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CHILDREN
ACCOUNT FOR ONE THIRD OF TSUNAMI DEAD
(28 December 2004)
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Children
are likely to account for more than a third of those killed
when massive waves smashed into coastal communities across Asia,
UNICEF Executive Director Carol Bellamy said today. Virtually
no country has a population with less than a third of its population
aged eighteen years or below and in some of the countries up
to 50 per cent of the population is young, she told reporters
at the United Nations. |
According
to UNICEF, children account for a large proportion of casualties
because they represent 39 per cent of the overall population in
the eight hardest-hit countries. Eyewitness accounts indicate that
many children died because they werent strong enough to hold
on to fixtures or trees when huge tidal waves swept them off their
feet. Kids can run but they were least able to withstand the
flooding or hold on. So that is one of the reasons children have
been particularly affected, Carol Bellamy said.
Latest
estimates suggest the huge undersea earthquake off the coast of
Indonesia and the tsunami it triggered on Sunday killed more than
50,000 people and left millions homeless in countries around the
Indian Ocean.
Sri
Lanka, Indonesia, India and Thailand were among the worst hit by
the undersea earthquake which measured 9.0 on the Richter scale
and triggered huge waves from Malaysia to Africa.
As
millions of people in coastal communities around the rim of the
Indian Ocean struggle to survive the aftermath of the disaster,
the United Nations is coordinating one of the worlds largest
ever relief operations. A UNICEF-chartered plane packed with medical
supplies, shelter materials and education kits left Denmark this
evening.
These
first supplies, destined for Sri Lanka, include enough emergency
health supplies for 150,000 people for three months, 150,000 sachets
of oral rehydration salts to combat diarrhoea and 20 tents. School-in-a-box
kits (containing education materials for 8,000 pupils and their
teachers) and recreation kits are also included in the shipment,
ensuring that children can resume their education as quickly as
possible and regain a sense of normality.
UNICEFs
commitment is to be able to respond to an emergency within 48 hours.
It has long-established offices in every affected country staffed
by experts who live and work there throughout the year.
In
Thailand, UNICEF is assessing both immediate and long-term needs
in the affected areas, which in addition to the tourist spots Phuket
and Krabi also include fishing communities along other areas of
the coast which were completely destroyed by the tidal surge. UNICEF
is focusing on providing water, sanitation facilities and food for
those in the affected areas, especially children, as well as addressing
the longer-term needs for education, psychological support and replacing
lost livelihood of entire communities.
In
Sri Lanka, UNICEF has already responded to a government request
for shelter supplies, providing more than 30,000 blankets and sleeping
mats as well as T-shirts and other articles of clothing from local
emergency stocks.
In
India, UNICEF has delivered an initial 50 water tanks to the southern
state of Tamil Nadu, where the government has set up 200 relief
sites in seven affected districts. UNICEF expects to provide the
region with hundreds of thousands of water purification tablets,
a total of 1,600 community water tanks, 200,000 sachets of oral
rehydration salts, medical supplies sufficient to serve 30 health
centres, and 30,000 blankets. Serious concerns remain for children
in the Indian islands of Andaman and Nicobar where death tolls of
up to 7,000 have been reported.
In
Indonesia, UNICEF staff are part of a larger UN assessment team
that has headed into worst-hit Aceh province to identify urgent
needs. Some 500,000 people in the province have been directly affected,
particularly in the provincial capital of Banda Aceh, where houses
have been destroyed and water, power and telecommunications disrupted.
All but two of Banda Acehs ambulances were destroyed.
In
Somalia, where hundreds of families have been left without shelter,
food and clean drinking water, a UNICEF team assessing the affected
areas with local authorities is delivering immediate assistance
of oral rehydration salts, chlorine powder and essential drugs while
arranging for increased supplies as needed. In addition to providing
clean water and sanitation facilities, UNICEF will focus on emergency
health care, nutritional needs, family relief kits and temporary
shelters for the affected families.
In
the Maldives, which were hard hit by the tsunamis, UNICEF and UN
sister agencies are working with the government to coordinate an
international relief effort that will include the immediate provision
of water purification supplies, food, clothing for children, shelter
supplies, and other basics.
In
Bangladesh, and Myanmar UNICEF is supporting government-led efforts
to meet localized needs. The impact of the disaster was not as widespread
in these countries, although a more complete picture is still emerging.
UN
emergency relief co-ordinator Jan Egeland said the UN would probably
make its largest ever appeal for humanitarian funding. To support
UNICEFs efforts to help children and their families who were
affected, please click
here
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