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Red Cross steps up aid efforts in Aceh
3 January 2005
by Ian Woolverton in Northern Sumatra
The International Federation response to the disaster on the Indonesian island of Sumatra is focusing for now around the town of Meulaboh, on the western coast of the province of Aceh. It is estimated that at least 40,000 people may have been killed there during last week's powerful tsunami.

According to the Red Cross, there is extensive damage in Meulaboh, extending up to three kilometres inland. Close to the shoreline there is total destruction. “There is considerable debris, massive destruction of buildings and roads,” said Red Cross Water and Sanitation engineer Sara Escudero who travelled to the disaster stricken town as part of a four member Field Assessment and Coordination Team (FACT).

“The huge force of the tsunami has swept many boats inland. There is a strong smell of putrefaction, and whilst body retrieval has commenced it can be assumed that there are still hundreds, possibly thousands, of bodies remaining underneath the debris,” she added.

Until now, access for humanitarian organisations to Northern Sumatra's west coast has been limited due to the lack of suitable aircraft able to fly into the affected area, damaged airstrips and roads, as well as the long distances involved.

However volunteers from the Indonesian Red Cross (PMI) have been working round the clock in Meulaboh since the tsunami struck and have mainly been involved in the evacuation of bodies and the provision of first aid. But the PMI team, which consists of some 50 volunteers, are exhausted as well as emotionally distressed by what they have witnessed.

The humanitarian needs in Meulaboh will be massive and in anticipating this, the Federation has begun to deploy specialised emergency response units including a basic health unit from the Japanese Red Cross to meet the needs of some 30,000 people, as well as a water and sanitation unit from the Spanish Red Cross, which can pump out clean water for more than 60,000 people a day.

A French Red Cross water and sanitation Emergency Response Unit (ERU) is also in northern Sumatra. Together the two specialised units have the capacity to provide clean potable drinking water to up to 100,000 people per day.

In addition, a German Red Cross emergency health care tea, supported by a German water and sanitation team, and a Danish Red Cross logistics unit are en route to Indonesia.

Meanwhile the Indonesian Red Cross is planning to send two five tonne trucks laden with relief items to the disaster stricken community. This is just the beginning of a huge relief operation being mounted by the Federation in the support of the Indonesian Red Cross to bring much needed humanitarian assistance to both the people of Meulaboh and the areas south of the town.

“While other agencies focus their considerable efforts on getting assistance to the people of Banda Aceh in the north, we have to assume that many thousands of vulnerable people are in desperate need of shelter, clean drinking water, food and medicines all over Aceh province,” said Juergen Weyand, head of the Federation’s field assessment team.

“It is essential that we get relief items to the west coast including Meulaboh where we know the needs are massive. We will use our foothold there to access other areas along the western seaboard and in doing so get humanitarian assistance to many thousands of vulnerable people,” he concluded.

Elsewhere, the International Committee of the Red Cross and Indonesian Red Cross are working together to concentrate their efforts on the humanitarian needs in the north of the island in and around Banda Aceh as well as the east coast.

The International Federation is working closely with the Indonesian Red Cross and the International Committee of the Red Cross. The Federation also maintains regular contact with the Indonesian authorities.

One of the most pressing concerns is ensuring a supply of clean water to the population to minimise the risk of waterborne diseases, and the Red Cross will soon be providing safe water to some 100,000 people left homeless by the catastrophe.

“We have an awful lot of bacteria in the water and the most common way of losing a lot of people, especially children and particularly very young children, is due to drinking contaminated water which causes diarrhoea and then dehydration, and in cases like this, death. So one of our priorities is to get clean water to as many as people as possible, as quickly as possible,” Weyand said.

The water and sanitation ERU from Spanish Red Cross, which consists of six specialists including a geologist, chemist and biologist whose role is to assist the team locate a body of water to purify and make safe to drink, believe they can make a huge difference in the tsunami affected region.

With the right water source, the Spanish Red Cross team are confident they can turn out some 300,000 litres of high quality water every day, suitable for a hospital or basic health care unit or alternatively pump out 500,000 litres per-day of potable water, enough to meet the needs of 60,000 people.

“The water source could be a lake, a river or a pool, it doesn't really matter. The water is then sucked into a big bladder tank, where it goes through a purification process, which takes just a few hours,” said 32-year-old Iñigo Vila, leader of the Spanish Red Cross team.

“We will then store the water and, with our colleagues from the Indonesian Red Cross, who have many hundreds of volunteers working in the region, we will distribute the water to the disaster affected communities,” he added.
A doctor treats a child in Aceh province, the region hardest hit by the tsunami on 26 December (REUTERS/Yusuf Ahmad/courtesy www.Alertnet.org)
RELATED LINKS
Tsunami appeal
Tsunami operation
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A village near the coast of Sumatra lies in ruins after being hit by the tsunami (REUTERS/Philip A. McDaniel/courtesy www.Alertnet.org)
Women carrying rice stand in a line for water distribution in Aceh (REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon/courtesy www.Alertnet.org)