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Haiti 3 months on: World Vision provides aid to around 1.8 million people

Published: 12 April 2010

  1. Following the 12 January earthquake, many Haitians are now living in camps using tarps provided by World Vision.
  2. Children smile as they peer out of a makeshift tent, provided by World Vision after a 7.0 magnitude quake hit the Haitian capital Port-au-Prince on 12 January 2010.
  3. Fabiola, aged 8, is glad that tarps provided by World Vision help keep out the rain. Her family’s home was damaged in the January 12 earthquake.
  4. Cooking kits provided by World Vision are distributed to earthquake survivors in Haiti, following the earthquake that struck the capital on 12 January 2010.
  5. Yulisa, aged 8, hides under a blanket, her attempt to escape from the blazing sun. There has been little protection from the sun and rain since her home was completely flattened in the worst earthquake to hit Haiti for 200 years.
  6. A food distribution point set up for earthquake survivors by World Vision following the 7.0 magnitude earthquake that struck Haiti on 12 January 2010.
  7. A boy receives a meal provided by World Vision, along with wheat, soy and oil at a World Vision distribution point in Port-au-Prince, Haiti.
  8. Rigest, aged 9, enjoys his meal of pasta, provided by World Vision in Port-au-Prince, Haiti.
  9. 4-year-old Schneily receives medical treatment after she was injured in the earthquake on 12 January 2010. World Vision has supplied the hospital with medical supplies, drinking water and logistical support.
  10. Children in the first of six Child Friendly Spaces, at Camp Accra where World Vision has donated tarps, blankets, cook kits, drinking water and food.

12 April 2010

Three months after the earthquake in Haiti, World Vision has provided aid to around 1.8 million people, bringing much-needed items to displaced families throughout the capital city.

“We see small successes every day,” said Liz Satow, deputy response manager for World Vision in Haiti. “Health clinics and mobile health teams are reaching thousands of people. Around 50,000 people in the camps we are working in are benefiting from our water and sanitation services. Our Child-Friendly Spaces are attracting around 3000 children a week.

Despite these great strides, many quake-affected families are still facing serious risks. The problems they face are complex and interlinked, threatening to create new patterns of vulnerability for Haiti’s poor.

“Because there is no work, there is no money for food. Because there is only limited water, and people are forced to crowd together in unsanitary conditions, the risk of illness is very high. With no food, no drinking water, and no jobs, challenges for families multiply,” explained Satow.

In particular, as the rainy season approaches, emergency shelter and access to healthcare are some of the most critical needs for the displaced. In addition, children continue to be extremely vulnerable, particularly at risk of illness and malnutrition.

World Vision will continue to work to provide emergency relief items like food, water, shelter supplies, blankets, and cooking and hygiene kits to the survivors in Port-au-Prince. Longer term projects include family tracing and reunification, strengthening of health services in both urban and rural areas, and an early childhood curriculum in camp Child Friendly Spaces.

January’s 7.0 magnitude earthquake killed more than 220,000, injured another 300,000 and left at least 1.7 million people displaced from their homes. World Vision’s relief and recovery program in Haiti is substantial and long-term, including projects in shelter and housing, sanitation and water, health, livelihoods and child protection. World Vision has been working in Haiti for over thirty years in relief, development and advocacy.

Fast facts on World Vision’s work in Haiti since the earthquake:

  • Food distribution: Over 1.5 million people
  • Shelter: 26,396 tarpaulins, 12,164 blankets and 13,259 mosquito nets
  • Water and sanitation services: Reach around 14,000 people each day
  • Health: 5 camp clinics and 3 mobile clinics provide free medical consultation
  • Livelihoods: Cash-for-work activities in camps
  • Child protection: Child-Friendly Spaces attended by 3,000 children each week
  • Reunification: Caseworkers are searching for families of nearly 300 separated children

You can read more about World Vision's response in Haiti or donate to the Haiti earthquake appeal here.

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