By Ahmad Husein, IFRC
"Water is an urgent need for the communities in Lanny Jaya,” said the Executive Chairman of the Indonesian Red Cross Society, Ginandjar Kartasasmita. Local water sources are reportedly frozen or have been contaminated and supplies of bottled water are unavailable in local markets. In response, the Red Cross has so far distributed 500 gallons of drinking water, blankets and instant food to help 182,000 people who are in need of humanitarian assistance.
All aid items have been decided following a rapid assessment carried out by the Red Cross in coordination with local authorities which have distributed five tonnes of rice to Kuyawage and deployed two doctors and five nurses.
The average temperature in Lanny Jaya ranges between 17.8 degrees to 32 degrees and such an extreme cold wave hasn’t been witnessed since 1989. So far, nine people have died, half of whom were children. Hundreds of people are suffering from health problems while thousands are threatened with food shortages. The hailstorms caused severe damage to farmland and killed a large number of livestock.
“Our community has suffered as the hailstorms destroyed yam crops and people have nothing to harvest. It also killed 168 pigs which are our main livestock,” said Lenius Muria Lanny, head of Kuyawage sub-district.
Delivering aid to the region is a major challenge. Affected villages are nestled high in the mountains and to reach them, Red Cross volunteers walked for three days with supplies as the unstable weather has hampered efforts to send materials by small aircraft which is normally the only form of transportation that can be relied upon.
According to the Indonesian Agency for Meteorological, Climatological and Geophysics (BMKG) the cold wave with accompanying hailstorms is a climatic event that could be attributed to El NiƱo which typically brings colder than normal temperatures to the far eastern Pacific during the June-August and September-November seasons.
Thursday, July 30, 2015
Thursday, January 01, 2015
Red Cross provides health and psychosocial services to grieving family members
By: Ahmad
Husein, IFRC Indonesia
Following
the disappearance of Air Asia’s flight QZ8501, the Indonesian Red Cross,
locally known as Palang Merah Indonesia (PMI), opened its health and
psychosocial services post at the Juanda International Airport in Surabaya,
East Java. The Airbus A320-200, carrying 155 passengers and 7 crewmembers from
Surabaya to Singapore, lost contact with air traffic control at 6.17am local
time around Tanjung Pandan, an area between Borneo and Java Island. Debris from
the plane and several bodies believed to be the passengers were found in the
Pangkalan Bun area, Central Kalimantan, after more than 48 hours of intensive
search efforts.
“We, in
collaboration with the Surabaya Municipality, initiated the operation of this
health and psychosocial service post on Monday for the family members who
stayed at the airport waiting to hear news of their loved ones,” says Mirta
Krisna, a PMI coordinator stationed at the post. While the authority focused on
search and recovery operations, PMI sees the urgency of providing appropriate
health services for the passengers’ family members. To smooth the operation,
PMI deployed five skilled volunteers to work in three different shifts each day
for 24 hours. They are equipped with two ambulances that are on standby at the
airport.
In
Sumatra, PMI’s Bangka Belitung chapter is providing an ambulance at the H.A.S
Hanandjoeddin airport, the nearest location to where the plane reportedly
crashed in East Belitung, Sumatera. Meanwhile, the PMI branch in Kotawaringin
Barat, Central Kalimantan, has mobilized 25 volunteers to the search area to
help local authorities. The Central Kalimantan Chapter provided two ambulance
units, while the South Kalimantan Chapter contributed 80 body bags and one
ambulance to help with the recovery efforts.
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