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ACT Alert15/2008 - TajikistanSevere winter freezing and energy crisisGeneva,
15 February 2008
Christian
Aid, a member of the Ecumenical Consortium of Central Asia (ECCA)-
and of the Action by Churches Together (ACT) International alliance-
reports that Tajikistan is experiencing its harshest winter in
three decades with unusually low temperatures. The cold weather
over the last months and the ensuing shortage of electricity has
crippled the population, particularly in urban areas which depend
on electricity for heating, cooking and water supply. Children and
the elderly are among the most vulnerable people being hit by these
conditions. The worst affected areas include the larger cities of
Dushanbe (approx. 600,000 population), Kulyab (approx. 170,000 population),
and Khujand (approx. 154,600 population). Smaller towns affected
are Kurgan-tube, Chkalovsk, Gafurov, Taboshar, Spitamen, Kayrakkum.
Many
antiquated water lines have broken or become frozen or clogged, which
has had a major impact on the availability of water for the past seven
days. The Dushanbe water company has warned of the risk of epidemics
if a minimum electricity supply to operate the city’s water system
cannot be maintained. In Khojand and Kulyab, some people are using
ditches as toilets as water systems are not working. Sub-zero temperatures
and water shortages may be expected to continue. As a result of heavy
snowfalls, roads between several districts are blocked, which has
also reduced local supplies of food and other basic commodities. According
to media reports, 303 babies and 12 young women have died as a result
of this situation over the last month
(Source: Asia Plus). While
national infrastructure remains largely unaffected and the Tajik
government has not formally announced a crisis, government funds
to respond in all areas are believed to be insufficient. The World
Health Organization (WHO), together with other agencies, has identified
critical food and non-food items that, if distributed in a timely
manner to the most vulnerable of households and institutions, may
serve to mitigate against immediate, life threatening conditions.
These items include wheat flour and vegetable oil in particular,
warm clothes for children and the elderly, blankets and sleeping
mats, jerry cans for carrying and storing water, flashlights, batteries,
candles, matches, fuel (such as coal), generators, generator fuel,
and medicines. Other responses are expected to include direct cash
disbursements for household purchases of needed food and non-food
items from local markets and cash for work programs. Local
partner organizations of the Ecumenical Consortium of Central Asia
(ECCA) are planning initial relief assistance of food in urban areas,
woodstoves and coal to schools and hospitals, information campaigns
on the dangers related to using wood/coal burning stoves in homes,
and seeds for rural communities whose crops have been destroyed
by frost. Their planned assistance includes communities they are
working with through the ongoing ACT appeal for community-based
disaster risk reduction (ASCE71). Their ground assessments of the
needs are still in progress. Other agencies responding with relief
assistance include UNICEF, the Japanese government, Save the Children
Fund, and the International Federation of the Red Cross. The
ACT International Coordinating Office expects an appeal to be forthcoming
from Christian Aid as lead agency for the Ecumenical Consortium
of Central Asia. Christian Aid is planning to allocate funding for
relief assistance ahead of the expected appeal’s issue, which would
also be incorporated into said appeal. Any funding
indication or pledge should be communicated to Jessie Kgoroeadira,
ACT Finance Officer (jkg@act-intl.org). |
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