In Bangladesh, recovery from Cyclone Aila continues with help from UNICEF

Naimul Haq, UNICEF

Young volunteers help Nirod Chandra Roy

© UNICEF Bangladesh/2009/ Murad

Young volunteers help Nirod Chandra Roy, 80, whose house was destroyed during Cyclone Aila. The youths were trained under a UNICEF program funded by the European Union.

BARGUNA, Bangladesh (July 1, 2009) — Cyclone Aila swept through south–west Bangladesh in May, reducing homes to rubble, destroying crops and leaving villagers without safe water or sanitation. In the weeks since, local communities have been struggling to cope with the storm's impact.

People had barely recovered from the devastation of last year’s Cyclone Sidr when Cyclone Aila struck, affecting more than 4 million people.

In the remote coastal village of Hoglapasha, an old timber house with a palm leaf roof belonging to 80–year–old Nirod Chandra Roy was reduced to debris. Mr. Roy built a makeshift shelter with the bits and pieces of his old home that he found lying around. He survived in this shelter, without food or water, until relief workers finally were able to reach him.

"We were under chest–deep water for at least three days and hardly had any dry place for shelter. With surging tides and gusts, Aila swept away almost everything," Mr. Roy said, visibly shaken.

Young volunteers help families

Now, a UNICEF–supported program is giving cyclone–affected villagers hope and disseminating lifesaving information during a difficult time. Through the program, young people have been trained on how to help minimize the damage to life and property—as well as give moral support to community members—in pre– and post–disaster situations.

The volunteers work in conjunction with the Department of Public Health Engineering to reach out to cyclone–affected families. They teach villagers how to make sure their water is safe to drink and how to prepare oral saline solutions for treating dehydration.

The program is funded by the European Union and implemented by UNICEF in collaboration with a non–governmental organization, the Center for Mass Education and Science. Since May, the center has been training adolescents in disaster–prone communities to help their own families, as well as the families of their neighbors, during emergencies.

"They give us motivation to fight"

Young volunteers visited Mr. Roy in his shelter, bringing him UNICEF–supplied water purification tablets and jerry cans. They also provided support and hope for the future. "It is hard for families who've lost almost everything to survive and make a normal living," said one of the volunteers in Hoglapasha village, Monoj Mojumdar.

After leaving Mr. Roy's shelter, the volunteers visited a fisherman's family. They explained how several folds of used cotton cloth can help filter contaminated pond water before boiling.

The volunteers regularly visit about 50 families to make sure they are drinking safe water and maintaining proper hygiene and sanitation practices. "We are encouraged by seeing those young children," said villager Biba Rani. "They give us motivation to fight."

 

WHAT YOUR MONEY CAN BUY


$6 can provide three 10-liter collapsible water containers for transporting and storing water.

$60 can provide 20 sheets of tarpaulin, providing simple shelter or ground sheeting for several families.

$200 can provide one recreation kit for 90 children to enjoy physical activity and play in times of emergency or displacement—containing items such as frisbees, jump ropes, footballs, volleyballs, handballs, whistles, a chalkboard and chalk, etc.

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