Emergencies – Oxfam Canada https://www.oxfam.ca Ending global poverty begins with women’s rights Fri, 05 Apr 2024 13:00:30 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.4.3 https://www.oxfam.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/11/cropped-oxfam_ico-32x32.png Emergencies – Oxfam Canada https://www.oxfam.ca 32 32 Gaza Humanitarian Emergency https://www.oxfam.ca/emergency/crisis-in-the-occupied-palestinian-territory-and-israel/ Thu, 12 Oct 2023 19:19:25 +0000 https://www.oxfam.ca/?post_type=emergency&p=42840

Emergency

Gaza Humanitarian Emergency

A humanitarian catastrophe is unfolding in Gaza. Oxfam teams are preparing for a humanitarian response to support the 2.2 million people under siege in Gaza.  

Background media: Palestinians inspect the damage following an Israeli airstrike on the Sousi mosque in Gaza City on October 9, 2023.
Photo: Majdi Fathi/NurPhoto/Shutterstock

A humanitarian catastrophe is unfolding in Gaza following the Israeli response to the appalling attacks by Hamas. Oxfam has been forced to halt all of its humanitarian and development work in Gaza as violence continues to rage across Gaza and Israel. 

We are preparing our response to support the 2.2 million people trapped in Gaza but can only do so when the air strikes and violence stops. All humanitarian operations are now effectively frozen and it is impossible for all agencies to restart them under the continued military escalation. 

The Situation

This page is being updated as the situation evolves. Last update: April 5, 2024

  • Israel and Hamas are involved in the worst outbreak of violence in decades.
  • On Saturday, 7 October 2023, Hamas and other Palestinian armed groups from Gaza launched a coordinated assault consisting of land and air attacks into multiple border areas of Israel.
  • Over 1,431 Israelis and other nationals were killed by Palestinian armed forces, including by rockets launched from the Gaza Strip and over 5,400 have been wounded. Around 242 Israelis were captured by armed groups and taken from Israel into the Gaza Strip, and 13 have been allegedly killed in Israeli airstrikes. 
  • On Monday, 8 October, the Israeli government announced a “total blockade” on Gaza, stopping all food, water, electricity and fuel from reaching the already vulnerable population.
  • The siege adds to the ongoing blockade of Gaza, which has endured for over 16 years and has devastated Gaza’s economy, leaving most people unable to leave Gaza and restricting access to essential services such as healthcare and education.
  • Over 32,000 Palestinians across the Gaza Strip have been killed. 70% of those killed are women and children. The daily death toll in Gaza is the highest of any conflict this century. 
  • It is estimated that over 75,000 Palestinians have been injured. Many more are missing.
  • There are 1.7 million displaced people across the Gaza Strip, equal to 75% of the population.

Humanitarian Needs and Impact:

  • Gaza has undergone more than three months of complete blockade, with only a trickle of aid being delivered. 
  • 2.3 million people need water, and essential health, water, and sanitation services are on the brink of collapse. The severely limited access to safe water is leading people to consume brackish water from agricultural wells, triggering severe concerns about the spread of waterborne diseases and cholera.
  • 1.8 million people find themselves food insecure, which is exacerbated by a severe shortage of electricity, fuel, and water in Gaza. 1.1 million people are projected to face catastrophic levels of food insecurity.
  • 24 hospitals are out of service, the healthcare system in Gaza has collapsed.
  • Women and girls face increased challenges in maintaining menstrual hygiene, privacy and safety, and the risk of gender-based violence is higher.
  • Hundreds of newly widowed women and orphaned young girls lack protection and are more at risk of violence, food insecurity, and homelessness.
  • There are critical gaps to health services that affect women and adolescent girls including comprehensive emergency obstetric care, newborn care, SRHR services.

Oxfam Response

The ongoing conflict is making delivery of humanitarian assistance nearly impossible. The total siege and limited access to Gaza means very little food, medical aid, water, fuel, and other essentials are available. Despite these challenges, Oxfam's partners are assisting people in Southern Gaza with resources from Oxfam. So far we have reached 260,000 people since early October with humanitarian assistance.

Support the people of Gaza. Give what you can now so we can provide aid as soon as we are able to do so. Photo: CHINE NOUVELLE/SIPA/Shutterstock

What is Oxfam Doing?

Oxfam has been forced to halt all of its humanitarian and development work in Gaza with its local partners as violence continues to rage across Gaza and Israel. Oxfam is preparing to respond, in support of the 2.2m people trapped in Gaza, as soon as conditions allow. 

When we can operate, our response will include providing people with clean water, sanitation and hygiene items, food and other essential household items. We will also rebuild water and wastewater networks that have been destroyed. 

Oxfam has been working in the Occupied Palestinian Territory and Israel since the 1950s and established a country office in the 1980s.  

Your generous donation to Oxfam will help us to deliver emergency food, clean water and sanitation services.

Background media: A Minnie Mouse doll amongst the rubble of bombarded buildings.
Photo: Marwan Sawwaf/Alef MultiMedia/Oxfam
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Earthquake in Türkiye and Syria https://www.oxfam.ca/emergency/earthquake-in-turkey-and-syria/ Mon, 06 Feb 2023 17:20:02 +0000 https://www.oxfam.ca/?post_type=emergency&p=42063

Emergency

Earthquake in Türkiye and Syria

On February 6, 2023, two powerful earthquakes and hundreds of aftershocks rocked southeastern Türkiye and northern Syria. Thousands of people lost their lives, and millions lost their homes.

The Situation

On Monday, February 6, 2023, two powerful earthquakes and hundreds of aftershocks rocked southeastern Türkiye (Turkey) and northern Syria. Across the two countries, nearly 56,000 people were killed, and more than 10 million were left in urgent need of help.

In Türkiye, the earthquakes killed at least 50,000 people and injured more than 100,000 people. Nearly 300,000 buildings were damaged or destroyed, 3 million people had to leave their homes, and 9.1 million were directly affected. Many people had a very difficult time after the disaster and could not return to their homes for fear that their buildings would collapse. Those who couldn’t leave had little access to clean running water or toilets. Basic education and health services were decimated. Women, children, the elderly, and people with other vulnerabilities were left without services, especially in terms of protection and health.

In Syria, the quake caused one of the biggest natural disasters to impact Syrian families in recent times. The shock of the earthquake piled on top of 12 years of conflict marked by crumbling infrastructure, financial collapse, coronavirus, soaring food prices, and a recent cholera outbreak, and forced more and more people deeper into poverty.

Meryem Aslan, Oxfam spokesperson in Ankara, said: "Even as Turkiye has a lot of expertise in dealing with the aftermath of earthquakes, the scale of this one is daunting," she explains. The number of survivors who may be left now with absolutely nothing is likely to be huge."

Civil defence workers and residents search through the rubble of collapsed buildings in the town of Harem near the Turkish border, Idlib province, Syria. Photo: Ghaith Alsayed/AP/Shutterstock

What is Oxfam Doing?

Over the past year since the earthquakes, Oxfam has supported over 2 million people in collective centers and communities across Türkiye and Syria, with water, sanitation, hygiene, food and livelihood support, and gender and protection services. We are grateful to our supporters and institutional donors for helping us to make a difference in the lives of the people we serve.

Emergency Response

As Oxfam had teams on the ground in both Syria and Türkiye, we were able to send rapid assessment teams into the worst affected areas within hours to assess the damage, impact, and people’s needs. The data gathered was immensely helpful in informing our planning. Our immediate focus overall was to provide emergency aid to the earthquake survivors. However, we tailored our approach to the different contexts in each country.

Syria: When the earthquake struck, Oxfam teams had been managing large humanitarian programs to address the needs of people suffering from more than a decade of conflict. We scaled up and adjusted those programs to cover the urgent needs of those affected by the quake.

Türkiye: Government agencies and local civil society have extensive humanitarian capacity from years of providing relief to refugee communities. Building on our 37 years of experience supporting women-led development and networks in Türkiye, we decided to supplement and enhance the larger response and invest in women-led local recovery and development in Türkiye. Through the 1999 Marmara earthquake response, we’ve learned that no response can be successful without tackling existing social and economic inequalities in the long run. We decided to concentrate on the harshly hit towns and villages near the fault line while also dedicating attention to underserved communities.

One Year On

A year after the earthquake, people are still suffering. At Oxfam, we have shifted from providing life-saving aid to a longer-term recovery plan that seeks to improve and restore lives in the communities affected by the disaster. While the first stage of the response is now largely over, the work to rebuild lives and livelihoods has merely begun.

  • Our team in Syria continues to support people with the assistance they need to survive these difficult times and restore their dignity after a year of hardship and trauma, on top of the ongoing conflict that has destroyed much of the infrastructure in their country.
  • In Türkiye, we are establishing dialogue and negotiation channels with government agencies and humanitarian actors to help women and their communities influence decision-making and advance localization of the aid agenda over the long term.
  • We are supporting survivors and refugees to have a voice in the reconstruction of their cities as safe and resilient communities – investing in particular in women’s capacities to access and control resources.
  • In Türkiye, we’ve now mapped water needs of approximately 20 villages in Adiyaman, and we are developing plans to service these villages in 2024.
  • We will continue to provide cash and material support to women cooperatives, entrepreneurs, and women engaged in agriculture and livestock farming in Türkiye’s rural areas.
  • We continue to work on the distribution of winter clothes, with 3,433 winter clothes kits scheduled to be distributed in 2024 in Gaziantep and Hatay, targeting 15,000 individuals.
  • The Women’s Coalition in Türkiye, of which Oxfam KEDV is a member, will distribute 3,000 hygiene kits on Oxfam’s behalf in Adıyaman in 2024.

Read our full report here

Support the people of Türkiye and Syria. Give what you can now so we can provide aid where it's needed most.

Background media: A security officer walking among collapsed buildings and rubble.
Photo: Ahmet Yukus/Depo Photos via ZUMA Press Wire/Shutterstock
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Crisis in Lebanon https://www.oxfam.ca/emergency/crisis-in-lebanon/ Fri, 07 Aug 2020 18:57:44 +0000 https://www.oxfam.ca/?post_type=emergency&p=36131

Emergency

Crisis in Lebanon

On August 4, 2020, more than 2,750 tonnes of ammonium nitrate exploded in Beirut's port, killing at least 180 people and making 300,000 homeless. The government match for this emergency ended on August 24, but you can still give to our Emergency Response Fund.

The Situation

On Tuesday, August 4, more than 2,750 tonnes of ammonium nitrate held in a warehouse in Beirut’s port exploded, killing more than 200 people and making 300,000 people homeless.

  • More than 7,000 people were injured in the blast.
  • Damage has been extensive to buildings, businesses, four key hospitals, people’s homes and apartments, and to essential public services and food storage facilities.
  • Protests have since broken out in Beirut demanding political reforms, which authorities have responded to with force.
  • Lebanon has been teetering on the edge of financial collapse, with mounting debt in addition to being hard hit by COVID-19.
  • Lebanon hosts the largest number of refugees per capita in the world: 1 out of every 4 people.

Oxfam is extremely concerned about the ability of communities in Beirut, and the rest of Lebanon, to recover from the latest crisis. Even before the blast, Lebanon was at breaking point, with people struggling to cope with multiple, complex crises as they near economic collapse and deal with a global pandemic.

The day after the Beirut blast, Lebanon recorded its highest day of COVID-19 infections since February and things are getting worse. Beirut’s hospitals are overwhelmed with COVID patients and survivors from the blast. Social distancing and lockdown restrictions have crumbled while people have sought to clean up and rebuild their lives in Beirut.

There can be no return to “business as usual” for Lebanon after this tragedy. The government has asked the IMF for a $10 billion bail-out package. The scale and magnitude of the disaster means hundreds of thousands of people needed immediate aid including food, shelter, water, fuel, protection, as well as support to rebuild their lives and livelihoods well into the future.

This is a country facing crisis upon crisis, and the people of Lebanon needed our help to prevent a catastrophic level of suffering.

French firefighters and a rescue dog search in the rubble after the August 4 explosion at the seaport of Beirut, in Lebanon. Credit: Hassan Ammar/AP & Shutterstock.

What Is Oxfam Doing?

