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Concern responds rapidly to flooding in Chittagong
14 Jun 2007 15:25:34 GMT
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Concern’s plans will complement the government’s response, which swung into action shortly after the fatal mudslides on Monday morning.

For a detailed report on the scale of the mudslides please click here.

The number of people killed by the floods and mudslides has now to risen to at least 118, officials say.

Essential supplies

Relief packages consisting of one weeks rations (15 kilograms of rice, two kilograms of pulses, one kilogram of salt, one litre of vegetable oil and five packets of oral re-hydration salts) will be distributed to over 4,000 families living in slum areas affected by the water logging. The distribution will be conducted with local NGO partner NISHKRITI in eight wards of Chittagong.

“As a result of the devastating ongoing rains, thousands have lost valuables. In many families the principle wage earners are injured or sick”, Concern regional manager Bijoy Krishna Nath explained. “The unemployed and underemployed, who make up the majority of our target group, have lost income for over a week now. This relief package will help reduce suffering and ensure that families and wage earners remain healthy and ready to take up wage earning activities as soon as possible.”

Working with partners

This emergency response is the latest in a long line of actions from Concern, which has been working in Bangladesh since its independence. “As a humanitarian organisation it is our duty and responsibility to stand alongside government and respond quickly to emergencies of this type”, Concern country director Kieron Crawley stated.

It is expected that the relief distribution will be supervised by government and Chittagong city corporation officials.

[ Any views expressed in this article are those of the writer and not of Reuters. ]

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Flood victims of the Lalbagh area line up wait for relief materials at centre in capital Dhaka, August 13, 2007. In Bangladesh, one of the world's poorest countries, more than 400 people have been killed since flooding began in mid-July. On Monday, officials voiced concerns about diarrhoea and other diseases. Nearly 45,000 people have been treated in hospitals and clinics across the country since late July.



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