Aid after the tsunami
LO:• To be able to distinguish between
different types of aid• To be able to explain what aid would
be needed to help after the tsunami
Types of aid
400 million children do not have access to safe water
140 million children have
never been to school
270 million children have no access to health care services
Thousand of homes have been destroyed in Haiti after
the earthquake.
How can developed countries help?• There are 3 types of aid
Short term aidGiven to immediately help in the aftermath of a
disaster
Long term aidGiven to help a country develop over the course of
a number of years
Appropriate aidHelp given to countries that uses local peoples skills
and technology.
Long or short term?
Aid is given by 3 main groups:• Individuals• Governments• Non-Governmental organizations
(Unicef, Red Cross etc…)
Governments: Short term• The governments of the affected countries
reacted reasonably quickly but were reliant in many cases on OUTSIDE AID due to the magnitude of the disaster and the lower level of economic development of the places affected.
• The first tasks of the governments and humanitarian aid agencies were to ensure access to food and clean water, and medical care for the injured. The World Health Organization warned that the number of deaths from preventable diseases such as cholera and typhoid could rival the death toll from the disaster itself.
• The USGS managed to get a warning to Africa which saved lives
Governments: Longer term
• Country governments helped to rebuild whole community towns, including in Indonesia in Aceh province
• An early warning system for Tsunami has now been put in place in the Indian Ocean, through co-operation from many governments.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=psxquPsreb0
Aceh province 5 years the disaster
• http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2009/dec/23/2004-tsunami-five-years-on
• 167,000 people died• Red Cross :has provided 4,807,000 people with
assistance; 51,395 new houses have been built; 289 hospitals and clinics built or rehabilitated.
• Pledged international aid from all sources for the recovery has topped $13.5bn, almost half of it given by private individuals and organisations.
Tsunami? What is needed….You are the foreign minister in Indonesia. Write a letter to the UK government to explain why you
need emergency aid. Include:
Explanation of the problem (e.g. what effects did the tsunami have) and what short term aid is
most needed and why.What other aid may also help the long term
development of the area or would prevent this happening in the future.
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