Earthquake Response for China's Rural Communities

Summary

ActionAid is taking supplies to small, rural earthquake-stricken communities to meet their immediate needs. These small communities were overlooked by city-centered response efforts. progress reportread updates from the field

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More Information About this Project

Project Needs and Beneficiaries

ActionAid is providing shelter, food, medicines and essential supplies to earthquake survivors in Ningqiang, Huixian, Lveyang, Xu Jia Ping , Mingshuiba, Xupingzhen, Guozhen, Longdong, Baishigou, Xujiaping , Guo, and Jinjiahe . ActionAId is providing direct assistance in the form of tents, blankets and other supplies. We will also initiate a psychoscoial recovery program

Activities

Repair schools and provide tents for temporary schools in select communities. Provide blankets, tents and medicines to communities. Conduct community assessments. Create long-term recovery plans with each community.

Funding Information

Total Funding Received to Date: $24,791
Remaining Goal to be Funded: $43,144
Total Funding Goal: $67,935

Additional Documentation

This project has provided additional documentation in a Microsoft Word file (projdoc.doc).

Resources

Why this Project is Important

Potential Long Term Impact

The project will help as many as 25,000 survivors of the earthquake by providing immediate relief and long-term psychosocial support to rural communities struck by the earthquake.

Project Message

"The rapid reaction Action Aid, is not only timely in rain, even delivery charcoal in the snow days!”
- Project Beneficiary, Villager from Lveyang

Who is Running This Project

Contact

Anna Gibson,
Program Manager
1420 K Street NW
Suite 900
Washington, DC 20005
United States
01-202-370-9924
Email:

Project Sponsor

GlobalGiving

Organization

ActionAid International USA
1420 K Street NW
Suite 900
Washington, DC 20005
United States
202-835-1240
http://www.actionaidusa.org

Learn more about ActionAid International USA and the project team.

ActionAid International USA's Current Projects on GlobalGiving

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Turning the Tide: Community Recovery in Bihar

Where this Project is Located

Country

This project is located in China and can also be found under Disaster Recovery.

For more information about China, read the Human Development Report on China or the Wikipedia entry for China.

When this Project was Updated

Last Updated

This project was last updated on August 14, 2008.

Date Added to GlobalGiving

This project was added to the GlobalGiving project catalog on May 27, 2008.

Latest Update from the Field

Diary from Nanba: A Relief Worker's Journal

By Anna Gibson - Chief Development Officer, August 14, 2008 12:38 PM

Peng Haihui, Disaster Relief Coordinator for Actionaid in China, describes his experience in a refugee camp in a rural community in Sichuan.

Please note that the word sunny accompanying most entries refers to the weather. The rural communities affected by the earthquake dread the onset of the rains, which will make recovery still more difficult. The rains began in late July.

May 19, Monday. Sunny
It’s not the mosquito which woke me up but the sun. Like most people in Mianyang, I slept in the open. People are afraid of aftershocks. Take my friend Liu Jianjun, who I met at the airport. He took me to his home when he knew that I was an earthquake relief worker. In his hometown, for example, the cracks on the walls of his new house made us feel as if the house was made out of paper. So we decided to sleep outside.

After leaving Mianyang, I headed for one of the worst-hit area -- Pingwu county. The Nanba township of Pingwu county has been completely cut off from external world since May 12 when earthquake stroke. I hitchhiked a ride on a mini-bus to where the road was destroyed by landslide and walked for almost two and half hours into Nanba town. Community members I met along the way directed me to the Nanba Disaster Relief Center, set up by local government, to collect information on the current situation and what refuges need the most.

May 20, Tuesday. Sunny
Today I went to visit refugee camps.
Talking with women, doctors and others, I was surprised to find that the military already organized a temporary tent school which already took in more than 150 students.

I collected first-hand information about what the community needed, what was being supplied by the government or other source, and began the long trek back to Chengdu to report to our country director. That night, after meeting with our staff, ActionAid committed to supply the emergency relief goods requested in my report.

May 21, Wednesday. Sunny
With money allocated, I went to Mianyang ogether with a couple of my colleagues, to buy relief goods such as toothpaste, toothbrush, towel, basin, cooking oil, rice. We also bought sanitary napkin for women, milk powder for infants. For students, we bought packs, pencil-box, notebook paper, jumping rope, chess for them. I believed the teacher and students would be very surprised and happy about that!

Also with the help of local volunteers, we managed to get one volunteer truck from the government’s Relief Center to transport our goods to Nanba, which was 3 hours away from Mianyang. Full of excitement, I jumped into the truck and headed for Nanba as if I was going to beat the monster of disaster.

May 19, Monday. Sunny
It’s not the mosquito which woke me up but the sun. Like most people in Mianyang, I slept in the open. People are afraid of aftershocks. Take my friend Liu Jianjun, who I met at the airport. He took me to his home when he knew that I was an earthquake relief worker. In his hometown, for example, the cracks on the walls of his new house made us feel as if the house was made out of paper. So we decided to sleep outside.

