DEC agencies aid over half a million people within 1 month of Nepal quake

DEC member agencies and their partners have reached over half a million people with aid since a deadly 7.8 magnitude quake rocked the country on 25 April 2015.

The DEC has also announced today that its Nepal Earthquake Appeal has now raise £65m since it opened to donations on 27 April and formally launched with appeals on all major UK television networks by Joanna Lumley on 28 April.

DEC member agencies are providing a wide range of emergency items and services, such as emergency shelter, food, blankets, clean water, sanitation supplies, water storage units, medical aid, baby kits and other essentials.  As quickly as possible, they will begin supporting the worst affected communities to begin rebuilding more permanent homes and restoring their livelihoods.

DEC Chief Executive Saleh Saeed said:

“I have been very moved by the extraordinary generosity of the UK public in response to the appalling devastation in Nepal.  Their kindness, combined with the courage and tenacity of the Nepali people, working with our member agencies and their partners, have helped provide aid to over half a million people in just one month. 

“This has been achieved even in many villages that were all but inaccessible even before the earthquake; despite Kathmandu’s small airport being completely overwhelmed; regardless of the severe damage to Nepal’s already inadequate road network; and in the face of extremely hazardous flying conditions for the limited number of available helicopters.

“There is no room for complacency.  The monsoon is coming. The need for emergency shelter and materials to help people begin rebuilding homes is incredibly urgent because conditions for homeless survivors will be soon be intolerable and the road will become even more treacherous.

“These huge challenges, and the need to support the Nepali people through the hard years it will take to rebuild their lives and livelihoods, are why the DEC Nepal Earthquake Appeal remains open and why we are relying on the continued support of the UK public.”

The 7.8 magnitude earthquake struck Nepal on Saturday 25 April 2015 (11:56am local time), with the epicentre some 50 miles northwest of Kathmandu in Gorkha district.  There have been hundreds of aftershocks but a second major quake of 7.3 magnitude struck on 12 May at 12:50pm local time. The epicentre was 47 miles northeast of Kathmandu in Sindhupalchok district - an area already badly affected by the earlier quake.

The death toll has increased to 8,631 people, including 154 people killed in the 12 May earthquake. So far a total of 494,777 houses have been reported destroyed and 267,373 damaged, which means that up to 3.8m people may need help with temporary shelter, repairs or rebuilding.

Around the world, a total of £106 million has been raised by the eight members of the Emergency Appeals Alliance (EEA) of which the DEC is a member.  To date, only 22% of the $US423m  identified by the UN Nepal Earthquake Flash Appeal has been given by governmental and other major donors. The UK Government has been the most generous international donor committing £33m, including £5m towards the DEC appeal through UK Aid Match.

The monsoon will begin in June and is at its most intense in July and August.  Survivors will have an increased need for shelter, an already weak and earthquake damaged road network will be further compromised, and flying conditions will become even worse.  This creates an urgent need to provide as many of the worst affected communities as possible with emergency shelter materials or, ideally, shelter kits to allow them to begin to repair or rebuild their homes.

Examples of help already provided by DEC member agencies, directly or through their partners, using DEC and other funds, include:

  • ActionAid has delivered over 372 tons of rice in Kavre, Kathmandu Valley, Rasuwa and Sindhupalchowk
  • Age International are advocating for older people and people with disabilities to be included in the overall humanitarian response through the UN coordination system
  • British Red Cross have provided tarpaulins for shelter for 270,000 people
  • CAFOD has delivered shelter kits and water and sanitation kits to 32,000 people in Gorkha
  • CARE has provided emergency shelter to 8,500 people in Ghorka and Dhading - focusing on the extremely remote areas where some villages have lost 90% of their houses
  • Christian Aid has provided support to 66,000 people with emergency shelter, 15 days’ food ration, and water and sanitation kits in Gorkha, Dhading, Sindhupalchowk, Kathmandu, Lailitpur, Bhaktapur and Rasuwa districts.
  • Concern has given 2,147 shelter and hygiene kits in Sindhulpalchowk and Dolakha districts
  • Islamic Relief has provided food to 5,100 people in Nuwakot and Sindhupal Chowk districts
  • Oxfam has given emergency shelter kits to 12,000 people in Gorkha, which include a tarpaulin, blankets, ground sheets, foam mats and solar lamps
  • Plan has distributed more than 16,000 tarpaulins and 5,635 food packages across Nepal, including in Sindhupalchowk and Dolakha
  • Save the Children has given out over 25,000 food items including flour and dry food, as well as delivering kitchenware, bottled water and jerry cans
  • Tearfund has provided food, tarpaulins and blankets in Dhading and Nuwakot to families whose homes have been destroyed
  • World Vision has distributed 2372 tarpaulins and 2372 blankets, and set up one child friendly space, all in Kathmandu.

The DEC does not routinely compare disasters or the appeals we run in response because we believe that for those affected their suffering is always incomparable and we are grateful for whatever the UK public are generous enough to give.  For anyone wishing to make comparisons the following figures for the largest five appeals in our 52 year history may be helpful.

Appeal

Year

After 1 Month

Final Total

Earthquake Tsunami

2004

Not Available

£392m

Haiti Earthquake

2010

£77m

£107m

Philippines Typhoon

2013

£73m

£97m

East Africa Crisis

2011

£50m

£79m

Pakistan Floods

2010

£45m (estimated)

£71m

To make a donation to the DEC Nepal Earthquake Appeal visit: http://www.dec.org.uk, call the 24 hour hotline on 0370 60 60 900, donate over the counter at any high street bank or post office, or send a cheque. You can also donate £5 by texting the word SUPPORT to 70000.

  • £25 can provide clean water for four families for one month
  • £50 can feed a family for two weeks
  • £100 can provide emergency shelter for five families

Notes to editors:

  • The fundraising total includes funds raised by the DEC secretariat and funds raised by member agencies as part of the appeal.  The DEC will regularly update the fundraising total on its website: http://www.dec.org.uk/appeal/nepal-earthquake-appeal
  • The DEC brings 13 leading UK aid charities together in times of crisis: ActionAid UK, Age International, British Red Cross, CAFOD, Care International, Christian Aid, Concern Worldwide, Islamic Relief, Oxfam, Plan UK, Save the Children, Tearfund and World Vision; all collectively raising money to reach those in need quickly.  All DEC agencies are supporting the appeal and responding in Nepal.
  • The EAA brings together organisations of various countries, which launch fundraising appeals following humanitarian disasters: AGIRE in Italy, Aktion Deutschland Hilft, Consortium 1212 in Belgium, Disaster Emergency Committee in the UK, The Humanitarian Coalition in Canada, Samenwerkende Hulporganisaties/Giro 555 in the Netherlands, Radiohjälpen in Sweden and Swiss Solidarity.
  • To make a postal donation make cheques payable to ‘DEC’ and mail to ‘PO Box 999, London, EC3A 3AA’.
  • Donations can be made at any high street bank and at post office counters. To donate £5 by text, send the word SUPPORT to 70000. The full £5 will go to the DEC Nepal Earthquake Appeal. Donors must be 16 years or over and have bill payers permission. Texts are free and donations will be added to the bill.
  • Aid delivered by DEC members and their partners has been paid for with DEC funds and money from other sources. Some people will have received different kinds of help from more than one DEC agency. For example it is likely that separate schemes - one providing shelter assistance and another providing food packages - will have reached some of the same people.