As a member of the Humanitarian Coalition, Oxfam was part of a joint fundraising appeal with 11 other trusted Canadian aid agencies. We worked with local partners to assess how to help those who lost their homes in the Beirut explosion.

A disaster of this scale and magnitude meant hundreds of thousands of people needed immediate aid including food, shelter, water, fuel, protection, as well as support to rebuild their lives and livelihoods well into the future.

Oxfam undertook a rapid assessment to understand the extent of needs and how to best support our partners.

Your generous donations to Oxfam helped us to deliver the aid that was so desperately needed. Thanks to our donors, the Humanitarian Coalition and a matching fund from the Government of Canada, together we raised $19 million dollars to support people during the Lebanon crisis.

Through local partners, we provided:

  • Financial assistance
  • Emergency housing
  • Clean water, safe sanitation facilities and essential hygiene items

Oxfam has been working in Lebanon since 1993, providing humanitarian assistance to vulnerable people affected by conflict, and promoting women's rights, economic development and good governance at a local and national level through work with local partners. Oxfam also works with partners to contribute to the protection and empowerment of marginalized women and men.

In response to the Syria crisis, Oxfam has been providing water and sanitation, and emergency cash assistance for refugees and Lebanese people living in poverty, helping refugees with legal protection issues, and supporting small businesses and private-sector job creation. Oxfam is currently working in North Lebanon, the Bekaa Valley, South Lebanon, and in Palestinian camps and gatherings.

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COVID-19 Crisis https://www.oxfam.ca/emergency/covid-19-crisis/ Mon, 06 Apr 2020 21:55:54 +0000 https://www.oxfam.ca/?post_type=emergency&p=35719

Emergency

COVID-19 Crisis

There is an urgent need for clean water, soap, medical supplies, cash grants and accurate health information to limit the spread of COVID-19.

The Situation

Some of the most vulnerable communities around the globe are facing unprecedented COVID-19 case numbers while they continue to wait for first doses of vaccines that may take another year or more to arrive. Each new wave of the virus poses further challenges and threats to people already facing other crises.

The devastation is especially high in refugee camps or countries that are already experiencing conflict or crisis, where people struggle to access clean water, nutritious food, health care, safe shelter and other basics that offer protection from COVID-19. The impact has been highest in crowded camps, urban areas and in settings where women are already fighting for their rights.

Women are the most deeply affected in this crisis. They make up 70 per cent of health care workers worldwide and are at the frontlines of this pandemic, which puts them at high risk of infection. Women also hold an unequal share of care responsibilities around the world, and the work of caring for elders and children has increased dramatically in this crisis.

Help us slow the spread of COVID-19 in vulnerable countries around the world to prevent further loss of life.

Hasna Tuwa fixes the tarp of the mobile live public announcement platform known as the rekorida before roaming around Datu Abdullah Sangki, Maguindanao, Philippines. Credit: Princess Taroza/Oxfam.

What Is Oxfam Doing?

Oxfam is continuing to work non-stop with local partners to protect people and save lives.

Your support will help us to:

  • Distribute multi-purpose cash grants in Bangladesh so people can meet their immediate survival needs of food, water, medicine and temporary shelter items
  • Distribute hygiene kits in Nepal containing soap, detergent, masks, hand sanitizer and sanitary pads
  • Work with our network in Indonesia to advocate for vaccine distribution, production and easier access for communities
  • Offer psychological support in the Philippines for those coping with the uncertainty of the displacement period and quarantine restrictions
  • Raise awareness about the spread of COVID-19 and the work being undertaken by Oxfam and its partners at tea stalls and mosques in Cox’s Bazar, Bangladesh

Oxfam’s expertise in fighting diseases like this, as we have done with Cholera, Ebola and Zika outbreaks, has put us in a strong position to save lives and slow the spread of COVID-19 in each wave of this pandemic. Around the world, our local teams and partners are helping to protect people now and save lives in the future.

 

This is what Oxfam is doing in other countries around the world right now:

  • In Myanmar, we have increased our health promotion work around hand and respiratory hygiene in the camps where we work. Our team in Myanmar is working closely with local partners to scale up our humanitarian assistance in more than 100 displacement camps, distributing soap, building more than 1000 handwashing stations (to date), distributing 17,000 additional bars of soap per month, increased hygiene materials and delivering health education and training in camps for people displaced by long-standing conflict.
  • In the Zaatari refugee camp in Jordan, which is now in complete lockdown, we are using social networks and WhatsApp to spread messages promoting good hygiene practices. We are reaching more than 2,000 children with awareness sessions on proper handwashing techniques
  • In Syria, which is now in the 11th year since the outbreak of conflict, people are facing the grim reality of COVID-19. In response, Oxfam is seeking approvals for a mass-media campaign and scaling up delivery of clean water in the most at-risk communities. The first phase of our plan aims to reach more than 100,000 people directly.
  • In Pakistan, we have installed water tanks in a large centre where people are quarantined to allow them access to clean water. And in Iraq, we are advance-shipping hygiene and infection control materials, in addition to delivering public health awareness campaigns.
  • In Yemen, families and communities have endured more than five years of conflict, which has left the health system in ruins, and has pushed vital resources like clean water, safe shelter and proper nutrition out of reach for many. Oxfam's Yemen country team is preparing a public health promotion campaign on COVID-19 prevention, including training for community health volunteers to engage in community awareness campaigns, and support to health facilities with hygiene care materials.
  • In Afghanistan, we are incorporating COVID-19 awareness-raising messages into our ongoing humanitarian response, which includes distributing food and cash to families, and supplies to support farmers.
  • In Mozambique, where families are still recovering from Cyclone Idai, which made landfall just over a year ago, Oxfam and partners are working to combat misinformation about COVID-19 and to raise awareness of prevention and treatment with the help of community volunteers.
  • An outbreak in Gaza would have tremendous consequences, as the health system was already collapsing prior to COVID-19 and more than half of the population is living under the poverty line. Oxfam is providing 100 beds and hygiene kits to quarantine centres in Gaza, as well as hygienic protective clothing, handwashing facilities and sterilization materials for 750 medical staff working in 15 non-governmental medical centres. We also are working with the World Health Organization and UNICEF to support a public-health campaign across the Occupied Palestine Territory.
  • Increasing the distribution of soap and strengthening sanitation services, including facilities for washing hands, as well as access to drinking water, especially for people living in overcrowded refugee camps and urban areas.
  • Helping people minimize the risk of infection by providing accurate information and advice in local languages in the poorest countries around the world.

Everywhere, women are more vulnerable to getting sick due to added family care responsibilities, and those who are already experiencing domestic violence are likely to be confined to households where they are in constant danger. In our experience, women and marginalized groups are usually also excluded from decision-making spaces for the design and implementation of policies that directly affect them, and the response to this pandemic may not be any different.

We are working with partners in Canada and around the world to push for inclusion of women’s voices at key decision-making tables.

Help vulnerable families in the fight against COVID-19 today. Donate now to support Oxfam's pandemic response. Together we have already helped 14.3 million people in 68 countries.
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Crisis in the Amazon https://www.oxfam.ca/emergency/crisis-in-the-amazon/ Fri, 30 Aug 2019 18:41:23 +0000 https://www.oxfam.ca/?post_type=emergency&p=34799

Emergency

Crisis in the Amazon

Right now, the Amazon rainforest is burning at an alarming rate. We must work together to stop this human-made disaster that will have far-reaching, global effects.

The Situation

An unprecedented number of fires are burning in the Amazon Rainforest, which stretches over Bolivia, Brazil and Peru. It is believed that these fires are being deliberately set to clear land for agricultural use, leading to the devastating destruction of the Amazon.

This situation is being called the world's most urgent environmental crisis. As of August 24, about 15 per cent of the Amazon has burned in the fires, which will have a lasting global impact on our environment. Experts indicate that the effects of climate change are likely to accelerate now that hectare after hectare of precious, oxygen-producing rainforest has gone up in smoke.

This is a crisis we cannot ignore. The Amazon produces a significant portion of our global oxygen, and we must respond swiftly and effectively to protect both local and global populations.

What is Oxfam Doing?

Oxfam has a presence in the hardest-hit area of Bolivia through CIPCA and Colectivo Rebeldía, meeting the urgent needs of those who were forced to flee their homes due to the fires.

To date, approximately 2,000 families are affected in 9 municipalities across Bolivia.

Your generous donation to Oxfam will help us to deliver clean, safe water, emergency food, hygiene support and livelihood programs to those affected by the fires.

In all, approximately 2,000 families are affected in 9 municipalities across Bolivia.

Oxfam has coordinated with other actors in the region, and we are focusing on the following:

  • Potable water storage and distribution for up to 1,000 families in the short-term
  • Emergency food distribution
  • Clean water, safe sanitation facilities, promoting good hygiene practices through participatory activities and providing essential hygiene items
  • Supporting the most vulnerable people to produce food for themselves and develop livelihoods to support their basic needs
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Cyclone Idai https://www.oxfam.ca/emergency/cyclone-idai/ Wed, 20 Mar 2019 16:57:18 +0000 https://www.oxfam.ca/?post_type=emergency&p=34105

Emergency

Cyclone Idai

Oxfam was on the ground, providing life-saving assistance to survivors and helping them rebuild in the aftermath of Cyclone Idai and Cyclone Kenneth.

The Situation

Oxfam responded with clean water, sanitation services and other life-saving aid in the aftermath of two deadly Cyclones.

Cyclone Idai tore through southern Africa and devastated Malawi, Mozambique and Zimbabwe on March 14 & 15, 2019. Just weeks after, a second devastating cyclone hit on April 25 putting more lives at risk from catastrophic flooding. 

More than a thousand people were feared to be dead, thousands more missing, and up to 2.6 million people were affected and in desperate need of humanitarian aid.

Massive flood waters destroyed homes, hospitals, schools, farms and agricultural land, damaging roads and washing away bridges. Thousands of people were isolated in difficult-to-reach areas, some only accessible by helicopter or boat. Hundreds of thousands of people were displaced following the cyclones. They have gathered in transit camps, with little or no access to clean drinking water or sanitation services, heightening the risk of water-borne diseases. The threat of a cholera epidemic was high.

Credit: Micas Mondlane/Oxfam

What Oxfam Is Doing

Despite huge access and logistical challenges, Oxfam teams worked around the clock to assess the needs and deliver aid to those worst affected. In coordination with local partners, we planned to reach up to 775,000 people across the three countries with clean water, sanitation services, food and emergency shelters.

Our response was focused on the unique needs of women (75,000 of whom were pregnant), providing water and sanitation, and stopping the spread of deadly diseases such as cholera and malaria. Activities included:

  • water trucking to households without clean and safe water plus using mobile water treatment plants to provide clean water and emergency toilets on a huge scale.
  • providing temporary latrines with hand washing facilities
  • distributing family kits, each includes 2 blankets, a 10 litre bucket, 2 mosquito nets, 1 jerry can, 8 spoons and 2 cloth wrappers and water purification tablets.
  • distributing buckets, water bladders and hygiene kits that contain soaps, jerry cans and menstrual hygiene items
  • training up volunteers to increase hygiene awareness and deliver key messaging to communities
  • Distributing cash grants so people could buy the food they need and begin re-establishing their lives.
  • Participating in programs to restore basic social services, including access to healthcare, education and long-term water resources
  • Prioritizing safety in our interventions to allow women the opportunity for meaningful participation in decision-making processes, such as the location of bathing facilities and latrines, approaches to lighting and the upkeep of hygiene facilities.

Disasters don’t affect everyone equally. Often it is the poorest and most vulnerable people who get left behind and suffer the most. In cities like Beira, Mozambique, the poorest people live in flimsy tin shacks and in areas more susceptible to floods; richer people have houses with concrete walls, stronger roofs and on higher ground. Poverty intersects with race, gender and with ethnicity to create greater vulnerability.

Oxfam worked to ensure that inequality wasn’t exacerbated because of this disaster. We worked with other agencies to assess, prioritize and access people who are poorest and most vulnerable in our responses, specifically women. And we’ll continue to lobby governments, not only for more aid and resources, but also for good public policies like universal social protection and universal health coverage to help countries and communities build back stronger.

