International
Committee Red Cross (ICRC) is an international nongovernmental
organization headquartered in Geneva, Switzerland, that
seeks to aid victims of war and to ensure the observance
of humanitarian law by all parties in conflict. The work
of the ICRC in both World Wars was recognized by the Nobel
Prize for Peace in both 1917 and 1944. It shared another
Nobel Peace Prize with the League of Red Cross Societies
in 1963, the year of the 100th anniversary of the ICRC's
founding.
The International Committee of the Red Cross was formed
in response to the experiences of its founder, Jean-Henri
Dunant, at the Battle of Solferino in 1859. Dunant witnessed
thousands of wounded soldiers left to die for lack of adequate
medical services. Soliciting help from neighbouring civilians,
Dunant organized care for the soldiers. In 1862 he published
an account of the situation at Solferino; by 1863 he had
garnered so much support that the Geneva Society for Public
Welfare helped found the International Committee for the
Relief of the Wounded. In 1875 this organization became
the International Committee of the Red Cross.
The ICRC is now one component of a large network including
national Red Cross and Red Crescent societies and the International
Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies. (The
Red Crescent was adopted in lieu of the Red Cross in Muslim
countries.) The governing body of the ICRC is the Committee,
consisting of no more than 25 members. All the members are
Swiss, in part due to the origins of the Red Cross in Geneva
but also to establish neutrality so any countries in need
can receive aid. The Committee meets in assembly 10 times
each year to ensure that the ICRC fulfills its duties as
the promoter of international humanitarian law and as the
guardian of the Fundamental Principles of the Red Cross:
“humanity, impartiality, neutrality, independence, voluntary
service, unity, and universality.”
You may visit ICRC’s website at http://www.icrc.org/.