Presbyterian Disaster Assistance - Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.)
PC(USA) Seal
 
 
             
 

ACT-Caritas prepares for the coming rains

July 2008

  Give now!

DR000044
 
             
 
 
Photo of woman holding material to shelter her head from the rain
An IDP woman shelters from the rains in Darfur.   © Claire Mc Evoy, IRIN

Life in Darfur can be harsh at the best of times, but during the rainy season it can be particularly challenging. Many families who have lost their homes because of the conflict are now living in makeshift mud huts and straw shelters.

Ensuring people have shelter, medicine and reserve food is also a challenge for the staff of ACT-Caritas. The June to September rainy season can make road transport difficult, so it’s important to prepare things well in advance.

In Mershing, South Darfur, staff have already delivered essential household items to hundreds of internally displaced families living in camps.

In Teigy camp, one of the ACT-Caritas IDP camps, a large group of mostly women and children gathers at sunrise at their community center to receive items delivered by ACT-Caritas.

“I am happy because the household things from last time are now damaged,” said Fatima, who has been living in Teigy camp since 2004 with her three sons and four daughters. She points to the plastic sheet on the roof of her house she got two years ago, now broken by many months of exposure to the harsh sun and rain.

In May, more than  4,700 families in nine camps in the Mershing area received the protective plastic sheets for their roofs. They also got sleeping mats, blankets and women’s clothes.

The large-scale distribution is challenging. ACT-Caritas receives essential support from the 22 members of a ‘Solidarity Committee’ of sheiks representing the internally displaced as well as leaders from the host community in Mershing.

“We helped the displaced people with food, water and clothes for three months before aid organizations arrived here,” said Adam Mohammed Altahir, a member of the Solidarity Committee and from the host community.

He said that the numbers of internally displaced people put pressure upon the local community and their limited resources, and so he is grateful to ACT-Caritas, who began work there in 2004 through national partner organizations, the Sudan Council of Churches (SCC) and Sudan Social Development Organization (SUDO).

Good plastic sheeting is not easily available on the market or is too costly for most families to buy.

Alam Eldin said that many people would work on local farms to buy grass or plastic sheets to rehabilitate the roofs of their houses to prevent leaking.

“It would take me 45 days to finish work on three grass covers for food to sell at the market so that I am able to buy only one plastic sheet”, said Fatima, who earns a small income from local handicrafts.

A leaky roof can mean the spread of deadly disease. ACT-Caritas Health Coordinator Dr. Omer Ibrahim says that the health clinic in Mershing is likely to receive more cases of illness during the rainy season.

“Malaria, diarrhea and eye infections are usually the top three diseases prevalent during the period,” he said.

He explained that the nature of the area, where there are domestic animals living in close proximity to people and places which are fertile breeding grounds for mosquitoes, combined with a damp environment are behind the spread of these diseases.

Mr. Ibrahim said that extra drugs for treating acute watery diarrhea and other essential medical supplies have already been put in place in every clinic in case of an outbreak. In addition, a three-month supply of food for nutrition centers has also been stockpiled in locations.

Since 2004, Presbyterian Disaster Assistance has supported the humanitarian work in Darfur in cooperation with Action by Churches Together (ACT) International and Caritas Internationalis, a confederation of Catholic relief, development and social service organizations. 

The PDA supported program of ACT-Caritas has become one of the largest humanitarian efforts in southern and western Darfur with a proven capacity to respond to this humanitarian crisis.

 
             
 
 

This story was written by Emad Eldin Ali Adam, ACT-Caritas.  Catherine Dennis, ACT-Caritas Donor Liaison and Communications Officer, also contributed to this story.

 
         
  Sudan response index      
             
PC(USA) Home (Link)
     
   
  Home  
   
  Who We Are  
   
  Give Now  
   
  National Response  
   
  International
Response
 
   
  How to Help  
   
  Work Teams  
   
  Frequently Asked Questions  
   
  Links  
   
     
  button graphic: Give  
     
  Resources: preparedness, response and mission tools  
     
  Stories of hope  
     
 
     
  For more information: Pamela Burdine, (888) 728-7228 x5389, Send email or write to: 100 Witherspoon Street, Louisville, KY, 40222  
     
  Link to Top of Page  
 
Contact PC(USA) (link)
Copyright Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.). All Rights Reserved.