Your generous donation to Oxfam will help us to deliver emergency food, clean water and sanitation services.

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Crisis in Cuba https://www.oxfam.ca/emergency/crisis-in-cuba/ Fri, 01 Feb 2019 22:32:44 +0000 https://www.oxfam.ca/?post_type=emergency&p=33723

Emergency

Crisis in Cuba

Oxfam Canada is collecting donations to support the Emergency Response in Cuba after a level EF4 tornado devastated the La Habana region on Jan. 27.

The Situation

Oxfam is well placed to mobilize quickly in the aftermath of the tornado, which hit the region of La Habana.

On the night of Sunday January 27th, a powerful storm and tornado hit the Cuban capital region of La Habana. The government activated an early alert for strong winds. However, the storm far exceeded forecasts.

Preliminary classifications indicate that a level EF4 tornado also touched down. Winds reached 322 km/h leaving 4 people dead and 195 injured. The storm also damaged and destroyed 11 health centres and hospitals as well as 13 educational institutions. It is estimated that more than 500 000 people were affected.

In the immediate aftermath, the Cuban President and other authorities visited the affected areas. Response mechanisms were activated early Monday morning. Oxfam has been in close communication with the Ministry of External Commerce, Investment and Cooperation (MINCEX) and with the Cuban Civil Defense, who are leading and coordinating the response as well as assessing the damage and needs of the impacted population.

Rescue efforts are underway in the most severely impacted areas of La Habana, Mayabeque and Artemisa. Greatest needs include shelter and roofing materials to repair damaged infrastructure, as well as water and sanitation items, to replace those lost or damaged by the storm.

Oxfam Canada is collecting donations to support the Emergency Response in Cuba – click the button below to make your gift through our Emergency Response Fund.

The aftermath of a level EF4 tornado, which touched down in the La Habana region on January 27.

Oxfam in Cuba

Oxfam has been working in Cuba since 1993, supporting local partners in the promotion of equitable and sustainable development. We stand alongside local governments, governmental and non-governmental organizations, academic institutions and communities and aim to strengthen and support sustainable development grounded in gender equality. We support civil participation, local development, food security, gender equality and women's rights, disaster risk reduction and emergency response.

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Indonesia Earthquake and Tsunami https://www.oxfam.ca/emergency/indonesia-earthquake-and-tsunami/ Mon, 31 Dec 2018 17:45:50 +0000 https://oxfamcanprod.wpengine.com/?post_type=emergency&p=33153

Emergency

Indonesia Earthquake and Tsunami

Oxfam is well placed to be able to mobilize quickly in the aftermath of the second tsunami in the region in the past three months.

The Situation

The Latest: Oxfam is well placed to be able to mobilise quickly in the aftermath of the second tsunami in the region in the past three months.

On Friday 28 September, a powerful 7.4 magnitude earthquake triggered a devastating tsunami on the Indonesian island of Sulawesi. Oxfam has been responding with clean water, food and emergency shelter to survivors in the worst hit areas.

Thousands of people were forced to flee their homes and the widespread destruction made access to affected areas difficult, but we are on the ground delivering life-saving supplies. We've already delivered hygiene kits to nearly 5,000 people. We're building toilets, treating and distributing water, and providing shelters.

Ida (46) poses with a bucket of clean water from an Oxfam installed water filter near the earthquake-damaged city of Palu. Photo Credit: Hariandi Hafid/OxfamAUS.

Your generous donation to Oxfam will help us to deliver emergency food, clean water and sanitation services.

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Crisis in Yemen https://www.oxfam.ca/emergency/crisis-in-yemen/ Fri, 02 Nov 2018 13:58:35 +0000 https://oxfamcanprod.wpengine.com/?post_type=emergency&p=32346

Emergency

Crisis in Yemen

Yemen, the poorest country in the Middle East, is in the midst of a massive humanitarian crisis that only continues to deteriorate. As many as 22 million people are in need of humanitarian assistance, and 17 million people are now considered food insecure.

The Situation

The humanitarian situation in Yemen continues to deteriorate with fuel shortages, rising food prices and a severe lack of basic services- making daily survival a painful struggle for millions. The conflict between a Saudi-led coalition of Gulf countries and the Government of Yemen against the Ansar-Allah movement (also known as the Houthis), escalated in March 2015, causing more than 54,000 deaths and injuries.

Over three million people have been forced to flee their homes due to the bombing and fighting. Nearly 22 million people – 75 per cent of Yemen's population – need emergency aid. 

Yemen is facing the world’s worst ever recorded cholera outbreak, which has spread to nearly every corner of the war-ravaged country. More than 1 million cases have been reported and over 2,200 people have died since the start of the epidemic. Many more are now at risk, already weakened by hunger and the effects of the ongoing war.

Farah (name changed), 8,  is collecting water from the water distributions point at the camp. Al-Manjorah IDPs camp – Bani Hassan District – Hajjah. Credit: Moayed Al.Shaibani/Oxfam

What is Oxfam Doing?

We are delivering essential aid in the north and south of the country and have reached 3 million people across the frontlines, since July 2015. In response to the cholera outbreak, we have directly supported more than 430,000 people from four governorates in coordination with other international agencies.

Help has included:

  • Cash payments to more than 270,000 people to help families displaced by the conflict to buy food.
  • Clean water and sanitation services for more than one million people, including in hard-to-reach areas of the country, through providing water by truck, repairing water systems, delivering filters and jerry cans, as well as building latrines.
  • Conducting public health campaigns to raise awareness about the measures individuals can take at the household level to prevent and treat cholera.

Oxfam in Yemen

Oxfam has been in Yemen for more than 30 years, working with government authorities, as well as civil society organizations, to improve water and sanitation services, and livelihoods of thousands of people living in poverty.

  • Since 2012, Oxfam has rehabilitated water systems in 41 rural communities in western Yemen, providing more than 125,000 vulnerable people with safe drinking water.
  • Oxfam responded to the 2014 fuel crisis with the distribution of water filters to 3,300 vulnerable households and a cash transfer to an additional 1,000 households in western Yemen.
  • In the north in Sa'ada governorate, where years of conflict have destroyed infrastructure and created significant access constraints, Oxfam is working on repairing and installing water sources, and has reached 58,000 people. We have also delivered vital water and sanitation services to communities in Aden and Abyan in the south.
  • Together with partners, Oxfam works to empower women economically, socially, and politically to have a say in decision making at all levels.
  • Planning for the longer term, Oxfam is piloting three solar pump drinking water systems, reaching more than 20,000 people in three communities.

Your donation today will help provide timely, appropriate humanitarian responses where the need is greatest.

Your donation today will help provide timely, appropriate humanitarian responses where the need is greatest.

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Crisis in South Sudan https://www.oxfam.ca/emergency/crisis-in-south-sudan-2/ Fri, 20 Jul 2018 22:18:55 +0000 https://oxfamcanprod.wpengine.com/?post_type=emergency&p=30979

Emergency

Crisis in South Sudan

Nearly 7.6 million people remain in urgent need in South Sudan following the conflict that broke out in December 2013. Over 4 million people have fled their homes and sought refuge within neighboring countries.

The Situation

Since fighting between government troops and rebel forces erupted in 2013:

  • Nearly 7.6 million people are in urgent need in South Sudan
  • 4 million people have fled their homes and sought refuge within South Sudan or in neighboring countries. The majority of displaced people are women and children.
  • More than 4,000 people PER DAY have fled to neighboring countries, many of whom had to cross the Nile River on their way to Uganda, leaving everything they had behind and risking their lives.
  • 4.5 million people in South Sudan are severely food insecure
  • There are more than 2.4 million South Sudanese refugees in Uganda, Kenya and Ethiopia.

Aid in South Sudan is making a difference. But the threat of serious hunger remains, as an end to the conflict is nowhere in sight.

This is a crisis we cannot ignore. Worsening hunger and the spread of famine are imminent, but not yet inevitable. We can still stop the spread of famine and prevent a catastrophic loss of life if we act now. 

Malakal IDP camp, South Sudan. Barbed wire is placed by the UN to prevent people from settling on unsuitable or prohibited areas. Fighting has forced more than a million people from their homes, and up to 50,000 children are at risk of dying from malnutrition if they don't receive adequate humanitarian aid. Credit: Simon Rawles/Oxfam

What is Oxfam Doing?

Oxfam is meeting the urgent needs of the most vulnerable people affected by disaster and conflict, as well as helping them to build for the future, and addressing the root causes of poverty. In 2016 we reached over 600,000 with emergency and longer-term support.

Oxfam has seven humanitarian bases across the country and our roving Emergency Preparedness & Response team is assisting in locations where the need is greatest.

Your generous donation to Oxfam will help us to deliver emergency food, clean water and sanitation services.

Our activities include:

  • Providing emergency food distributions.
  • Supporting the most vulnerable people to produce food for themselves and develop livelihoods to support their basic needs.
  • Providing clean water, safe sanitation facilities, promoting good hygiene practices through participatory activities and providing essential hygiene items.
  • Helping poor and marginalised citizens to claim their rights.
  • Helping people flee violence in search of safety.

We're helping communities recover from one of the world’s longest and bloodiest conflicts, including over 150,000 South Sudanese refugees in Ethiopia and Uganda.

  • In the Upper Nile region, Oxfam focuses on providing clean water, sanitation, public health promotion, and livelihood support including to Returnees in Renk and Malakal.
  • In Lakes we focus on livelihoods work, supporting small-scale agriculture, microfinance and animal health, and we have a peacebuilding program to promote reconciliation and understanding between different communities.
  • In Wau and Warrap states, Oxfam is supporting returnees, displaced people and local communities in order to promote peaceful coexistence, provide water and sanitation activities, increase food security/livelihoods, and improve the local education system.

Your generous donation to Oxfam will help us to deliver emergency food, clean water and sanitation services.

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Syria Refugee Crisis https://www.oxfam.ca/emergency/syria-refugee-crisis/ Sun, 08 Jul 2018 21:45:30 +0000 https://oxfamcanprod.wpengine.com/?post_type=emergency&p=32427

Oxfam is responding to the powerful earthquakes that rocked northern Syria and southeastern Türkiye on February 6, 2023. The death toll has already reached 35,000 people and is growing. Learn about the current situation and find out how you can help.

Emergency

Syria Refugee Crisis

The human suffering caused by the civil war in Syria is overwhelming. We are helping those affected by the crisis, across Syria, Lebanon, and Jordan and in Greece, Serbia and Macedonia.

The Situation

Approximately 13.5 million people are in urgent need in Syria. Women and children have been particularly affected by the violence. Oxfam has reached over 2 million people impacted by the Syria crisis, across Syria, Lebanon and Jordan.  With your support we can reach more.

  • More than 13.5 million people are in urgent need of humanitarian assistance such as water, food, and shelter.
  • More than 400,000 people have lost their lives as a result of the Syrian conflict.
  • Over half the country's population has fled: 5 million people have sought refuge in the region and beyond, and 6.3 million Syrians are internally displaced
  • 7 million people are unable to obtain basic food required to meet their needs; and a further 2 million lack enough to eat
  • Almost 60 per cent of the population requires health assistance, and more than half of public health care facilities are either closed or partially operational
  • 4.9 million Syrians are trapped in besieged or hard-to-reach areas where it is either impossible or extremely difficult to provide humanitarian aid
  • Women have been particularly affected by the violence in Syria and when they flee to neighbouring countries. Forced and child marriage, rape, and sexual harassment are common occurrences. Women and girls rarely report such incidents and so they occur with impunity.
  • The steady arrival of families displaced by the conflict in neighboring countries is putting extreme pressure on local infrastructure and economies.

Oxfam is providing aid and long-term support to hundreds of thousands of people affected by the crisis.

Oxfam Delivery to Syria

Thanks to everyone who has donated so far to help us provide these desperately needed supplies and equipment.

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What is Oxfam Doing?

Oxfam has reached over 2 million people affected by the Syria crisis - refugees in Lebanon and Jordan, as well as communities inside Syria.

Oxfam’s operations inside Syria focus on the provision of clean water to conflict affected populations through the rehabilitation of water infrastructure, water trucking and repairing of wells.

