After an earthquake struck in western Nepal, damaging houses in two districts of Karnali Province, families have nowhere to stay and are now living outdoors. ActionAid is concerned about the lack of shelter for everyone as winter has just started, and currently, the temperature is under five degrees Celsius.
Sujeeta Mathema, ActionAid Nepal’s Executive Director, said:
“We are especially concerned about women and children, who always suffer disproportionately during such disasters. We need to act quickly to protect pregnant women and lactating mothers, who are now out in the cold. These women not only require shelter but are also in dire need of nutritional support. Families have lost everything.”
“Apart from these unique needs, the risk of violence against women increases during such disasters because they are now exposed without shelter. ActionAid Nepal has worked with communities in Jajarkot before, and we stand in solidarity with them during this time.”
By Saturday, more than 157 people had been killed and over 500 injured in the 6.4-magnitude earthquake. Sadly, these numbers are expected to go up as more people are still missing, and many feared to be trapped in the rubble. According to the National Disaster Risk Reduction & Management Authority Nepal, women and children make up most of the fatalities.
Saroj Pokhrel, ActionAid Nepal’s Head of Programme and Policy, said:
“Nepal is still reeling from the aftermath of twin earthquakes that hit the same region only a month ago. On October 3, families were left picking up the pieces after the earthquakes struck western Nepal. ActionAid Nepal is still responding in that region, and Friday’s earthquake only worsened the humanitarian situation.”
Concerns are also rising about how long it takes to get aid to the affected families as the earthquake struck in a hard-to-reach area.
Gautam Raj Adhikari, the Program Director at ActionAid’s partner organization KIRDARC-Nepal, said:
“Families need food, water, sanitation and hygiene facilities, and medical supplies, but aid is trickling in very slowly as it is difficult to access this region. This area is mountainous, and without a proper road network to bring in aid, we are losing crucial time. Worse still, we cannot consider flying in the aid as the weather is terrible.”
The trauma that comes with such disaster means families also need psychosocial support to cope and feel safe again, says ActionAid.
ENDS
Spokespeople available:
· Sujeeta Mathema is ActionAid Nepal’s Executive Director. She speaks English and Nepali.
· Saroj Pokhrel is Head of Programme and Policy at ActionAid Nepal. He speaks English and Nepali.
· Gautam Raj Adhikari is Program Director at KIRDARC-Nepal. He speaks English and Nepali.
For media requests, please email Christal.James@actionaid.org or call 704 665 9743.
About ActionAid
ActionAid is a global federation working with more than 15 million people living in more than 40 of the world’s poorest countries. We want to see a just, fair, and sustainable world in which everybody enjoys the right to a life of dignity and freedom from poverty and oppression. We work to achieve social justice and gender equality and to eradicate poverty.