News Update: 12 May 2008

 

Crisis in the Relief Camps: Mass Exodus Sets Stage for Public Health Crisis Hundreds of Thousands of Homeless Forced to Migrate North for Aid

  1.   The lives of thousands of cyclone survivors are at extreme risk as people scramble out of the shattered Delta region to find food and shelter.

  2.

Displaced people are living in appalling conditions in make-shift shelters and camps where overcrowding and unsanitary conditions are prevalent. These are the findings of a World Vision assessment team that visited 26 shelters across Myaung Mya.


  3.

As thousands of villagers leave the hardest-hit areas of the Irrawaddy Delta, they embark on a journey where there is almost no food or shelter and water is contaminated by salt, human remains or animal carcases.


  4.

In Myaung Mya, an area some 50km north of the devastated town of Labutta, World Vision Myanmar staff says some 30,000 people are seeking food, water and medical attention. Children – many of them orphans – are suffering from fever, diarrhoea and respiratory infections.


  5.

Samson Jeyakumar, a World Vision Programme Manager, said, “In this situation, the most vulnerable people are children under five because they have the highest mortality rates in emergency situations and suffer the effects most quickly.”


  6.

Seventeen WV Child Friendly Spaces are due to be set up in the Yangon area today.


  7.

World Vision has been supplying clean water to survivors in the Irrawaddy area. The agency has also started chlorinating wells, providing water tanks and disinfecting camp sites with bleaching powder. Meanwhile, in Yangon, more than 78,000 people are receiving clean water, and diesel fuel is being distributed to operate water pumps.


  8.

World Vision has also distributed sterile dressings, anti-bacterial medicines, mosquito nets and disinfectants, but additional resources are needed. Much of this equipment is available and could be within the country in hours from World Vision’s global warehouses in Dubai and Frankfurt.


---END---

  • World Vision has 31,000 staff working in around 100 countries worldwide. It currently has food programmes in 29 countries and, in 2007, 450,000 metric tons of food helped feed millions of people



World Vision is a Christian relief, development and advocacy organization dedicated to working with children, families and communities worldwide to reach their full potential by tackling the causes of poverty and injustice. We serve more than 100 million people and work in 98 countries around the globe. Through child sponsorship, 3.4 million children benefit from having clean water, food and agriculture, healthcare, education and microfinance.