We have reached nearly a million refugees in Jordan and Lebanon with clean drinking water or cash and relief supplies, such as blankets and stoves and vouchers for hygiene supplies.

Oxfam has built shower and toilet blocks in Zaatari refugee camp, informal settlements in Lebanon, on deserted routes used by people fleeing Syria and installed or repaired toilets in communities hosting refugees. Piped water systems are being developed for Jordan’s Zaatari refugee camp and in host communities in the Bekaa Valley in Lebanon.

We are helping families get the information they need about their rights and connecting them to medical, legal and support services.

Thanks to the Government of Canada donations made up to February 29, 2016 were matched dollar-for-dollar to the Syrian Emergency Relief Match Fund. Global Affairs Canada matched every eligible dollar, up to a total of $100 million, donated by individual Canadians to registered Canadian charities in response to the conflict in Syria.

Your donation today will help provide timely, appropriate humanitarian responses where the need is greatest.

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Rohingya Refugee Crisis https://www.oxfam.ca/emergency/rohingya-refugee-crisis/ Wed, 20 Jun 2018 21:20:19 +0000 https://oxfamcanprod.wpengine.com/?post_type=emergency&p=32425

Emergency

Rohingya Refugee Crisis

Refugees are living in overcrowded, unsanitary conditions, and many face threats including gender-based violence, trafficking, forced prostitution, and early forced marriage.

The Situation

There are now nearly 860,000 Rohingya refugees in Cox’s Bazar, of whom 688,000 have arrived since August, 2017. Not only has the pace of new arrivals made this the fastest growing refugee crisis in the world, the concentration of refugees in Cox’s Bazar is now amongst the densest in the world.

Refugees are living in overcrowded, unsanitary conditions, and many face threats including gender-based violence, trafficking, forced prostitution, and early forced marriage. Roughly 1000 people continue to arrive every day, and thousands are stuck in the border area known as no-man’s land. This is a large scale and escalating humanitarian crisis.

Existing camps and the ones newly being set up are inadequate to deal with the massive influx of people. These individuals have been left homeless and hungry following a long and treacherous journey across the border. More than 70% of the newly arrived have no shelter and only 50% have access to safe drinking water. Many people are still living under open skies, by the roadside and in forest areas with little or no protection from the elements.

These individuals need life-saving assistance now, including clean drinking water, sanitation and hygiene, essential food items and emergency supplies.

  • Water supply, water purification, and storage facilities are needed immediately. Due to the inadequate sanitation facilities, there's a high probability for the spread of waterborne diseases.
  • More than 470,000 people need aid because they don't have enough to eatof which 200,000 are vulnerable people including pregnant women, new mothers, and children under 5. 

Special attention must be paid to the needs of women and girls. More than half of the refugees are women, the majority being girls under the age of 18. There are more than 120,000 pregnant women and mothers with new babies now living in the camps. The protection, privacy, health, and hygiene needs of women, girls and nursing mothers must be met, and measures are taken to prevent any form of sexual or gender-based violence.

A group of young Rohingya girls collect drinking water for their families from a local pump in Balhukali settlement, Bangladesh. Credit: Aurélie Marrier d'Unienville

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What is Oxfam Doing?

Oxfam is responding now and has reached nearly 260,000 Rohingya refugees in Bangladesh by providing clean drinking water, portable toilets and sanitation facilities, plastic sheets, and other essential supplies.

Many Rohingya are being relocated from flood risk areas to new locations in the camps. Oxfam is supporting Rohingya refugees in Bangladesh by:

  • Setting up of 443 shallow tube wells and 87 deep tube wells to provide people with clean water.
  • Oxfam has also now designed and will co-construct a new water piping network across the mega camp. Oxfam has already constructed over 500 tube wells to provide water
  • Our fecal sludge management plant is now up and running, and aims to manage the waste of 100,000 people. We have also mapped latrines and are designing a sewage system to manage human waste.
  • In Unchiprang and Nyapara camps we have set up a water treatment plant that pumps water to the entire camps.
  • We are also providing fresh food vouchers for over 100,000 people. The vouchers allow Rohingya to buy vegetables and other fresh food they previously did not have money for.
  • We have also now installed 50 public solar lights and hand held solar lights to 2,000 families so people feel safer at night.

We are working with the government and other agencies to make sure that new refugee camps being setup meet humanitarian standards for the delivery of aid.

Oxfam’s programmes going forward will include:

  • clean water and sanitation
  • hygiene materials and promotion
  • gender integrated into our provision of water, sanitation and hygiene
  • safe spaces for women

Your gift to Oxfam's Emergency Response Fund will go directly towards our emergency work, present and future.

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Drought, Hunger and Famine Crises https://www.oxfam.ca/emergency/hunger-and-famine-crises/ Sun, 29 Apr 2018 22:26:49 +0000 https://oxfamcanprod.wpengine.com/?post_type=emergency&p=32428

Emergency

Drought, Hunger and Famine Crises

Right now, millions of families around the world are struggling to survive hunger, violence, skyrocketing food prices, climate-driven natural disasters, and poverty pushed to the extreme by inequality.

The Situation

Persistent climate-fueled drought, compounded by ongoing conflict, political uncertainty, COVID-19, and the rising cost of living, has led to a humanitarian nightmare. As many as 28 million people across the Horn, East and Central Africa are at risk of severe hunger.

A massive mobilization of international humanitarian assistance is needed now to avoid loss of life and to help people already facing severe levels of hunger, conflict and a massive drought across the region. Rising food prices are a hammer blow to millions of people who are already suffering multiple crises, and make the huge shortfall in global support potentially lethal. We urgently need to scale up our response to save more lives.

Rising food prices are a hammer blow to millions of people already suffering multiple crises, making the huge shortfall in global support potentially lethal. We urgently need to scale up our response to save more lives.

You can help.

Oxfam and local partners provide urgent, life-saving assistance in the short term and, wherever possible, invest in longer-term programs to help protect communities from future climate shocks. We are also using our position on the global stage to call for long-term peaceful resolutions to hostilities that are ravaging lives and lobbying governments for meaningful change in policy and legislation.

Marta Kangach lives in Jonglei, South Sudan, one of the states worst hit by flooding. She lost all her cattle and harvest. "We go out to the bush," she explains, "and pick green leaves to cook."

South Sudan

South Sudan is in the midst of a catastrophic humanitarian crisis driven by years of brutal civil war. There are now more than 2 million internally displaced people in South Sudan and millions more refugees have fled to neighbouring countries.

In addition, the country has suffered a fifth consecutive year of severe flooding, which has destroyed crops and homes. Around 70 per cent of South Sudan is flooded. Nearly a million people have been forced to flee their homes, searching for food and shelter.

Over two-thirds of the total population are estimated to need humanitarian assistance and 7.2 million people are facing high levels of acute food insecurity.

We are on the ground distributing food, providing clean water and sanitation facilities, promoting good hygiene practices, and helping people produce food for themselves and make a living.

Habodo Gele age 35, with her last remaining cow in Bisle, Siti zone, Ethiopia. A devastating drought is causing the worst food crisis to hit Ethiopia in 30 years, putting millions of people at risk of hunger and disease.

Horn, Central and East Africa (HECA)

Across the Horn, Central and East Africa, 44.7 million people are in need of emergency food and water due to severe drought across Ethiopia, Somalia, South Sudan and Kenya. On top of food insecurity crisis, parts of the region have simultaneously been hit by the worst flooding in 30 years. Significant rain has fallen on drought-stricken ground causing nearly a million people to be affected.

In South Sudan, Oxfam continues to provide people with safe water, sanitation and hygiene services and supports, cash grants for families to buy food and other essentials and livelihood supplies like seeds, tools and fishing kits.

In Somalia, Oxfam is providing life-saving water, sanitation and health support, including drilling boreholes in water insecure areas, distributing hygiene kits, providing materials to help protect communities from water-borne diseases and distributing cash, seeds and tools, and training farmers in small-scale greenhouse farming.

In Kenya, Oxfam is currently supporting with cash transfers for food and other essential items and water, sanitation and hygiene activities, such as repairing water points and boreholes to provide access to clean, safe water.

In Ethiopia, Oxfam has supported people in Northern Ethiopia with life-saving clean water, food and cash assistance, particularly in conflict-affected areas in South Tigray, Central Tigray, Amhara and Afar.

Three women stand nearby shacks made from plastic tarps in Al-Mashkafa, a small camp in southwestern Yemen, home to 140 displaced families seeking safety. Seven years of armed conflict have displaced over four million people.

Yemen

Almost three million people in Yemen have been forced to flee their homes due to bombing and fighting. 22 million people – 75 percent of Yemen population – are in need of emergency aid. 17 million Yemenis are suffering from food insecurity and malnutrition, including 8 million who are now on the brink of famine. Yemen is also the world’s worst ever recorded cholera outbreak, with over 1 million reported cases to date.

Oxfam has reached more than 1.5 million people with water and sanitation services, cash assistance and food vouchers. In response to the Cholera outbreak, Oxfam has provided water and sanitation assistance to more than 430,000 people in an effort to prevent and contain the disease.

Your donation today will go towards Oxfam’s Hunger and Famine relief efforts where the need is greatest.

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Mexico Earthquake https://www.oxfam.ca/emergency/mexico-earthquake/ Wed, 20 Sep 2017 14:38:30 +0000 https://oxfamcanprod.wpengine.com/emergency/mexico-earthquake/

In September, 2017, Mexico was rocked by a powerful 7.1-magnitude earthquake, resulting in the death of more than 300 people. Donate now to our Emergency Response Fund to support our relief efforts.


The Situation

On Tuesday September 19, a powerful 7.1-magnitude earthquake struck southern Mexico in Puebla state, 123km from Mexico City. This earthquake exacerbated the effects of another earthquake two weeks prior on September 7, which measured 8.2 - the strongest ever recorded in Mexico.

39 aftershocks were recorded  and 318 people were confirmed dead. More than 765 people were injured and hospitalized in Mexico City, Morelos, Puebla, Estado de México, Guerrero and Oaxaca.

The epicentre of the earthquake was Axochiapan, Morelos, which is approximately 100 miles from Mexico City. Morelos and Puebla, which have high levels of poverty and inequality, have been the worst affected.


What Oxfam is doing

Oxfam Mexico sent teams to Morelos and Puebla, two of the places most affected by the earthquake, in order to carry out an evaluation, protect the rights of people who have been affected, and to establish a long-term action plan.


How you can help

Make a donation today to Oxfam Canada's Emergency Response Fund. Oxfam Canada's Emergency Response Fund (ERF) enables us to provide timely, appropriate responses to emergency situations and support reconstruction work. The ERF ensures that Oxfam can quickly respond wherever and whenever the need is greatest.


Page last updated January 2, 2018.

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Hurricane Irma https://www.oxfam.ca/emergency/hurricane-irma/ Mon, 11 Sep 2017 19:02:22 +0000 https://oxfamcanprod.wpengine.com/emergency/hurricane-irma/

Oxfam is on the ground responding to Hurricane Irma, the most powerful Atlantic storm in a decade. 


The Situation

Hurricane Irma, a Category 5 hurricane, raged through the Caribbean affecting Haiti, the Dominican Republic and Cuba. In the Dominican Republic, Irma left more than 24,000 people displaced, destroyed more than 100 houses, and obliterated over 2,000 hectares of crops. In Cuba, Irma caused damage to 13 of Cuba's 15 provinces, forcing more than 2 million people to leave their homes.

The hurricane affected the poorest people the most. Poverty and inequality leaves communities more vulnerable to the effects of climate change because of bad housing and weak livelihoods. In many cases, they do not have the resources to recover.

When natural disaster strikes, women and girls often suffer the most. Women are more likely to die during natural disasters than men. Women face an increased risk of losing livelihoods, gender-based violence, and an increased responsibility for home and family.


How Oxfam is Helping

In the Dominican Republic, Haiti, and Cuba, our teams are on the ground helping the most vulnerable people who have lost their homes and livelihoods to recover from the disaster, including ensuring access to clean water and basic sanitation.

