Table of Contents

Features
Predicting tsunamis: The how and why of tsunami
Himank Kothiyal
ICT’s role in disaster relief and warning
Tsunami relief and rehab
Lending their hands
Amateur Radio: A potential tool in emergency operations
Mahesh Acharya
Recommendations for rehabilitation from MSSRF India
Life beyond tsunami

Columns
Disaster recovery and ICT in Sri Lanka: The day after
Maithri Jansz
Report: Seventh UNICT Task Force annual conference
Maithri Jansz
AISECT ICT mobile vans in India: A silent revolution
Jayalakshmi Chittoor
Interview
Richard Fuchs, Director ICTD Division, IDRC
Bytes for All...
What’s on
In fact
Webbing disaster
Magazine >> January 2005 >> Features
 

Tsunami Relief And Rehab

Lending their hands

Though it is impossible to conquer nature, yet human beings have withstood the challenges thrown by nature from time to time. Natural disasters leave behind large-scale destruction and thousands of bereaved persons. But slowly people pick up the bits of pieces and life moves on. Every time, a disaster strikes, human solidarity is tested. The December 26 tsunami tragedy is perhaps the worst natural disaster to have occurred in living memory. Once again it has thrown human species under the test or trial of survival. The tragedy has invoked instant response from all: government bodies, non-government organisations, celebrities, corporates and international organisation. Everyone has responded admirably and effort of everyone is encouraging.

What is special about this tsunami is the geographical extent of the devastation and the number of countries affected. The damage stretches across thousands of miles and involves millions of people. That produces a huge logistical challenge for international organisations and aid agencies: how to get relief supplies and, later, reconstruction assistance to so many places at more or less the same time. Though the road to recovery is full of obstacles, let us take a pause and take a deeper look into what these international organisations are doing for tsunami victims and what is in their agenda.

There are numerous websites that have listed organizations involved in relief operations. Some of these are: This site provides list of 22 organisations working for the victims of tsunami. This site provides list of 79 organisations providing relief and assistance in the tsunami affected region. This is a site by American Institute of Philanthrophy. It has listed 24 organisations that are providing relief to the tsunami victims. It gives the list of 70 relief organisations and their overhead costs. This site provides a list of 92 organisations that are working for Tsunami victims. It also includes organizations that are working for the animals affected by Tsunami. This site provides list of 58 USAID agencies working for the Tsunami victims. This site provides list of 51 organisations working for the tsunami victims. This site provides list of 34 organisations that are providing help to the victims of tsunami This site provides a list of 21 international organizations working in the tsunami affected region.


Relief work in progress


As it is impossible to highlight the work of each and every organisation, we have highlighted few which are reputed and have the experience of delivering in the past and have a long-term vision.

CARE
www.careindia.org
CARE is helping in relief work in all the affected countries. CARE India has dispatched a 15-person rapid assessment team to the city of Chennai on India’s southeast coast. It is distributing water purification tablets, oral rehydration salts, clothing and plastic sheeting to people in the hard-hit coastal areas. (www.careindia.org) In Indonesia it is distributing around 100,000 safe water system bottles, each of which can provide safe drinking water for a family for at least one month (one to two caps of chlorine solution disinfects 20 litres). The goal is to provide this monthly for a six-month period. CARE Sri Lanka is distributing aid to six main areas of Jaffna, Mullaitivu (north), Batticaloa, Trincomalee, Ampara (east) and Hambantota (south). Another major need identified is transport, and CARE is also assisting with the transport of relief goods. In Thailand, its teams are working in the hardest hit southern provinces of Pang Nga, Krabi, Ranong, Phuket and Trang. CARE teams are supplying medicines and first aid kits, oral rehydration packets, water, blankets, clothing and other emergency items.

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