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Afarvänner i Sverige
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Realizing
that assistance takes time to collect and organize and knowing how critical the
problem is, APDA set out ahead of receiving funds to assist on January 20th
taking 5 health workers, a couple of cartons of human medicine, 100 liters of
kerosene, 100 pieces of soap and some animal medicines. Unbeknown to our
reckoning, a storm of rain starting in the Amhara/
Tigray highlands went the bordering woredas partly
affecting Sifra (Zone 1), Uwa,
Awra and Goolina and
falling well in Yallo Woreda.
The edge of the storm reached the southern parts of Teeru
and also caused a considerable ground flood to come in to the woreda from the Goolina/ Battling
on through the recently sand – strewn hills of northern Awra
now the vehicle sliding through mud, we reach a very anxious woreda telling us that over 75% of the most affected are
now trapped behind the overnight flood. Wading up to our thighs in mud and
water, we reach where we had been some 8 days ago to face the latest
development:
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Overnight death of huge numbers of weak
cattle and sheep due to the flood and mud
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The traditional wells are now covered
by flood water and the people are drinking rain – water – most likely
contaminated by the carcasses. We
break into 3 teams using the health workers and with the community leaders
begin to go settlement to settlement to activate:
a)
Carcass – burning
b)
Boiling water for drinking
c)
Promoting the use of soap. Firewood
is available since a great section of the woreda
forest died when the Awra/ Again,
we re-activated the 15 woreda paravets
who had been trained in early 2004, equipping them to give immediate treatment
and assist in the carcass – burning effort. Meanwhile, I was brought to the
local level of reality by one man and his cow. The story goes like this: On the
first day, as we were wading through the mud to reach the settlements, a voice
from inside a forested area calls out, ‘come and help me’. Reluctant to risk
missing a foot, we respond to find Ahaw and his wife
bending over a cow. He says he slept out with the cow overnight and this is the
fourth day he and his wife have hand- fed their last cow with seed pods, tree –
branches and snippets of grass they managed to scrounge. They are smoking the
cow to fight off biting flies and the tick infestation. He begs our help to try
once more to stand the cow up. We try but she cannot stand. Trying to grasp his
own reality, he jokes saying the cow’s name is Yallo
since he and his father bought her as a calf in Yallo
market and she alone remains of his and his father’s 100 cows. Realizing who we
are, he suggests fencing off Yallo with thorn
branches and taking us on to his house for the night. Next morning, we set out
with him to see if his cow survived the night. To his extreme joy, she was
still there. Almost skipping, he motioned to his wife to keep up the vigil of
feeding Yallo while he rushed on with us to bring
back a paravet with our medicine to treat her. The
situation is hard to grasp: one year ago, Teeru was
probably the best - off grazing land in Afar Region. This man, along with
perhaps 20,600 people (50%) of the woreda is
immanently threatened with destitution. People
are suffering from diarrhea, chronic malaria with anaemia
and respiratory infection. The overwhelming fear is an outbreak of cholera –
type diarrhea. APDA reminds those
assisting the urgency of medical support: the organization immediately needs
208,100 ETB ($US 25,331) to purchase medicines, supplies and support health
workers to avert/ contain disease outbreak. Signed: Valerie
Browning |
Last changed: 04 juli 2011 |