In the Dominican Republic and Haiti our primary goal is to prevent the spread of cholera and other diseases due to damaged water infrastructure. Oxfam will provide safe water in four villages with handwashing points and chlorine tablets. Oxfam is also coordinating a public health and hygiene campaign with government and aid agencies.

In Cuba, Oxfam is working with partners and Cuban officials, responding to the widespread destruction caused by Hurricane Irma. Oxfam is preparing to respond in the province of Camagüey in the municipalities of Esmeralda and Minas. The aim is to reach at least 8,500 people with lifesaving water, sanitation, and hygiene services, along with emergency shelter and support to agricultural cooperatives.

For more than 30 years, Oxfam has been active in the Caribbean region, where we work hand in hand with local partners to assist people in crisis, while helping affected communities raise their voices to ensure they get appropriate assistance. Oxfam worked with local partners in Haiti, Dominican Republic and Cuba to assist with disaster recovery after Hurricane Sandy (2012) and Hurricane Matthew (2016), where we provided hygiene kits, tarpaulins for shelter and water purification tablets to more than 5000 people.

As communities begin to rebuild from natural disasters, Oxfam's long-term programs help the most vulnerable areas become stronger and more resilient. Oxfam ensures that the specific needs of women and girls is included in all our humanitarian and long-term program work. As skilled agents of survival, change, and adaptation, women and girls are critical to reconstruction.


How you can help

Donate now to help us meet the most critical needs. Funds designated for Hurricane Irma will be used to support relief, recovery, and reconstruction efforts for affected areas where Oxfam is on the ground.


Learn More:

Media Release: Oxfam mobilizing to help Cubans devastated by Hurricane Irma with a focus on women and girls, September 18, 2017
Media Release: Hurricane Irma: Oxfam assists the poorest people hardest hit by disaster, September 12, 2017
Media Release: Hurricane Irma: Oxfam collaborates with Cuban authorities to assess and mitigate damage, September 9, 2017
Media Release: Hurricane Irma: Oxfam assessing damage in Haiti and Dominican Republic, September 8, 2017
Media Release: Hurricane Irma: Oxfam in Haiti preparing for the worst, September 7, 2017

Page last updated: January 2, 2018

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South Asia Floods https://www.oxfam.ca/emergency/south-asia-floods/ Fri, 01 Sep 2017 04:00:00 +0000 https://oxfamcanprod.wpengine.com/emergency/south-asia-floods/

An estimated 43 million people have been affected by flooding and landslides across a huge area of India, Bangladesh and Nepal. Please support Oxfam's response and help us provide clean water, sanitation and other urgently needed items.


The Situation

1,200 people have died and 43 million people have been hit by the monsoon rains and heavy flooding in Bangladesh, India, and Nepal. While some flooding is normal with monsoonal rainfall, for most of the affected communities this level of flooding is unusual and unheard of. Oxfam staff in Bangladesh reported that two thirds of the country was under water, and in some areas the flooding is the worst since 1988.

The flooding has cut off thousands of villages, depriving people of food and clean water for days. In Nepal, one region received one month’s worth of rain in just two days.Families have lost their homes and crops, and the number of casualties is likely to continue to increase.


How Oxfam is helping

Oxfam is working with flood-hit communities and local partners, providing more than 186,000 flood-hit people with clean drinking water, food supplies, emergency shelter, hygiene kits, and other essentials.

Paolo Lubrano, Oxfam’s Regional Humanitarian Manager for Asia, said: “We have been building the capacity of people to cope with and recover from disaster, and to prevent these crises in future. This will only be possible if international agencies work with local people and put them at the center of the response.”

Climate Change:
This heavy monsoon and unpredictable weather are most likely due to climate change which hits the poorest people the hardest. The carbon footprint of the world’s one billion poorest people represents just 3% of the global total.

Oxfam works with poor and vulnerable people to build their resilience to climate change and to make their communities safer.


How you can help

Make a donation today to Oxfam Canada's Emergency Response Fund. Oxfam Canada's Emergency Response Fund (ERF) enables us to provide timely, appropriate responses to emergency situations and support reconstruction work. The ERF ensures that Oxfam can quickly respond wherever and whenever the need is greatest.


Learn More:

Media Release: Oxfam responds as 43 million hit by South Asia Floods, August 2017

Page last updated January 2, 2018

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When Emergencies Don’t Make the Headlines https://www.oxfam.ca/emergency/when-emergencies-dont-make-the-headlines/ Sun, 02 Apr 2017 02:03:24 +0000 https://oxfamcanprod.wpengine.com/?post_type=emergency&p=32430

Emergency

When Emergencies Don’t Make the Headlines

Oxfam's Emergency Response Fund

Oxfam's Emergency Response Fund

Our Emergency Response Fund (ERF) enables Oxfam to provide quick and effective responses to emergency situations wherever and whenever the need is greatest. Assistance shouldn’t be dependent on media coverage.

Your gift to Oxfam's Emergency Response Fund will go directly towards our emergency work, present and future. With your help, we can:

  • Locate the communities hit hardest and launch relief operations immediately.
  • Strengthen the Gender in Emergencies capacity of partners and responders.
  • Reach survivors and help provide the tools they need, like food, cash, and access to clean water and safe sanitation-–even when disasters don't grab headlines and inspire an outpouring of donations.
  • Provide support to smaller underfunded emergencies.

Your generous donation to Oxfam will help us to deliver emergency services where they are needed most.

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Hurricane Matthew https://www.oxfam.ca/emergency/hurricane-matthew/ Tue, 04 Oct 2016 00:10:29 +0000 https://oxfamcanprod.wpengine.com/emergency/hurricane-matthew/

On October 4 and 5, Hurricane Matthew, a powerful Category 4 storm, moved through the Caribbean impacting hundreds of thousands of people. High winds, storm surges and 8 hours of sustained heavy rain – toppled trees, severely damaged homes and water sources, and caused extensive power outages to many areas of Cuba, Haiti and the Dominican Republic.

On month on, Oxfam staff and partners in Cuba, Haiti and the Dominican Republic are have begun responding to the hardest hit areas, providing safe water, hygiene supplies and shelter where aid is needed most urgently.

Oxfam is responding in the Eastern municipalities of Cuba including Baracoa, Guantanamo, where 90% of housing and shelter were destroyed or damaged; providing hygiene kits, tarpaulins for shelter and water purification tablets to 4800 people, ensuring the inclusion and specific needs of women and girls.

Needs still are growing and require support to rebuild livelihoods significantly damaged by the storm, shelters and ensuring that there are safe water sources in all affected communities.

Jerome Faure, Oxfam director in Cuba, said:

Oxfam is on the ground responding in eastern Cuba and Haiti as communities worst hit by Matthew require immediate assistance with water, sanitation kits and emergency shelter.

"Oxfam has been working in the area – already one of Cuba’s most vulnerable – for over 20 years, and was able to rapidly set up an evaluation team to assess damages to infrastructure and the impact on communities."

As Younes Karroum, Oxfam's Program Manager in Haiti, said: "The first need is to save lives and to help people who are in crisis by flooding or whose homes have been destroyed. After that, the priority will be to provide safe water, food and 'first response' aid like shelters and sanitation. We are worried about potential cholera outbreaks too: with these floods there will probably be a big increase in contaminated water and possible spread of disease."

Some crises can't be prevented, or imagined, in advance. But as soon as they strike – when conflict breaks out, when a hurricane hits – Oxfam and our partners on the ground need to be ready to respond. Lives depend on it.

Your gift to Oxfam's Emergency Response Fund will go directly toward our emergency work, present and future. As the situation progresses, we will be updating this page accordingly.

Add your support now so that when crises erupt, Oxfam is ready to spring into action. Make your tax-deductible gift to the Emergency Response Fund today.

Updated November 4, 2016

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Cyclone Roanu impacts Sri Lanka and Bangladesh https://www.oxfam.ca/emergency/cyclone-roanu-impacts-sri-lanka-and-bangladesh/ Wed, 18 May 2016 14:10:53 +0000 https://oxfamcanprod.wpengine.com/emergency/cyclone-roanu-impacts-sri-lanka-and-bangladesh/ After torrential rains sent landslides cascading over three villages in Sri Lanka on May 18th, Cyclone Roanu gathered steam as it moved along the east coast of India, then hit Bangladesh hard. Over 500,000 people in Bangladesh have had to evacuate their homes due to floods, landslides, and torrential rains.  In Sri Lanka, over 425,000 people were affected. Oxfam is responding in both countries.

The government of Bangladesh acted promptly to evacuate over 500,000 people ahead of landfall in the country's coastal districts. However, people's homes have been damaged or destroyed, their livestock lost, and crops devastated.

Oxfam already has teams in the area distributing portable toilets and essential hygiene kits to affected families. We have reached so far almost 7000 people with hygiene kits and temporary latrines. Oxfam is also setting up "cash for work" schemes to assist the thousands of families who are dependent on agriculture and daily wages. 

Oxfam's Sri Lanka Country Director reports that "People in landslide prone areas will have to stay in camps until their villages are safe. Some will have to be resettled. Children, women and the poor will face many challenges. We will work closely with the Government to assist them."

As the situation progresses, we will be updating this page accordingly.

Some crises can't be prevented, or imagined, in advance. But as soon as they strike – when conflict breaks out, when an earthquake hits – Oxfam and our partners on the ground need to be ready to respond. Lives depend on it.
 
Your gift to Oxfam's Emergency Response Fund will go directly toward our emergency work, present and future.
 
Your support now means that when crises erupt, Oxfam is ready to spring into action. Make your tax-deductible gift to the Emergency Response Fund today.

Last updated May 25, 2016

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Ecuador Earthquake https://www.oxfam.ca/emergency/ecuador-earthquake/ Sun, 17 Apr 2016 14:51:04 +0000 https://oxfamcanprod.wpengine.com/emergency/ecuador-earthquake/

Oxfam is responding to a major earthquake off the coast of Ecuador that has already claimed hundreds of lives. Initial reports suggest that damage to buildings and infrastructure is severe.

We are currently sending teams to the area to assess the extent of damage and how Oxfam can best assist the Government response.

Some crises can't be prevented, or imagined, in advance. But as soon as they strike – when conflict breaks out, when an earthquake hits – Oxfam and our partners on the ground need to be ready to respond. Lives depend on it.

Your gift to Oxfam's Emergency Response Fund will go directly toward our emergency work, present and future.

As the situation progresses, we will be updating this page accordingly.

Add your support now so that when crises erupt, Oxfam is ready to spring into action. Make your tax-deductible gift to the Emergency Response Fund today.

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Indian Floods https://www.oxfam.ca/emergency/indian-floods/ Fri, 11 Dec 2015 21:48:24 +0000 https://oxfamcanprod.wpengine.com/emergency/indian-floods/ India’s fourth largest and most populous city, Chennai, is facing the worst floods in over hundred years. More than 300 people have died in the torrential downpour caused by deep depression in the Bay of Bengal. The flooding has forced more than 200,000 people to abandon their homes and over 3 million people have been affected.

The capital city of Chennai has been particularly hard-hit, receiving its highest ever rainfall recorded in November in over a century. Release of water from a brimming reservoir has further swamped the low lying areas of Chennai city.

Besides Chennai, the worst affected districts include: Cuddalore, Kanchipuram, Thiruvalu, and Thanjavur, where entire villages have been marooned and totally inundated. There are currently 97 relief camps in Chennai city and 215 in Kanchipuram district. The neighbouring state of Andhra Pradesh where 54 persons have died, and union territory Puducherry where nearly 400 houses have suffered damage, have also been affected by the disaster. Road, rail and air transport have all been affected in Tamil Nadu. Over 2 million people have been affected by the disaster, which has caused damages and losses amounting to over `20000 crore (US$3 billion).

Our response:

Oxfam is responding to the humanitarian needs of flood affected people in Tamil Nadu and Andhra Pradesh. Oxfam will assist the flood ravaged communities with lifesaving water, sanitation and hygiene facilities, emergency shelter materials to protect them from elements of weather, and cash assistance to the most vulnerable families. Thousands of people need humanitarian assistance—both in urban and rural areas of Tamil Nadu. Responding to the crisis now and for the next six months with local NGO partners, remains an Oxfam priority.

