Church helping flood victims
in South Sudan
A girl walks in water, in the town of Pibor, Boma state |
The Church rushes to assist flood-struck people in South
Sudan after heavy rains affect East Africa.
By Francesca Merlo
Flooding in South Sudan and Somalia has forced almost
900,000 people to leave their homes in recent days. 600,000 of these are from
South Sudan where aid workers are working to provide humanitarian assistance to
those worst hit.
Sr Elena Balatti is a Comboni Missionary working in the
diocese of Malakal in South Sudan. She told Vatican Radio’s Marco Guerra that
the Church is trying to provide two main forms of support to the hard-hit
region.
Sr Elena says that there is much work being done to
“purchase and distribute” tents to the population, so that people “can be in
temporary shelters”, where their villages have been damaged.
Along with the tents there is a dire need for the
distribution of mosquito nets. Sr Elena explains that “with a lot of stagnant
water, mosquitos increase”, adding that some of these carry malaria. Therefore,
she says, “the distribution of mosquito nets is one of the first actions to be
done”.
Sr Elena explains that there will soon be a “food emergency,
because the crops have been flooded” and that they foresee a “need for
humanitarian help in terms of basic food items”.
Since July, destructive weather has affected numerous
countries in East Africa, where at least 30 million people were already in need
of humanitarian assistance.
Không có nhận xét nào:
Đăng nhận xét