Austrian Red Cross
The Austrian Red Cross (German : Österreichisches Rotes Kreuz , ÖRK) is the national Red Cross Organization in Austria and is part of the International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement . It was established on March 14, 1880, by Doctor Adam Lichtenheld of the Vienna General Hospital and is the biggest aid agency in the country.
Duties
Its duties contain:
By far, most staff members are volunteers (about 74.000 in 2018), but there are professional employees as well as drafted Zivildiener , which are conscientious objectors forced to serve up to nine months time in medical service, instead of military service .[ 1]
Presidents of the ÖRK
Emblem of the Austrian Red Cross in Innsbruck
Karl Baron of Tinti (1880–1884)
Franz Earl Falkenhayn (1885–1898)
Prince Alois von Schönburg-Hartenstein (1899–1913)
Rudolf Earl of Abensperg-Traun (1913–1919)
Max Vladimir Eck (1919–1938)
Adolf Pilz (1945)
Karl Seitz (1946–1950)
Burghard Breitner (1950–1956)
Hans Lauda (1956–1974)
Heinrich Treichl (1974–1999)
Fredy Mayer (1999-2013)
Gerald Schöpfer (since 2013)
National organisation
Ambulance of Lower Austria Red Cross in Linz
The organisation persists of nine subordinate national organisations, all are their own entities but are bound to the basic principles of the Austrian Red Cross. This has historical reasons, the national organisation originated out of many small, local aid organisations.
These consist of totally 142 district offices and 956 local offices.
References
External links
International Organisations
Non-members and affiliate societies
NGOs
International
Action Against Hunger (France, Spain)
ADRA (Czech Republic, Denmark, Germany)
CARE International (Austria, Denmark, France, Germany, Netherlands, Norway)
Caritas Europa (Austria , Belgium , Czech Republic , Denmark , France , Germany , Ireland , Luxembourg , Netherlands , Spain )
ICRC (Austria , Belgium , Denmark , Finland , France , Germany , Luxembourg , Italy , Netherlands , Norway , Spain , Sweden )
Islamic Relief (Germany, Sweden)
Oxfam (Belgium, Italy, Netherlands, Spain)
Plan International (Belgium, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Ireland, Netherlands, Spain, Sweden)
Save the Children (Denmark, Finland, Germany, Italy, Netherlands, Norway, Spain, Sweden)
Solidarités international (France, Spain)
SOS Children's Villages (Austria, Netherlands)
Terre des hommes (Italy, Netherlands)
World Vision (Austria, Finland, Netherlands)
National
International organisations Agencies
International National Other