  • 2200 households from Chennai slums, and villages from Cuddalore and Kanchipuram  districts received 60 Chlorine tablets each, ensuring immediate access to safe drinking water for a month after the floods.
  • So far, we have completed debris cleaning in  5 villages as well as in one of the worst affected and severely congested slum in Chennai, Koyambude slum.
  • We have reached out 800 households with Hygiene Kits. Oxfam has also been doing intensive hygiene promotion work with our trained volunteers in the areas of handwashing and safe sanitation.
  • We have reached out to 2961 Households already with Emergency Shelter and NFI Kits containing tarpaulin sheet, groundsheet, fleece blanket, bedsheets, mosquito net and kitchen utensils to the most affected communities. These will help in protecting them from the mosquitoes and elements of weather.
  • We have also distributed smokeless  chulhas to 1900 households. Many homes lost their chulhas which were made of mud during the floods. Our smokeless chulhas are not only a more fuel-efficient option, they will not cause respiratory problems like the previous ones they were using!

How you can help

Oxfam is aiming to reach 8,000 families or approximately 48,000 flood affected people in Tamil Nadu &  Andhra Pradesh. You can help us provide shelter, health promotion, water, sanitation and latrines, blankets and solar lamps and cash transfers. Click below to donate:

Reports

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South Asia Earthquake https://www.oxfam.ca/emergency/south-asia-earthquake-2/ Mon, 26 Oct 2015 21:16:14 +0000 https://oxfamcanprod.wpengine.com/emergency/south-asia-earthquake-2/

The situation

A magnitude 7.5 earthquake hit Afghanistan’s north-eastern province of Badakhshan and also affected some areas of Pakistan early on Monday, 26th of October.

According to US Geological service, the depth of the earth quake was 196 km. The epicenter of the earth quake was 82 kilometers southeast of Faizabad, in the district of Jurm in the Hindukush mountain range.

Tremors were felt throughout most of Afghanistan but mainly in Badakhshan, Takhar, Baghlan, Kunduz, Balkh, Parwan, Kapisa, Panjsher, Kabul, Laghman, Kunar, Nangarhar and Nuristan.

How many people have been affected?

Reports indicate over 200 people have been killed, around 375 people have been injured and 9,509 houses have been damaged.

Insecurity, road blockages and low quality of mobile network have caused to hinder efforts to obtain more information on the impact of earthquake but reports about more casualties are to be expected.

At least 12 of the victims were Afghan schoolgirls killed in a crush as they tried to get out of their building, the BBC has reportedOpens in a new window. In Pakistan, the military said 123 people were known to have died in the north of the country, mostly in the Malakand region of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province. The area is extremely mountainous so there is a risk of landslides and avalanches.

What is Oxfam doing?

We have teams working with local authorities and organizations assessing the scale of the damage and what is needed and our teams are ready to respond where needed. The extent of damage and casualties is still unclear as information is only slowly coming in from rural areas, hindered by lack of communications.

We expect a much clearer picture to emerge in the dys following the earthquake.  We expect people to be fearful of aftershocks and likely to be sleeping in the open. They will need protection from the elements, food, clean water and hygiene essentials such as soap. With winter almost upon us people will need blankets and shelters to keep them warm in sub-zero temperatures.

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Hurricane Patricia https://www.oxfam.ca/emergency/hurricane-patricia/ Fri, 23 Oct 2015 16:57:05 +0000 https://oxfamcanprod.wpengine.com/emergency/hurricane-patricia/

The Situation

Oxfam Canada together with Oxfam Mexico had readied ourselves for what we believed would be a devastating hurricane on Friday, October 23rd, 2015.  In the span of just 30 hours, an ordinary tropical storm had mutated into the most powerful hurricane ever measured, with ferocious 200-mile-per-hour winds. And the cyclone was barreling right toward Mexico's southwestern coast.

Hurricane Patricia didn't end up causing anywhere near as much devastation as feared. The hurricane hit Mexico's coast at around 7 pm on Friday, a Category 5 storm with winds reaching upward of 165 mph.

Within a day, the storm had weakened considerably, chewed up by mountainous terrain. One reason there were very little fatalities, was that people paid attention to warnings. Schools shut down, stores and businesses closed and people heeded the advisories to stay indoors or move to shelters. When trees and lampposts fell, there was nobody outside who could be hurt. Preparation and effective response can often make all the difference.

Hurricane Patricia in numbers:

  • Overall, approximately 40,000 to 50,000 people affected.
  • 6 people have died.
  • 12,500 hectares of crops are damaged, particularly banana and papaya, according to the Minister of Agriculture.
  • In the Jalisco and Colima areas visited by Oxfam’s assessment team there are 6,000 homes affected
  • Although the authorities have announced the reopening of schools, many have not been rehabilitated and some are still being used as shelters.

Oxfam’s planned response is focussing on hygiene promotion, livelihoods rehabilitation, and promoting community dialogue with the authorities, including:

  • Livelihoods: support to fishermen, small food businesses on the beaches and daily workers through, for example, cash transfers to generate income for families and reactivate local business that depends mainly on tourism and sale of crops.
  • Sanitation: Cleaning days (removal of debris, removal of stagnant water, household cleaning).
  • Health and hygiene: Prevention campaigns and distribution of mosquito nets
  • Communication and strategic messaging: In order to guarantee the right to information to ensure access to services in the affected communities.

 

 

 

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Media enquiries:

Melanie Gallant
melanie.gallant@oxfam.ca
Tel: (613) 240-3047

Updated October 30, 2015

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Rebuilding Nepal https://www.oxfam.ca/emergency/rebuilding-nepal/ Fri, 03 Jul 2015 18:54:19 +0000 https://oxfamcanprod.wpengine.com/emergency/rebuilding-nepal/

On 25th April 2015 a massive earthquake struck Nepal between the capital of Kathmandu and the city of Pokhara, killing thousands and causing widespread devastation.

Hundreds of thousands of people fled their homes fearing aftershocks and gathered in the surrounding areas, some in makeshift camps. Transport and communications were severely disrupted. Just over two weeks later on 12th May, a second earthquake of a similar magnitude caused further devastation.  As a result, more than 8,900 people died, over 23,500 were injured and more than 800,000 houses were destroyed or damaged. In total, over 8 million people across 31 districts were affected by the earthquake.

Our response

In the first few days after the first earthquake hit, Oxfam in Nepal immediately responded by providing lifesaving relief including food items and drinking water and by setting up temporary shelters and emergency latrines. Our priorities were to ensure that affected people had access to adequate humanitarian assistance and to prevent the outbreak of disease.

During the first weeks, we distributed staple food supplies, alongside rice seeds and agricultural tools for farmers. We managed to ship vital emergency supplies to Gorkha, near the epicenter of the quake, as well as providing tarpaulins, rice, water and sanitation equipment to other hard-hit rural districts.  In Kathmandu Valley, we provided clean water and sanitation facilities to earthquake survivors living in some of the worst hit districts. Oxfam’s technical experts constructed water tanks and sanitation facilities in the temporary camps.

By April 25th, 2017, thanks to our donors, Oxfam has:

  • distributed close to 60,000 emergency and improved shelter kits benefitting over 322,00 people
  • helped 17,000 farmers to access rice seeds to replenish destroyed supplies.
  • constructed 8,000 latrines providing safer, more dignified living conditions.
  • provided chlorinated water to 35,000 people.
  • distributed cash vouchers to enable families to buy seeds, tools and other essential items, which in turn helps boost the local economy.
  • provided over 6,000 Compassionate Grants to enable people to buy life saving food items or medicines.
  • provided over 2,300 families with a Multi Purpose grant to restart existing businesses, to regenerate community infrastructure, and to support market and financial systems.
  • supported over 14,000 families with Oxfam’s Cash for Work (CFW) programme, which provides short-term employment in the rebuilding of community services.
  • Together we have reached  over 534,000 people in need.

After the initial relief phase the focus shifts to recovery and reconstruction.

Now, our focus shifts from emergency relief to long-term recovery for Nepal. Thousands of people have benefited from Oxfam’s cash for work schemes, which gives them much needed income in return for repairing damaged water supplies and pathways connecting communities. Oxfam’s recovery grants help rebuild livelihoods and regenerate the community infrastructures. We are continuing to repair and restore longer term water and sanitation facilities in schools with separate toilets and wash areas for girls to encourage them to come to school.

Dhan Kumari Adhikari (32) of Tripureshwor VDC in Dhading district scatters the rice seeds in her field, preparing for paddy cultivation. A housewife and a mother of 2, Dhan Kumari received the seeds from Oxfam and our partner, Small Farmers Agriculture Cooperative after the rice stock seeds that she had stored away  from her previous yield got mixed with rubble when her house collapsed during the earthquake. Credit Jes Aznar / Oxfam.

While Nepal continues the long road to recovery, Oxfam is urging the government to engage with communities in reconstruction and resettlement schemes to identify those in greatest need and to replace lost documents. “With monsoon rains fast approaching in Nepal, it is imperative that reconstruction is made both speedier and fairer,” said Oxfam country director Cecilia Keizer. "After such an overwhelming show of generosity, the people of Nepal deserve a fast and fair route to recovery."

How can you show your support?

By donating to Oxfam on a regular basis through our  Shareplan monthly giving program, you are giving us the financial security we need to step in and save lives - whenever and wherever we're needed. Thank you for your ongoing commitment. Lives depend on it.

Learn More

Map: Oxfam works in 7 out of the 14 most affected regions in NepalOpens in a new window
Photo Book: The Year Nepal Shook
Publication: Nepal One Year on
Publication: Rebuilding a More Resilient Nepal: Key recommendations for reconstruction and recovery, October 2015
Update: Nepal 6-month Report, October 2015
Report: 3-month Update, July 2015
News Release: One month on, Oxfam reaching Nepal’s most isolated in a race against the monsoon, May 25, 2015
News Release: Devastating earthquakes in Nepal, May 12, 2015
News Release: Need for shelter in monsoons biggest concern in rural areas of Nepal, May 7, 2015
Blog: Nepal earthquake was 'single most frightening experience of my life', May 19, 2015
Blog: Fostering gender equality in emergencies, May 1, 2015
Blog: 3 things to know about how we’re helping in Nepal, April 30, 2015

Updated April 25, 2016

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Burundi refugee crisis https://www.oxfam.ca/emergency/burundi-refugee-crisis/ Fri, 03 Jul 2015 17:22:58 +0000 https://oxfamcanprod.wpengine.com/emergency/burundi-refugee-crisis/

There are now over 140,000 refugees from Burundi in Tanzania, overstretching the capacity of the local government and aid agencies to respond. Tens of thousands of people are in urgent need of clean water, adequate sanitation, health care, food and shelter. Without these basic needs being met, the risk of disease like cholera and malaria is dangerously high.

Existing camps are already beyond capacity with schools and churches being turned into temporary accommodation while more appropriate shelter can be built. Many families have spent weeks in exposed, cramped conditions and now either sheltering with hundreds of others in schools or under trees to escape the hot sun.

Oxfam is there, but funds are urgently needed to provide essential materials such as tents, water pipes, water storage tanks and medical supplies.

How Oxfam is helping

Oxfam is working in both Nyarugusu and Nduta refugee camps, including the provision of all water and sanitation facilities (to approx 135,000 people), emergency food security, the distribution of hygiene kits, hand washing promotion and the installation of child friendly latrines.

Most recently, livelihoods programs have been introduced, including income generation activities developed to make use of people’s existing skills and knowledge (ie, bee keeping, farming). Cash for work projects have also been initiated to improve the camp infrastructure and protect the environment (drainage facilities, better roads, planting trees).

"People are thirsty and tired; many are sick. They've gone through so much already just to get to this point, and what they need now is clean water, food and a place to sleep. Oxfam is ready to scale up our response but we urgently need funds to do so," said Oxfam Tanzania Country Director Jane Foster.

Oxfam is working towards developing a more sustainable approach, implementing solar pumping stations for water, semi permanent latrines for families, and developing the capacity of local partners.

Oxfam in Tanzania

Oxfam has had presence in Tanzania since 1962.

