Wheelchairs —
two tranches.
Wheelchair distribution to people with mobility disabilities in Pakistan. Two tranches across the year (Jan + Jul 2026), each Rs 200,000. Co-led by Ahmad Saeed (primary) and Ateeq Ayub (who also runs QIF’s prosthetics line).
Donor attribution is “Qureshi Int. Fund & Family Welfare” — internal QIF allocation rather than named external donor. Unusual pattern in the portfolio.
Per-chair attribution. Per-recipient.
Wheelchairs are the canonical high-tangible, low-overhead charitable intervention. Each chair = one named recipient = one verifiable impact unit.
Why wheelchairs are an underrated charitable line.
Wheelchair distribution is the classic high-tangible-impact charitable intervention. A donor pays for a chair; a person with a mobility disability receives that chair; their life changes the next day. The intervention is one-time, attributable, and visible — the best possible unit for a transparent impact dashboard.
In Pakistan, a person with a mobility disability without a wheelchair is largely housebound. With a chair, they can attend school, work, mosque, family events. The downstream income, education, and dignity effects are large and permanent.
QIF’s Wheel Chairs project funds two tranches of Rs 200,000 each. At Pakistan 2026 wholesale pricing, that’s roughly 10–13 chairs per tranche, or roughly 20–26 people receiving mobility devices over the year.
The current donor attribution — “Qureshi Int. Fund & Family Welfare” — is internal: QIF’s general fund covers this line rather than a named external donor. That’s an unusual pattern in the portfolio (most projects have specific external donors), and points to an opportunity: this is exactly the kind of project that is easy to fundraise around with photos and named attribution.
Companion line: the Prosthetic Project (Rs 100,000, March 2026) is led by the same person and runs the same operational pattern — Pakistan’s full disability portfolio is consolidated under one team lead.
FY 2026 — two distribution waves.
Each tranche delivers mobility devices to a fresh cohort of recipients. Per-recipient documentation is the operational standard.
Photos & captions.
The wheelchair line is QIF’s strongest candidate for per-recipient photo storytelling. Each recipient with their chair becomes one direct attribution unit donors can fund.
Sponsor a
wheelchair.
Rs 20,000 funds one wheelchair for one named recipient with photo attribution. Rs 200,000 funds an entire tranche of 10–13 recipients. The tightest unit of named-attribution charity in QIF’s portfolio.