Children traumatized by Nepal quake need aid to rebuild lives - UNICEF
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[February 12, 2024]
By Gopal Sharma
KATHMANDU (Reuters) - About 68,000 children and their families who
survived Nepal’s deadliest quake in eight years need further
humanitarian aid to rebuild their lives, UNICEF said on Sunday, 100 days
after the tremors that devastated parts of west Nepal.
A 6.4 magnitude earthquake struck two districts of Jajarkot and Rukum
West in the remote western region of the Himalayan country on Nov. 3,
killing at least 154 people, more than half of them children.
The tremors, the deadliest in Nepal since two quakes killed about 9,000
people in 2015, flattened more than 26,000 houses and partially damaged
another 35,000 buildings, rendering them unfit to live, according to
official estimates.
UNICEF said about 200,000 people, including 68,000 children, many of
whom spent a cold winter in temporary shelters, still need humanitarian
assistance to recover from the disaster.
The U.N. agency said it is appealing for $14.7 million funding to
support these children.
“Thousands of children affected by the destructive earthquake ... are
still dealing with the trauma of losing loved ones. Their development is
at risk as they lost their belongings, homes and schools, among others,”
Alice Akunga, UNICEF representative to Nepal, said in a statement.
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A woman holding a child who died during an earthquake mourns in
Jajarkot, Nepal, November 5, 2023. REUTERS/Navesh Chitrakar/File
Photo
“Even as temperatures rise, the
needs are still high as children require nutritious food, clean
water, education and shelter. One of the best ways to rebuild
children’s lives and restore a sense of normalcy is to get them back
to school and learning, so that they can play with their friends,
learn and heal,” Akunga said.
Anil Pokhrel, chief of Nepal's National Disaster Risk Reduction and
Management Authority, said a proposal to provide financial support
to affected families to rebuild their homes was ready for cabinet
approval.
(Reporting by Gopal Sharma; editing by Mark Heinrich)
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