Oxfam has been responding to the recent influx of refugees in Tanzania since May 2015 through the provision of WASH services and technical leadership and capacity building for partner organizations. Oxfam is currently on the ground in Nyarugusu, Nduta and Mtendeli refugee camps.

Oxfam’s work in emergency response is done in partnership with local organizations.  These partnerships were established out of previous Oxfam refugee response in the 1990s in Tanzania and Oxfam has built strong relationships with them. Working with local partners that already know the composition of the community/refugees accelerates and improves the identification of the most vulnerable sections of society, and effectively supports the development of local institutions that uphold the rights of marginalized people. In turn, these organizations have built up trust and acceptance with the local communities and refugees and have successfully implemented programming while harnessing traditional coping mechanisms and community structures for increased sustainability and impact.

Oxfam in Burundi 

Oxfam’s has been working in Burundi since the 1990s. In addition to emergency assistance, our long-term our work focuses on:

  • Food security, by improving people’s access to land and to other means of agricultural production.
  • Social justice, by improving living conditions and encouraging the participation of the population, civil society, local communities and marginal groups in public governance and development policies.
  • The right to be heard, by promoting access to information, freedom of expression and human rights awareness.
  • Women’s rights, by supporting women leadership and an active civil society.

Oxfam aims to ensure that everyone in Burundi will live in a society free from violence, where people will be able to exercise their freedom and their rights with a decent quality of life.

Our objective is to put the economy and development policies to work to serve the interests of the people, promoting effective prevention measures to avoid the emergence of ared conflicts and humanitarian disasters, and to reduce the impact of natural catastrophes.

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Oxfam Canada's Emergency Response Fund (ERF) enables us to provide timely, appropriate responses to emergency situations and support reconstruction work. The ERF ensures that Oxfam can quickly respond wherever and whenever the need is greatest.

Updated June 16, 2016

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Earthquake in Nepal – April 25, 2015 https://www.oxfam.ca/emergency/earthquake-in-nepal-april-25-2015/ Sat, 25 Apr 2015 23:33:50 +0000 https://oxfamcanprod.wpengine.com/emergency/earthquake-in-nepal-april-25-2015/

Today, at midday local time, an estimated 7.9 magnitude earthquake shook Nepal, near the capital, Kathmandu. Oxfam's team in Nepal is assessing humanitarian need following the devastating earthquake. In addition, a team of technical experts is arriving with supplies to provide clean water, sanitation and emergency food supplies.

Cecilia Keizer, Oxfam country director in Nepal said:

"Communication is currently very difficult. Telephone lines are down and the electricity has been cut off making charging mobile phones difficult. The water is also cut off.  The number of people killed is continuing to rise. Many of the old houses have been destroyed and at least one large apartment block has come down in Kathmandu. Given the closeness to the epicenter Pokhara must also be badly affected. Oxfam is preparing to help provide clean water and emergency food. People are gathered in their thousands in open spaces and are scared as there have been several aftershocks."
 
Commenting on the devastating earthquake in Nepal, Oxfam Canada Executive Director Julie Delahanty said:

"The first hours and days after a terrible disaster like this are critical in saving lives and moving to recovery. Oxfam is already on the ground, assessing the situation and working to meet basic needs. Canadians have always been extraordinarily generous in humanitarian crises. Sadly, there is a new crisis affecting the people of Nepal and I call on all who can to donate now."

Media Contact:
John Young
(613) 614-5040
john.young@oxfam.ca

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Cyclone Pam – Vanuatu https://www.oxfam.ca/emergency/cyclone-pam-vanuatu/ Mon, 16 Mar 2015 15:59:19 +0000 https://oxfamcanprod.wpengine.com/emergency/cyclone-pam-vanuatu/

You can support Oxfam's response to humanitarian crises in Vanuatu by donating online or by calling 1-800-466-9326.

The Situation

  • Tropical Cyclone Pam directly impacted the central and southern regions of Vanuatu, including the nation’s capital Port Vila on the island of Efate.
  • The National Disaster Managment Office (NDMO) reports that 166,000 people on 22 islands, two-thirds of Vanuatu’s population, have been affected by Cyclone Pam.
  • Approximately 110,000 people are in need of clean drinking water and 75,000 people are in need of emergency shelter.
  • An estimated 82,000 children are directly impacted across Vanuatu.
  • Cyclone Pam has severely compromised the livelihoods of at least 80 per cent of Vanuatu’s rural population.
  • 60% of people in Tafea and Shefa provinces are estimated to be in need of safe drinking water
  • 11 people are confirmed dead.

We urgently need your help to reach those most affected with emergency relief. Clean water, hygiene kits and shelter will be critical to save lives in the wake of this disaster.

Please make a donation to help get emergency relief to those most affected by Cyclone Pam.

What Oxfam is doing

Oxfam is on the ground in Vanuatu. Together with partners, Oxfam is bringing clean, life-saving water and essential hygiene items to thousands of people in Vanuatu. Oxfam’s response also includes emergency livelihood support with strong gender and protection components.

Oxfam has reached at least 24,910 people (12,477 men, 12,433 women) in more than 60 communities on four islands — Efate, Epi Ambrym and Emae — since Tropical Cyclone Pam struck on 13 March 2015. This is 13.3% of the total population affected by Tropical Cyclone Pam. In addition to this, we are supporting local partners who are also working on Tanna and Paama islands.

  • Oxfam has trucked clean water that will help prevent the outbreak of disease to more than 3000 people on the Island of Efate in partnership with Vanuatu’s National Disaster Management Office.
  • Oxfam has distributed hygiene kits to communities in Efate and Ambrym islands. These kits provide essential items for families to maintain their health and hygiene in very difficult circumstances.
  • Oxfam continues to escalate its water and sanitation response
  • While Vanuatu has borne the brunt of damage wrought by Cyclone Pam, other Pacific island countries have been severely affected as well. Oxfam is working directly with the National Disaster Coordination Committee in Tuvalu to support the emergency response in Tuvalu.


Support Oxfam's response to the humanitarian crisis in Vanuatu by donating online or by calling 1-800-466-9326.

 


Update on humanitarian crises in Vanuatu:

  • 65,800 litres of clean water delivered to 3,474 beneficiaries through water trucking activities on Efate Island.
  • 13,809 people accessing clean water through water system rehabilitation.
  • 20,928 people on Efate and Ambrym Islands receiving hygiene kits.
  • 3,406 people have learned good hygiene practices through watching a theatrical performance by Oxfam’s partner Wan Smol Bag.
  • At least 700 people across ten communities—including two schools and a dispensary—provided with large-scale gravity-fed water supply system reconstruction.
  • 10,000 people attended hygiene awareness sessions and received information, education and communication (IEC) materials.
  • Eight one-week-long community-based Water Safety and Security Planning sessions completed on Efate, Epiand Emae islands.

To learn more about Oxfam's work on the ground, please read complete 6-month update hereOpens in a new window.
Previous update:

Updated October 1, 2015

 

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Philippines Typhoon Hagupit https://www.oxfam.ca/emergency/philippines-typhoon-hagupit/ Sun, 07 Dec 2014 18:01:45 +0000 https://oxfamcanprod.wpengine.com/emergency/philippines-typhoon-hagupit/ Oxfam is providing emergency assistance. In this crisis we've seen that disaster preparedness saves lives. Oxfam is on the ground. Its rapid assessment teams, with experts in livelihoods, water and sanitation, protection and gender, are now being deployed to affected areas. Oxfam Canada has pledged funds to support humanitarian work in the wake of Typhoon Hagupit.

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Oxfam is on the ground with emergency assistance

Typhoon Hagupit first hit land as a category 3 typhoon on December 6, 2014. It struck the far eastern island of Samar with winds of 210km/h (130mph) - making it the most powerful storm to hit the Philippines this year.

While Typhoon Hagupit was not as strong as initially feared, damage has been extensive in many hard hit areas along its path.

Oxfam rapid assessment teams are on the ground in several affected areas, including Leyte, Eastern Samar, Northern Samar and Western Samar. They have begun providing life-saving emergency assistance. Oxfam is coordinating assessment and response efforts closely with government and humanitarian partners.

 

The storm caused widespread damage to the Eastern Visayas region, particularly Samar Island, as well as Masbate island in Bicol region before weakening further to become a tropical storm prior to reaching Batangas and southern Luzon. It moved into the West Philippine Sea on December 11, 2014.

Oxfam Canada has pledged funds to support humanitarian work in the wake of Hagupit. With your help, we can rush more life-saving aid to families in need and, when the worst is over, help them get back on their feet. Please donate to Oxfam Canada's Emergency Response Fund today.

We have seen in this crisis that disaster preparedness saves lives. Over one million people were evacuated to safety.

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Typhoon Hagupit, known locally as Ruby, hit a region still recovering from the destruction caused by last year’s super Typhoon Haiyan. Haiyan decimated the central region of the archipelago, killing more than 7000 people and forcing 4 million people to leave their homes.

Better preparedness and early warning has resulted in a lot less suffering from this typhoon. This year, the Philippines government led one of the world’s largest peacetime evacuations. This massive pre-emptive evacuation of communities in the Typhoon’s path saved lives.

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Depending on the extent of the damage to homes, hundreds of thousands of women, men, girls and boys will need support in the coming days. Oxfam remains concerned about the situation of those still struggling to recover from last year’s typhoon.

As part of our initial response, our teams have been helping to ensure that affected communities have access to safe drinking water and that no major disease outbreaks occur. Assistance thus far includes:

  • 8000 hyposol water purification units and 4,000 hygiene kits are being distributed in the northern part of Eastern Samar
  • 1,000 hygiene kits donated to Solidarités International for distribution in Western Samar
  • 6 water bladders and 6 tap stands, along with technical support for installation, for municipalities in Western Samar.

Updated December 11, 2014

Read Neil Pancipanci's account of the storm in Tacloban.  Neil is an Oxfam Livelihoods Officer based in the Philippines.

Oxfam Canada's Emergency Response Fund (ERF) enables us to provide timely, appropriate responses to emergency situations and support reconstruction work. The ERF ensures that Oxfam can quickly respond wherever and whenever the need is greatest.

 

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Floods in Pakistan https://www.oxfam.ca/emergency/floods-in-pakistan/ Fri, 19 Sep 2014 22:25:58 +0000 https://oxfamcanprod.wpengine.com/emergency/floods-in-pakistan/

Oxfam Canada's Emergency Response Fund (ERF) enables us to provide timely, appropriate responses to emergency situations and to support reconstruction work. The ERF ensures that Oxfam can quickly respond wherever and whenever the need is greatest.

Three days of flooding in Azad Jammu, Kashmir, Punjab and Gilgit Baltistan in early September 2014  affected over 1 million people with the number expected to rise to 3 million. The flash floods affected more than 2,100 villages with more than 47,000 homes partially or fully destroyed. So far, over 300 people are reported to have lost their lives and over 500 people have been injured.

Oxfam and partners have been distributing hygiene kits, conducting search & rescue operations and providing for emergency water and sanitation needs in the affected areas.

The flood waters in Punjab are receding, and many people who were made homeless are now returning. Oxfam supported 60,000 people in the wake of the floods, and the team is now focusing on helping people rebuild their lives and livelihoods.


Oxfam Canada's Emergency Response Fund (ERF) enables us to provide timely, appropriate responses to emergency situations and to support reconstruction work. The ERF ensures that Oxfam can quickly respond wherever and whenever the need is greatest.

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Updated January 8, 2015

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Floods in India https://www.oxfam.ca/emergency/floods-in-india/ Fri, 19 Sep 2014 21:31:00 +0000 https://oxfamcanprod.wpengine.com/emergency/floods-in-india/

Oxfam Canada's Emergency Response Fund (ERF) enables us to provide timely, appropriate responses to emergency situations and to support reconstruction work. The ERF ensures that Oxfam can quickly respond wherever and whenever the need is greatest.

The Jammu and Kashmir floods in India on September 4, 2014 were the worst floods in more than 60 years. The flash floods affected more than 2,500 villages and hundreds of thousands of people. More than 450 villages were completely submerged. More than 200 people have been confirmed dead and 700 injured.

