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Red
Cross Red Crescent appeals for aid for Uzbekistan
21 august
2001
Protracted
water shortages in Uzbekistan exacerbated by two years of drought
has led to tens of thousands of people in Uzbekistan in need of
food aid, says the International Federation of the Red Cross and
Red Crescent Societies.
Launching an appeal for one million Swiss francs, the International
Federation will provide 20,000 people in the Autonomous Republic
of Karakalpakstan with food parcels over four months - a period
intended to get them through the winter. Those targeted are from
the districts or rayons of Chimbay and Kegeli in the north west
of Karakalpakstan, an area that has seen little intervention by
aid agencies and which has been among the worst affected by food
shortages.
The United Nations' World Food Programme (WFP) and the Food and
Agriculture Organisation (FAO) have estimated that cereal production
in Karakalpakstan dropped by 54 per cent alone last year. With 80
per cent of the population in the autonomous republic dependent
on agriculture for their living, the drop in production is a major
catastrophe.
"Previously farm workers were being paid in kind with grain,
but two years of acute water shortages have resulted in failed harvests.
It doesn't only mean no food for them now, but also no jobs. Nearly
half a million people in the Karakalpakstan are without a stable
income in their family," says Martina Schloffer, team leader
of a recent Red Cross Red Crescent assessment mission to Uzbekistan.
The water shortages also mean there is a critical lack of safe drinking
water in the country, both in terms of quantity and quality. Uzbekistan
has had water problems for many years with its two main rivers,
the Amu Darya and Syr Darya heavily exploited to irrigate its cotton
fields. This is also the main cause behind the severe depletion
of the Aral Sea, the world's third largest inland sea, which is
rapidly disappearing.
What water sources there are, are often contaminated. The impact
on the health of the population is clear - there is an obvious trend
in the rise of diarrhoeal diseases and acute respiratory illnesses,
especially among children. Meanwhile, anaemia and malnutrition are
weakening people's resistance to disease and illness.
The International Federation, with the Uzbekistan Red Crescent,
will implement a health and water sanitation programme targeted
to reach up to 150,000 people. Essential drugs will be provided
for 30 health posts provide safe water while a health promotion
and public awareness campaign on waterborne and communicable diseases
will be carried out.
For further information, or to set up interviews,
please contact:
Jemini Pandya, Information Officer
Tel.: +41 22 730 4570 / + 41 79 217 3374
Marie-Françoise Borel, Information Officer Tel.: +41 22 730
4346 / + 41 79 416 3881
The Geneva-based International Federation
promotes the humanitarian activities of 181 National Red Cross and
Red Crescent Societies among vulnerable people. By coordinating
international disaster relief and encouraging development support,
it seeks to prevent and alleviate human suffering. The Federation,
National Societies and the International Committee of the Red Cross
together, constitute the International Red Cross and Red Crescent
Movement.
© International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies
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