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Children most at risk from disease and separation in Jakarta floods
06 Feb 2007 09:30:00 GMT
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Children most at risk from disease and separation in Jakarta floods

Save the Children is responding to the needs of children affected by severe flooding in Jakarta, which has forced 340,000 people to flee their homes.

Torrential rains in the Indonesian capital Jakarta and its surrounding areas have caused widespread flooding, which is the worst the city has seen for five years. The exceptionally heavy annual rains, which began late last week, have caused flood water levels to rise rapidly in the last four days, reaching over four metres in some areas. Thousands of houses and public buildings, including 1,498 schools, have been affected. Telephone lines and electricity networks have been cut off in some parts of the city and floodwaters have blocked some major roads and paralysed the transport system.

Our team in Indonesia is working as fast as possible to reach the children and families most in need. 

Save the Children has sent urgently needed relief items to Jakarta from our warehouse in Yogyakarta. The supplies include 2,000 tarpaulins to help provide temporary shelter for children and their families, and around 450 kits containing basic household and hygiene supplies like pots and pans, soap and washing powder.

We are also supporting our partner organisations in Jakarta by providing supplies of food to keep community kitchens running in some of the worst affected areas of North and East Jakarta.

Save the Children is concerned that the flooding is likely to increase the number of cases of dengue fever – which have already been high this year – along with cases of diarrhoeal diseases and acute respiratory infections, particularly in young children.

Toby Porter, Save the Children’s Director of Emergencies, said: “Children suffer most in any emergency. In Jakarta, it is the children of poor families living in makeshift housing along the banks of the rivers who are suffering the most. The biggest risk for these children is being exposed to deadly water-borne diseases and also being separated from their families. Save the Children launched a rapid response to the emergency and stands ready to scale up our operation if the situation worsens.”

For more information please contact the Save the Children Australia media centre:

Link Arrow. Arrow (Copyright: International Save the Children Alliance)Read other media releases here

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

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A boy sits in a muddy residential area in Jakarta February 13, 2007. Hospitals in the Indonesian capital were overwhelmed on Tuesday with hundreds of flood victims suffering from water-borne diseases after the city's worst flooding in five years.