CAFOD’semergency
work
Short-term relief
CAFOD works with local organisations on the ground who can respond to emergencies immediately and are used to working with local people
Conflict
• When a country is at war people are often forced to leave their homes
• CAFOD’s partners provide emergency relief such as shelter, food, water and health care
Short-term relief – Conflict
Real lives: Darfur, Sudan
• Khadija was driven from her home when militia attacked her village
• She has been living in a temporary camp run by CAFOD’s partner ACT/Caritas
Short-term relief - Conflict
Real lives: Darfur, Sudan
She received an emergency kit including cooking and washing utensils
Short-term relief - Conflict
Real lives: Lebanon
• CAFOD partners help people like Marie, 13, recover from their experiences of war
• Marie was living in Beirut during the Israeli attack on Lebanon and heard bombs every night
• Local partner, Caritas Lebanon provides counselling and support to help people like Marie recover from their trauma
Short-term relief - Conflict
Natural disasters
• CAFOD helps partners respond to disasters such as earthquakes and floods and to give people what they need to survive
• CAFOD also helps people affected by drought, another type of natural disaster, where people do not have enough food to survive because harvests have failed or livestock have died
Short-term relief - Natural disasters
• In Pakistan CAFOD’s partner CRS has built shelters for people who lost their homes in the earthquake
• Safeer, 20, also received a stove as part of his shelter kit
Short-term relief – Natural disasters
Real lives:Pakistan
Real lives: NigerHadiza did not have enough food to feed her family, after the harvest failed due to drought.
Short-term relief – Natural disasters
Real lives: Niger
She took her baby daughter, Roukaya to a CAFOD-funded feeding centre, where she was weighed and measured and found to be malnourished.
Short-term relief – Natural disasters
Real lives: Niger
Hadiza received a weekly food ration for the baby, and extra food for the rest of her family.
Short-term relief – Natural disasters
Rebuilding lives
• Natural disasters and conflicts can have a devastating effect on people’s lives
• Homes, schools, health centres and livelihoods can all be destroyed
• CAFOD helps by building new homes and replacing vital equipment so people can get back to work
• Selvanami and her children lost their house when the tsunami hit their village in south east India
• They are one of 220 families in Kottilpadu who have received a new house from CAFOD’s partner Caritas India
Rebuilding lives
Real lives: India
“Four of my friends died in the tsunami – some of them were my school mates.”
“I miss my friends and it’s strange living in a new place. But this house is better than the old house and I’m not afraid of the sea anymore.”
Selvarmary, 11.
Rebuilding lives
Real lives: India
• The houses are equipped with water points and electricity
• The Indian government is responsible for laying roads and installing sanitation systems. Caritas India is putting pressure on the government to complete the work.
Rebuilding lives
Real lives: India
Real lives: Darfur, Sudan
• Bdria is 18 and lives in Dereig camp in south Darfur
• She has not been able to go to school because of the conflict – but is now starting in the camp school, run by CAFOD’s partner Sudanaid
Rebuilding lives
Real lives: Darfur, Sudan
She also attends a sewing class and hopes to earn extra money for her family by setting up a sewing business.
Rebuilding lives
Real lives: Darfur, Sudan
“I want to thankyoung people inEngland and Walesfor the work they’vedone to help us. It isgood to help yourbrothers and sistersin humanity”
Bdria, 18.
Rebuilding lives
How short-term relief becomes long-term development
• CAFOD’s partners talk to communities about what they want, help them to prioritise their needs and help them to find new ways to support their families and improve their general standard of living
• Where possible, CAFOD remains in communities for the long term after an emergency has happened
Real lives: India
• Ragesh, 24, was a fisherman before the tsunami
• He took part in the training scheme supported by CAFOD where he learned how to operate a crane and now has a job lifting freight in the local port
How short-term relief becomes long-term development
Real lives: India
• He and others like him earn more money than before
• “Most youngsters are motivated to move away from traditional fishing because the yield is coming down, so we are looking for alternative options like heavy machinery”
Ragesh, 24.
How short-term relief becomes long-term development
Real lives: India
• These girls missed two years of school before the tsunami because their parents could not afford to pay school fees
• CAFOD’s partner, Caritas India, funded classes in their village so they could catch up and go back to school
How short-term relief becomes long-term development
Real lives: India
“I’m glad that I can go to school again. I thought I wouldn’t be able to study at all, so now I am very happy. I would like to be a teacher.”
Bala Sundari, 14.
How short-term relief becomes long-term development
Real lives: Nicaragua• Darling Urbina Arevalo,
15, takes part in a simulated flood response run by a CAFOD partner to help her community respond to future natural disasters
• In Nicaragua this area is prone to hurricanes and floods and people can be completely cut off. Learning how to scale ropes helps people like Darling to reach safety and assist others
How short-term relief becomes long-term development
Real lives: Nicaragua
“We’re not doing this just for fun. Every time it rains here the road and river floods and people can’t cross. Now when it rains they can cross with ropes”
Darling, 15.
How short-term relief becomes long-term development
Picture creditsAmelia Bookstein, Fiona Callister, Laura Donkin, Noel Gavin, Marcella Haddad, Patrick Nicholson, CRS/David Snyder, Jim Stipe, Laura Storr, Stefan Teplan.