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Displaced Palestinians receive First World Vision relief
29 May 2007 09:38:19 GMT
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World Vision Lebanon distributed more than 500 baby hygiene kits to Palestinian refugees on Sunday morning forced to flee week of fighting in their home camp of Naher el-Bared, near Tripoli in north Lebanon.

According to United Nations figures, approximately 25,000 people have fled fighting between the Lebanese Army and members of the militant group Fatah al-Islam, which began last Sunday after police officers tried to arrest suspects in a bank robbery.

'How long will this go on? We can't live like this – I have a newborn and three small children,' said Maysaz Moughamis, one of the mothers who received a hygiene kit from World Vision. 'I need this aid, but all I want to do is go back home.'

The UN says between 10,000 and 15,000 of the internally displaced refugees have moved to the nearby el-Baddawi Palestinian refugee camp where they have crammed into overcrowded and rundown schools or share cramped quarters with friends and family.

The baby hygiene kits are part of the first phase of a response that aims to reach 2,000 displaced families in el-Baddawi – including 4,000 boys and girls – with urgently needed hygiene items and to provide activities for children. The baby hygiene kits World Vision is distributing include diapers/nappies, baby creme, anti-bacterial wipes and water sterilisation tablets.

'These families who have been displaced were forced to flee their homes with little more than the clothes on their back to another, already overcrowded, refugee camp,' said Tony Matar, relief manger for the response. 'These families urgently need hygiene kits to protect their babies from disease and psycho-social programs to help their children deal with the impact of being displaced.'

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

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A mother prays over her child, who is suffering from dengue fever, at Phnom Penh's Kantha Bopha VI hospital on July 4, 2007. Impoverished Cambodia is appealing for international help to fight a major outbreak of dengue fever, which has killed more children early in this year's wet season than in all of last year.



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