UNICEF assists children displaced by Hurricane Ida in El Salvador
Tim Ledwith, UNICEF
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| UNICEF correspondent Tim Ledwith reports on the aftermath of flooding that displaced thousands of families in El Salvador in November. |
LA LIBERTAD, El Salvador (December 22, 2009) — Ismael, age 13, put a brave face on the story of how his family fled for their lives in the floods that struck El Salvador in early November. In the tiny hamlet of Melara, he pointed to a stretch of rocks and barren ground—all that remained of the houses where he and his relatives used to live.
On November 7 and 8, heavy rains from Hurricane Ida, combined with another storm system in the Pacific, battered the Salvadoran departments of Cuscatlán, La Libertad (where Melara is located), La Paz, San Martin, San Salvador and Verapaz.
Some 75,000 Salvadorans were displaced from their homes. About 15,000 of them took refuge in shelters that were quickly set up, mostly in local school buildings.
A month later, nearly 6,000 are still living in converted classrooms. More than 25 families from Melara, for example, remain at the Eduardo Guirola School, which Ismael normally attends. Their prospects for permanent housing are still uncertain.
"These families have lost everything," said shelter manager Tanya Roque.
Lives and property lost
© UNICEF/2009/Ledwith
Ismael, age 13, surveys the area where he and his extended family lived in the hamlet of Melares, La Libertad province. Their homes were destroyed in the floods that struck El Salvador in November
Ismael told a story of survival that was echoed—almost word for word—by at least a dozen children at shelters in La Libertad and other affected communities. In the early morning hours of November 8, he recalled, rapidly rising floodwaters took his sleeping family by surprise. They had to flee, leaving behind their home and all their belongings, which were lost in the deluge.
"My grandmother's house was also wrecked," Ismael said. "There's no kitchen. There's nothing."
The devastation in Melara came from an adjacent river that surged beyond its banks, washing away houses and even the concrete pilings of a highway bridge nearby. In other areas, homes and infrastructure were damaged or destroyed by avalanches of mud and boulders from deforested hillsides and mountain slopes.
Overall, the floods and landslides killed some 200 people, destroyed or damaged thousands of homes and wiped out vital water-supply and power systems.
Supplies for the displaced
© UNICEF/2009/Valencia
A mother and child wash up at the communal sink in a shelter set up in a school in La Libertad, El Salvador. Posters in the shelter provide residents with instructions on health and hygiene practices.
In the disaster's immediate aftermath, displaced families desperately needed essential supplies, including food and safe water. Government and humanitarian agencies responded quickly enough to prevent widespread disease outbreaks. UNICEF provided 250,000 liters of bottled water and 140 hygiene kits in those first weeks.
UNICEF also distributed 3,500 kits with household items for families whose belongings had been buried in mud or washed away. About a third of the shelter residents are children.
"I have three little boys here who are two, three and four months old," said Emma Rojas, manager of a shelter in Ilopnago, on the outskirts of San Salvador. "The rest are anywhere from 2 to 12 years old."
In early December, 160 families remained in the shelter, most of them from the hard-hit municipality of Joya Grande, where 175 homes were rendered uninhabitable. "Most of the people here have no home to return to," said Rojas. "Their houses are completely buried."
A sense of normalcy
© UNICEF/2009/Ledwith
On the outskirts of San Salvador, a repair crew clears flood damage in the municipality of Joya Grande, where 175 houses were destroyed or damaged, and five people—including three children—were killed.
Even as their basic needs are met, many youths who experienced the floods remain fearful and insecure. To help relieve their stress, UNICEF has provided psycho-social counseling services and recreation kits.
Play activities in the shelters are designed to help children regain a sense of normalcy, and they seem to be having an impact.
"I was afraid but I feel better," said Jocelyn Beatrice a la Costa, 11, who was playing with her friends at a shelter in San Vicente department. "Here, I can forget a little bit what happened."
International aid needed
Now, UNICEF and its partners in El Salvador are turning from the initial recovery phase to rehabilitation. With hundreds of homes destroyed and thousands damaged, building permanent housing for displaced families will be a major challenge. And much more international funding is needed to repair the country's infrastructure.
In mid-November, the United Nations issued a flash appeal asking donors to provide additional humanitarian aid for Salvadoran flood victims. The appeal includes $3.2 million for UNICEF's emergency programs. To date, however, the donor response has been disappointing.
© UNICEF/2009/Ledwith
Adeleci Cruz, now living with her surviving family members at a shelter in San Vicente department, lost two other sons, aged 12 and 15, in the avalanche of rocks and mud that struck their home in early morning hours of November 8.
"We propose, through the flash appeal, to support the country through the rehabilitation of the water system, the hygiene and the sanitation that were really affected by the emergency," said UNICEF Representative in El Salvador Miriam de Figueroa.
To get back on their feet, she added, flood-affected families need "urgent intervention."
Meanwhile, Ismael spends his days and nights at the shelter in La Libertad. School is out for now, but when classes resume in January, the shelter will be converted back into a school. Along with the thousands of others now taking refuge in school buildings, Ismael's family will have to find someplace else to live—once again testing the resilience they have shown in the wake of a life changing disaster.





