Save the Children Helping to Reduce Risks to Children and Prepare Communities in Disaster-Prone Countries
WESTPORT, Conn. (Nov. 10, 2008) — As Asia marks the 6-month and 1-year anniversaries of two deadly cyclones, Save the Children is helping communities in the region and around the world prepare for and respond to future disasters, with a special focus on working to protect children before, during and after major emergencies.
Over the last year, Asia has suffered severe flooding, tropical storms and monsoons, mudslides, earthquakes and two major cyclones. Cyclone Sidr hit Bangladesh November 15, 2007, killing 3,500 people and affecting 5.4 million people in 30 districts. Cyclone Nargis swept across Myanmar May 2–3, 2008, leaving more than 1 million people homeless and over 130,000 dead or missing.
"When disasters strike, children are among the most vulnerable. Their health, nutrition, security and education — the very foundation of their development — are threatened," said Charles MacCormack, Save the Children's president and CEO, who last week visited Save the Children's emergency response programs in Myanmar. "It is crucial to plan for emergencies before they happen, both to reduce risk in advance and to be prepared when they do occur."
On average, disasters around the world kill some 58,000 people and affect 225 million others every year. Children and women are the most adversely affected and comprise the majority of fatalities, MacCormack noted.
Recognising the critical importance that preparedness plays in helping children and communities plan for and react to a crisis, Save the Children is implementing disaster risk-reduction programs around Asia. Three examples:
The organisation's focus is to create child-focused strategies and to assist communities to build back safer. Key strategies include enhancing early-warning systems, reducing underlying risk factors, increasing school-based awareness and working with local and national governments to make preparedness a priority.
Save the Children is a global leader in providing rapid humanitarian relief, child protection, and short- and long-term recovery initiatives when children's lives and well-being are jeopardized by disasters. It provided lifesaving food, water and supplies to more than 200,000 people in the first six months after Cyclone Sidr and 500,000 people after Cyclone Nargis in Myanmar. Save the Children also ensured that tens of thousands of affected children could continue their education in temporary or rebuilt schools and had safe spaces to play.
Find out more about our work in Myanmar 6 Months On
Learn about our work in Bangladesh after Cyclone Sidr