After leaving Mianyang, I headed for one of the worst-hit area -- Pingwu county. The Nanba township of Pingwu county has been completely cut off from external world since May 12 when earthquake stroke. I hitchhiked a ride on a mini-bus to where the road was destroyed by landslide and walked for almost two and half hours into Nanba town. Community members I met along the way directed me to the Nanba Disaster Relief Center, set up by local government, to collect information on the current situation and what refuges need the most.

May 20, Tuesday. Sunny
Today I went to visit refugee camps. Talking with women, doctors and others, I was surprised to find that the military already organized a temporary tent school which already took in more than 150 students. I collected first-hand information about what the community needed, what was being supplied by the government or other source, and began the long trek back to Chengdu to report to our country director.

That night, after meeting with our staff, ActionAid committed to supply the emergency relief goods requested in my report.

May 21, Wednesday. Sunny
With money allocated, I went to Mianyang ogether with a couple of my colleagues, to buy relief goods such as toothpaste, toothbrush, towel, basin, cooking oil, rice. We also bought sanitary napkin for women, milk powder for infants. For students, we bought packs, pencil-box, notebook, stationary, jumping rope, chess for them. I believed the teacher and students would be very surprised and happy about that!

Also, with the help of local volunteers, we managed to get one volunteer truck from the government’s Relief Center to transport our goods to Nanba, which was three hours away from Mianyang. Full of excitement, I jumped into the truck and headed for Nanba as if I was going to beat the monster of disaster.

May 22, Thursday. Sunny
It’s a day of distributing relief goods and we found that the number of students and refugees had increased a lot! We never imagined that the situation would change so quickly. So we decided to distribute education items to younger students first. At the same, we tried to talk with the teachers to collect more information about students, including the increased number, the needs of students and the temporary tent school in general.

For the villagers, we divided them into groups according to their respective refugee numbers. Most of the refugees came from three villages and we tried to find the village leader and discussed with them how to distribute the relief goods.

In an open area, with some refugees observing as witnesses for their communities, we distributed relief goods to three villages in turn. We asked the village leader to make a distribution list for each tent. Later, we would collect distribution list and check with the villagers with the list by visiting the tents.

After dinner, we did the visit and we were happy that so far everything was good! That night I slept very well, and even a powerful aftershock happened at night did not wake me up.

May 23, Friday. Sunny
Since most of the villagers were from three villages, my colleague and I decided to visit their villages to see what really happened to their home.

It took us three hours to reach the cut-off town—Shikan town. I was really shocked by what I saw there. The road looked like noodles twisted by the hand of nature. It seems that the houses made of paper instead of brick. They seemed like they could be crushed by the touch of bare hands.

The Shikan town now is literally a dead town. It’s hard to believe this town used to be a prosperous mining community. But now, all those people, their happiness and sorrow has had gone forever in one minute. Walking through the debris of Shikan town, I felt as if I was the ghost drifting through the cemeteries.

May 24, Saturday. Sunny
With the updated assessment on the refugee camps and tent schools, we went back to Mianyang to purchase more relief good, particularly to buy supplies for the students and the teachers: they needed books, blackboard, pen, and other stationary badly.

Besides first-aid medicines, the refugee camps are also short of medicine related to woman’s productive health. So we decided to buy them in Chengdu—the capital of Sichuan province

May 25-29
We bought medicine and other relief goods, including radio, battery, thick chilly sauce important to the cooking in the region, etc. With the help of a local organization, we also got donated books and toys for the children.

As the International Children’s Day (which is as important in China as Christmas is in the United States) was around the corner, we decided to hold an gala for students to celebrate the international Children’s Day. Prodded by this idea, we also bought a lot of materials like colorful lights, eggs, banners, and balloons.

Loaded with relief goods in the volunteer’s truck, together with the good wishes to all students, we hit the road again.

May 30, Thursday. Sunny
After school, we work with students, teachers and soldiers to prepare for tomorrow’s festival. We decorate the tent, blow the balloon, and hang the colorful flags... It’s pitch dark when we finished the preparation, yet all of us do not feel tired at all. I believe that tomorrow the whole yard would be turned into a Disney Land and the students would feel that they were in paradise. Gone would be the dismal clouds hanging on the refugee camps.

May 31, Saturday. Sunny
Today, the sun beams and reveals the veil of the new paradise built in the center of hell. The school was transformed into the ocean of smiling, surprised children. All students are very excited, with all teachers smiling too.

We held some competitions like three-legged races, sack races and other fun things. The cheers from students go straight to my heart. I can see their confidence, firmness and optimism in the students face as well in their future.

For the winner of the competitions, we have toys as the awards. For the rest of the students, we also have prepared small gifts for every students—no one was left empty-handed, just like everybody was affected by the devastating earthquake. And I understood that it’s time for the people to clear the tears and devoted to the rebuilding of their community.



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