgery in Boston, her heart dropped as she had thought it would cost the same amount as the surgery in Singapore, which was about $300,000.

    Her Indiegogo campaign had received US$35,200 as of last night.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com