The government of Bangladesh is undertaking a major post-flood relief effort after over two million people were affected by above average monsoon rains, writes IRINnews Wednesday.
Since the end of July 39 of the country’s 64 districts have been affected. Some 300,000 people in Bangladesh have been displaced or marooned, most of them for the second time in just two months.
An official bulletin said the Brahmaputra river, which flows from Tibet through India to Bangladesh and the Bay of Bengal, was above the danger level in 17 places.
The government of Bangladesh has so far distributed US $580,000 in cash grants and $870,000 in housing grants to flood-affected people. At a press conference on 12 September the caretaker government announced that $1.7 million in cash grants and $5.9 million in housing grants had been paid out of the government’s relief fund.
The Bangladesh Agriculture Ministry estimates crop damage to be $290 million in this year’s flooding. Costs in terms of infrastructure and housing are yet to be determined.
UN agencies are conducting a rapid needs assessment (RENA) to better understand the immediate and early recovery needs of the affected people.
Four teams, made up of one representative each from the World Food Programme (WFP), UNICEF, the UN Population Fund, the World Health Organization and the UN Development Programme, have been dispatched to different regions of the country to undertake the RENA. Some NGO staff are also accompanying the teams.
FOOD AND MEDICINE
Aid operations have begun and procurement orders placed: These include high protein BP5 biscuits, 55 metric tonnes (mt) of which have already been received and dispatched for immediate distribution.
Another 66 mt are due to arrive in a couple of days, while an additional 147 mt of biscuits are in the procurement pipeline, according to UNICEF.
Other relief materials include 400,000 bags of intravenous saline and eight other life-saving drugs worth $125,000 from the Canadian International Development Agency.
Of the 10,000 family kits being procured, 2,000 are immediately available and have gone for distribution along with 3,000 plastic sheets.
WFP is focusing on food aid in the northern districts that had been worst hit by repeat flooding. In some pockets in the northern region poverty is endemic and at this time of the year hundreds of thousands suffer from acute food shortages.
The British Department for International Development (DfID) is interested in funding UN flood relief to the tune of $9-14 million.
The World Bank has pledged a $75 million loan in budget support to Bangladesh as emergency flood assistance. Possible areas for support include agriculture, health, education, communications, water and sanitation.
UNICEF will receive $750,000 from the Central Emergency Relief Fund says the former’s latest situation report on 12 September.
Kilde: www.irinnews.org