2 million children still at risk of floods: UNICEF
The United Nations children's fund (UNICEF) said more than two million children are now at risk as ongoing floods in eastern Bangladesh inundate homes, schools and villages.
UNICEF Bangladesh gave this information in a press release on Friday (August 30).
In the notification, the organization says that 5.6 million people have been affected by this worst flood to hit the eastern part of Bangladesh in the last 34 years. UNICEF needs $35 million in support to provide life-saving equipment to the thousands of people and children trapped in water without food or emergency relief supplies.
According to the notification, UNICEF started working in the affected areas since the disaster started. UNICEF in collaboration with Hasan Arif, advisor of the Ministry of Local Government, Rural Development and Cooperatives, carried out the initial verification phase together with the partners, UNICEF has so far reached more than 338,000 people, including 130,000 children.
Among these people, they distributed life-saving supplies such as 3.6 million water purification tablets, 25,000 jerry-cans for water retention and more than 250,000 bags of oral rehydration salts.
It said that disaster-affected people and children urgently need cash assistance, safe drinking water, hygiene kits, emergency latrines, sanitary pads, oral rehydration salts (oral saline) and emergency life-saving medicines. Primary health care to treat sick newborns and children and essential services to enable expectant mothers to safely deliver their babies need to be put in place immediately.
Emma Brigham, Deputy Representative of UNICEF in Bangladesh, said that the floods in the eastern part of Bangladesh highlight the severity of the impact of extreme weather events and climate crisis on children. Many children have lost loved ones, lost their homes and schools; They are very helpless.
Comments