Padang Pariaman, Sumatra, Indonesia, 7/10/2009 --
Untuk sementara Siaran Pers hanya tersedia dalam Bahasa Inggris.As international relief operations intensify in the
earthquake-shattered areas of West Sumatra, CARE is distributing aid
into hard-hit areas reachable only by motorbike or on foot. CARE
emergency workers say remote areas were hardest-hit by the devastating
7.6 quake Sept. 30, but have received little aid because of blocked
roads.
“Up until now most of the humanitarian effort is focused on the city of
Padang. But we are seeing the worst damage in the remote outlying areas
in the district of Padang Pariaman,” said Adjie Fachrurrazi, CARE
Emergency Relief Coordinator. “In the rural areas, people are saying to
us, ‘don’t count the number of houses destroyed. Count the number of
houses left standing – it will be faster.’”
With roads often heavily damaged, many rural areas cannot be reached by
car. CARE teams are using motorbikes to reach remote areas like the
village of Pulo Air. That village, along with two others, was almost
completely destroyed by a landslide caused by the earthquake.
“Tomorrow’s distribution will be done by foot, passing emergency
supplies from person to person in a human chain, because the roads are
totally blocked,” said Fachrurrazi.
CARE is distributing emergency kits consisting of a hygiene kit,
blankets, sarongs, jerry can for storing water and water purification
solution to 260 families (1,300 people) in a village in the
sub-district of Batang Gasan.
“Before we arrived, people had nothing. We saw the same thing after the
2007 quake, and in Yogyakarta in 2006. The remote areas are poorer, the
houses are less able to withstand a quake, and people have fewer
resources to recover,” said Fachrurrazi.
CARE is focusing its response on the hardest-hit rural areas, and is
coordinating closely with other aid agencies and the government to
ensure all areas receive assistance and there is no duplication of
efforts. A new shipment of emergency supplies arrived today, but the
clock is ticking; more funding is needed to scale up the emergency
response.
CARE is helping 5,000 people in the initial days of the response, but
plans to reach up to 40,000 people as more supplies and funding come
in. CARE responded to similar earthquakes in the same area in 2007,
providing water purification supplies and emergency shelter for 65,000
people.
About CARE: CARE is one of the world’s largest aid agencies, working in
70 countries to fight poverty and helping more than 55 million people
every year. CARE has been in Indonesia since 1967, and operates a broad
range of projects in disaster risk reduction, emergency response,
environment and natural resource management, health, livelihoods and
water and sanitation.