The worst hit districts were Anantnag, Pulwama, Sophiyan and Kulgam districts in South Kashmir, Bandipore in North Kashmir and Poonch and Rajouri districts in Jammu region. Water has receded in Srinagar but many parts are still under water. Weeks after the initial flooding, people were still stranded in their houses. In mid-Septmber 2014, 150,000 people were marooned in many parts of the valley.

What Oxfam is doing

  • Food has been distributed in affected areas of Jammu (Akhnoor).
  • Oxfam’s response has reached about 9,000 affected families in Kashmir.
  • Over 400 of the worst affected families received unconditional cash in Srinagar and South Kashmir, where about 900 families have also received food aid.
  • Our teams have completed the construction and rehabilitation of latrines in 3 districts, all installed with hand washing points and most of which are now being maintained by the community.

Oxfam plans to reach reach 60,000 people and will provide:

  1. Water and sanitation support focusing on safe drinking water to reduce public health risks.
  2. Public Health measures to avoid environmental contamination and ensure hygiene.
  3. Temporary emergency shelter support for families. The majority of affected families are living in camps or temporary shelters and need additional support with special attention towards the oncoming winter.

Oxfam Canada's Emergency Response Fund (ERF) enables us to provide timely, appropriate responses to emergency situations and to support reconstruction work. The ERF ensures that Oxfam can quickly respond wherever and whenever the need is greatest.

green click here to donate button

Updated January 8, 2015

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Floods in South Asia https://www.oxfam.ca/emergency/floods-in-south-asia/ Thu, 11 Sep 2014 17:09:21 +0000 https://oxfamcanprod.wpengine.com/emergency/floods-in-south-asia/

Oxfam Canada's Emergency Response Fund (ERF) enables us to provide timely, appropriate responses to emergency situations and to support reconstruction work. The ERF ensures that Oxfam can quickly respond wherever and whenever the need is greatest.

Bangladesh

Continous flooding in Bangladesh since August 14, 2014 has affected nearly 3 million people. Oxfam and its partners have deployed an Emergency Water Treatment plant and have been distributing safe drinking water to people in flood-damaged areas.

India

The Jammu and Kashmir floods in India on September 4, 2014 were the worst floods in more than 60 years. The flash floods affected more than 2,500 villages and hundreds of thousands of people.

More information

Nepal

More than 200,000 people in 18 districts of Nepal have been affected by the massive flooding that extended from August 13th to 16th 2014, with 4 districts severely affected. Over 18,000 homes have been partially or fully destroyed. Oxfam and its partners are in the affected areas and have been providing chlorine for water purification and assessing recovery needs.

Pakistan

Three days of flooding in Azad Jammu, Kashmir, Punjab and Gilgit Baltistan in early September 2014 has so far affected over 1 million people with the number expected to rise to 3 million.

More information


Oxfam Canada's Emergency Response Fund (ERF) enables us to provide timely, appropriate responses to emergency situations and to support reconstruction work. The ERF ensures that Oxfam can quickly respond wherever and whenever the need is greatest.

green click here to donate button

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Ebola: How Oxfam and its partners are responding https://www.oxfam.ca/emergency/ebola-how-oxfam-and-its-partners-are-responding/ Wed, 27 Aug 2014 20:59:18 +0000 https://oxfamcanprod.wpengine.com/emergency/ebola-how-oxfam-and-its-partners-are-responding/

The Situation

The Ebola outbreak has devastated communities in West Africa. We are working with communities to prevent new hotspots from emerging and to help them recover.

  • There have been more than 25,000 cases reported.
  • More than 11,000 people have died.
  • Liberia has been declared Ebola-free. However, in Sierra Leone and Guinea, new disease 'hotspots' continue to appear. On June 10th, Sierra Leone extended its state of emergency for a further 90 days.

We can’t stop fighting this Ebola outbreak until we get to zero cases in West Africa – despite significant progress, there’s still a long way to go until the region is Ebola-free.

It should be a global priority to help these devastated countries recover with a post-Ebola ‘Marshall Plan’ led by governments with community consultation, which includes building health care that won’t fall apart in a crisis and improving the thousands of clinics and schools in dire need of water and sanitation.


How Oxfam is helping

Oxfam is responding to the Ebola crisis and contributing to recovery efforts. To date, we have reached over 1.3 million people by working with communities to raise awareness and supporting medical facilities with water, sanitation and cleaning equipment.

In Sierra Leone and Liberia, our programs have reached more than a million people and have included:

  • providing medical facilities with water, sanitation, and cleaning equipment;
  • training hundreds of community and village health committees to improve awareness and promote referrals and safe burial practices;
  • training hundreds of volunteers to actively seek out cases door to door, encourage testing and referrals to health facilities, contact ambulances, and help families stay in touch with the progress of loved ones undergoing treatment; and
  • helping communities to get back on their feet post-Ebola, by supporting women’s saving groups to restart their businesses, giving cash support to some of the most vulnerable and providing farmers with tools, seeds and training.

In nearby countries like Senegal, Gambia, Guinea Bissau, and Mali, we have been working closely with governments on preparedness and prevention measures - work that has included raising awareness through signs, radio broadcasts, and door-to-door campaigns; installation of hand-washing stations and latrines; and distribution of hygiene kits.

To successfully tackle Ebola, communities need to be fully involved in the fight against it. That's why Oxfam is piloting bottom-up approaches, with local people promoting health messages in their own communities. Without this, other measures such as treatment, safe burials and contact-tracing cannot work.

The Ebola Crisis and Gender

Since the very outbreak of Ebola, women’s rights groups have been and continue to be at the frontline of the Ebola response - and play a key role in reaching women in affected communities. But they must be further supported financially and integrated into response structures.

In Sierra Leone, Oxfam has partnered with the 50/50 women’s group to support female Ebola survivors, reinforcing prevention messages and calling attention to how women and girls may be particularly stigmatised.

Oxfam calls on all implementing agencies to integrate gender dimensions, gender equality and women’s participation throughout the outbreak management and recovery process, to ensure the needs of both women and men are being met, and gender equality is strengthened wherever possible. This must include gender and age disaggregated data collection. National gender assessments are underway in Sierra Leone and Liberia. Further research is also required to guide the gender aspects of this response and improve response and recovery.

There are broader gendered impacts to the Ebola crisis, particularly in terms of wider health needs and livelihoods.

Access to maternal health care was already very poor and Ebola has made this worse with the crisis diverting critical resources. This is undermining recent progress where the number of maternal deaths in Liberia and Sierra Leone had almost halved since 2000. There is real risk that women - who are too afraid to seek medical care - are at increased risk of dying at home from complications in childbirth.

There is an urgent need to mitigate the economic losses of women during the pandemic and to position them for economic recovery and eventually, economic empowerment in the aftermath of the pandemic.

What we still need to do

Getting to zero Ebola can only be achieved with full community engagement and increased focus on tracking down each chain of infection transmission.

We need to see this approach prioritized and coordinated at district level, in order to improve understanding, build trust in the effectiveness of services offered and change risky behavior. It’s now recognised by the World Health Organization and others that community engagement is vital, otherwise other aspects such as treatment, safe burials and contact tracing cannot work.

Right now, we need to support governments and communities in beginning to return to normal while maintaining measures to protect against Ebola. Looking forward, the outbreak has shattered the affected countries. Economies need to be restarted, jobs and incomes are urgently needed and health services need to be rebuilt. The world cannot just walk away after West Africa is declared Ebola-free.


Learn More

Ebola one year on - Hearts and homes were key to breakthrough

Watch On the other side of the string: Video on Ebola quarantine in Sierra Leone

Photos and stories from Freetown, Sierra Leone on Ebola and how it has forced thousands of families into quarantine

Ensuring a Gender-Integrated Response to the Ebola Crisis - September 2014

Oxfam Blog: The challenges of Ebola quarantines in Freetown and how Oxfam is helping

Oxfam Blog: Responding to the largest Ebola outbreak in historyOpens in a new window

The Humanitarian Coalition is Canada's only joint appeal mechanism. It is comprised of CARE Canada, Oxfam Canada, Oxfam-Québec, Plan Canada and Save the Children Canada. With a combined presence in more than 120 countries, we bring together Canada's leading aid agencies to finance relief efforts in times of international humanitarian crises. We work together to eliminate unnecessary competition, reduce the duplication of fundraising costs, and inform the public on humanitarian needs.

Updated July 28, 2015

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Crisis in Gaza https://www.oxfam.ca/emergency/crisis-in-gaza/ Tue, 22 Jul 2014 12:18:22 +0000 https://oxfamcanprod.wpengine.com/emergency/crisis-in-gaza/

One year on from the 2014 Gaza conflict, most people's lives have not improved and an entire generation of young people face an increasingly bleak future with little hope of jobs, reconstruction or safety.

There has been virtually no reconstruction, there is no permanent ceasefire, no meaningful peace talks, and the blockade is still firmly in place.

The humanitarian needs in Gaza are enormous. Gaza has witnessed its worst destruction in decades and an already vulnerable civilian population has been left even more vulnerable. Our team is helping 380,000 people in desperate need. But we urgently need your support to reach more people in need and to build a lasting peace.

The Situation

An estimated 1.8 million people in the Gaza Strip have been affected by the violence in the region. Civilians make up the majority of casualties - around 85%. Oxfam is helping civilians access food, clean water, and emergency health care.

  • More than 100,000 people (more than half of these children) have had their homes destroyed and are still displaced.
  • Most of the water supply is unsafe to drink and there are power cuts of 12 hours a day.
  • The economy has been devastated, with more than 60 per cent of youth now unemployed - the highest rate in the world. The blockade prevents most people from leaving Gaza or trading with the outside world and markets in the West Bank. Fishermen and farmers are restricted from accessing their land and often shot at while working.
  • More than 40% of people in Gaza - 67% of youth - are now unemployed and 80% of people are in need of aid.
  • More than 300,000 children and youth were left extremely traumatized by the conflict - many of them lost relatives, homes and live in daily fear of renewed bombing. Last year's conflict will affect an entire generation of Gaza for years to come.
  • Restrictions on essential building materials mean that rebuilding homes has yet to begin. At the rate that construction materials are currently able to enter Gaza it will take decades to meet the reconstruction needs.
  • Tens of thousands of Israeli civilians have also been affected by the rocket strikes from Gaza, with buildings being hit and schools and other facilities closed. 69 Israelis have been killed - 64 soldiers and 5 civilians.

Oxfam condemns all violence against civilians. A permanent ceasefire, accountability of all parties for ongoing violations of international law, and an end to the Israeli blockade are needed urgently.

What Oxfam is doing to help

Working with partners, our humanitarian and development work helps around 700,000 people in Gaza affected by the crisis.

  • We provide safe water, rebuild damaged water systems and improve sanitation facilities across much of Gaza.
  • With the World Food Programme, we run a food voucher project that ensures 60,000 people have enough to eat and supports the local economy.
  • We work with farmers and fishermen who are prevented from accessing their livelihoods, and support a hospital and mobile clinics to provide primary healthcare.
  • We help local producers improve the quality of their produce and get it to market, and we help local civil society to advocate for their rights.
  • We campaign for lasting peace and security for all civilians and an end to the blockade.

Oxfam staff and partners, many of whom have been affected by the conflict, are working hard to respond to the mounting humanitarian needs.

Our emergency response includes:

  • delivering safe drinking water (3 litres a day) to 250,000 people
  • installing generators to pump water and repairing damaged water systems.
  • providing emergency food vouchers to 18,000 families (around 148,000 people)
  • supporting medical services (through support to a hospital, health centres and mobile clinics) for about 49,000 people
  • distributing hygiene kits to 26,000 people in shelters.

Oxfam is calling on both sides to agree a lasting solution to the conflict.

We condemn all violence against civilians, both Israeli military actions and Palestinian rocket fire. Civilians have borne the brunt of the attacks and civilians in Gaza make up the vast majority of casualties.

The international community needs to redouble efforts to achieve a just and lasting peace that brings security and development to all Palestinians and Israelis, and respects the basic human right of all peoples to feed their families and live with dignity.

Learn More

Gaza's youth using art to overcome the scars of war, July 7, 2015

 

Updated July 8, 2015

 

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