Nepal Earthquake

by Save the Children Federation
Nepal Earthquake
Nepal Earthquake
Nepal Earthquake
Nepal Earthquake

Project Report | May 7, 2015
320,000 Children Homeless in Nepal

By Gil Lima | Project Manager

Nepal Earthquake
Nepal Earthquake

One week after the deadly earthquake in Nepal, Save the Children warns that more than a third of a million children face months sleeping out in harsh conditions after their homes were destroyed.

In the most remote mountainous regions, only reachable currently by helicopter, children and babies are sleeping outdoors without any protection from the cold, nighttime temperatures and heavy rainfall.

In more accessible areas tarps, blankets and baby kits have been distributed in temporary displacement camps, but children remain vulnerable to disease from the cold and unsanitary conditions they are living in.

Kesang, a first-time mother speaking from a maternity ward, said she was terrified of taking her new born baby back to sleep outside. "We only have a plastic sheet to cover us and the ground easily becomes flooded – we have to stay standing all night. Disease spreads easily in these conditions, I'm really worried that my baby and I will get sick."

Parents sleeping outside are reporting fevers, outbreaks of diarrhea and the risk of pneumonia. There is also a serious risk from asbestos – many homes and offices in Nepal were built using asbestos and the earthquake has exposed it.

Delailah Borja, Save the Children's Country Director in Nepal, said: "A week on from the earthquake, the full scale of the devastation is just becoming clear. Many of these 320,000 children have lost everything – their homes, their warm clothes and tragically sometimes their families."

"The risk of disease outbreaks and exposure are very real, especially for young children. That is why we are moving fast to get hygiene kits, tarpaulins and warm children's sleeping bags out to everyone who needs it."

Save the Children has distributed much of its existing in-country emergency relief supplies, reaching thousands of people with shelter kits, baby clothes, cooking utensils and more. Three planes and several trucks have been loaded with more supplies in India, Dubai and Philippines and have begun to arrive in Nepal.

Save the Children is also now setting up child-friendly spaces for children to play and be safe in the displacement camps that have sprung up across the affected areas.

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Organization Information

Save the Children Federation

Location: Fairfield, CT - USA
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Project Leader:
Gil Lima
Fairfield , CT United States

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