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| World
AIDS Day celebrated with fanfare
in Nepal » |
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The
World AIDS Day was celebrated
in Nepal with fanfare. Nepal
Red Cross Society mobilized
its headquarters staff as well
as branches for the celebration
of the Day. A number of rallies,
street dramas, talk programmes,
and documentary shows were organised
throughout the country on 1st
December as a part of the global
campaign against the discrimination
and stigma against the people
living with HIV/AIDS.
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| Disaster
Preparedness Pays in Nepal » |
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In
the years 2002 and 2003 Makwanpur
district faced very big disasters.
Many villages were swept away
and the floods and landslides
killed more than 130 people.
"But nothing happened to
our village. We were the lucky.
Even the stiff mountain of our
village suffered no landslides,"
says Surya Bahadur Sintan, a
community leader of Lawati village
of Makwanpur district. "It
was the result of our common
effort of the Community Based
Disaster Preparedness Programme,"
he further adds.
The plantation in the stiff
mountains, well managed use
of firewood from forests, ban
in cutting tree from disaster-prone
areas, constructions of check
dams in hazardous places, well
managed use of land for planting
crops and the public awareness
about the disaster, mitigation
and preparedness were all that
kept the village far from disaster.
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Prime Minister
inaugurates General Assembly of Nepal
Red Cross Society -Download
Nepal Red Cross
Current News Bulletin
By Bijoy Patro in Kathmandu
11 August 2002
Nepal Red Cross volunteers have been
the first humanitarians to rescue
survivors and provide relief aid to
people affected by floods and landslides
in some of the most inaccessible areas
of the Himalayan kingdom.
Four hundred and
four people have died and 173 are
still missing as floods and landslides
followed incessant rain in 47 of Nepal
s 75 districts since the arrival of
this year s monsoon rains. The region
experienced its heaviest rainfall
in 30 years between July 21and 24.
More than 250,000
extremely vulnerable people, many
of them belonging to remote mountain
communities in the laps of the Himalayas,
face an uncertain future as landslides
have buried their loved ones and their
homes and livestock under tonnes of
debris.
The situation is
getting worse as time passes and hope
of rescuing the missing is reducing
with every passing day. Most may have
died under the debris, mainly mud
and boulders that tumbled downhill
at high velocity and crushed or buried
houses, says Eelko Brouwer, Federation
Disaster Response Delegate. The stark
face of the disaster was revealed
to me when a villager in Makwanpur
told me that there was a child lying
under the debris where I stood.
The stench in the
air fills Red Cross volunteers carrying
out a grim search for the missing
people under the wet mud with a sense
of hopelessness. Nevertheless, the
search goes on, if nothing, then to
provide the dead with a dignified
funeral.
Often, the Nepal
Red Cross has been the only humanitarian
organisation reaching relief to the
disaster-affected people. A vast network
of volunteers made it possible for
the Red Cross to work with the community
immediately after the disaster, says
Bob McKerrow, Federation head of delegation
for South Asia. Red Cross volunteers
have walked for five days to assist
remote communities. Much of the initial
evacuation and assessment for relief
was carried out by these volunteers
with little equipment or resources.
As the country s
lead disaster response agency, the
Nepal Red Cross has assumed the coordination
role for all humanitarian organisations
as also the government. Earlier, the
Red Cross would support the government
in its humanitarian role following
a disaster. This time, the roles have
been reversed, says Som Prasad Humgain,
President of Red Cross Kabhre branch.
Now, humanitarians and government
officials have asked us to take the
lead assessing and distributing relief
among the affected people.
Many humanitarian
agencies too are providing their relief
goods for distributions by Nepal Red
Cross to vulnerable people assessed
by Red Cross staff and volunteers.
The Red Cross is everywhere and its
widespread network and access is an
advantage, says Rabindra Rajbanshi,
Program Officer with the Adventist
Development and Relief Agency (ADRA).
Which is why our organisation trusted
the relief goods it procured to Red
Cross for identifying the beneficiaries
and distributing the relief.
Similarly, the UNHCR
provided the Jhapa branch of the Nepal
Red Cross kitchen sets to distribute
among the flood-affected people in
the villages of Jhapa.
One such beneficiary
is 60-year-old Krishna Bahadur Gurung
and his wife of Nayagaon in Kabhre
district. Four of their family of
nine died in the landslide and three
others were battling for life in the
hospital when the Red Cross came across
them. With no home in the rainy season
and the rest of the family in hospital,
the traumatised couple received tarpaulin
sheets to live under and a family
relief package provided by ADRA. We
will forever remember the compassion
shown by Red Cross volunteers, Gurung
says.
In the Terai plains
in southern Nepal, floods have devastated
villages. It was distressing to see
entire villages flattened by rushing
water that swallowed all that came
its way, Eelko Brouwer says. Elsewhere,
where the water was just a few feet
high, the villages were a mass of
thatched roofs lying on the ground.
The clay houses
simply melted in the standing water
and villagers will have to dry the
thatch and remove the fungus before
re-cycling the thatch roof. With the
rice crop destroyed, there is little
hope of getting fresh thatch to make
a new roof, he says, and adds, This
could also reflect on the household
food security of the affected population.
Mr. Patro is Regional
Information Officer at South Asia
Regional Delegation of the International
Federation of the Red Cross and Red
Crescent Societies. |