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CARE Begins Distributing Tents, Water and Basic Relief Items to Thousands Displaced by Haiti Earthquake, as Tropical Storm Grace Heads Towards the Island

A 7.2 magnitude earthquake hit Western Haiti on August 14, 2021, causing over 300 casualties. Here, a group of Haitian people dig through rubble.

CARE

CARE

Port-au-Prince, Haiti (August 15, 2021) – CARE teams have begun distributing core relief items including tents and water in Grand Anse, following the devastating 7.2 magnitude earthquake. Teams are assessing the impact on communities in the south of the Island. The earthquake, which has already led to over 700 deaths and nearly 2,000 injured has also damaged homes and smaller infrastructure, displacing thousands, with the full extent of damage still unknown. CARE teams on the ground have noted a huge and immediate need for temporary shelter, water and other core relief items.

Lora Wuennenberg, CARE Haiti Interim Country Director:

“So far, our teams in and around Jeremie – which was badly hit by the quake – have found that at least 469 homes were destroyed and over 1,000 people are in need of tents or some form of temporary shelter. We are continuing to carry out assessments and have begun distributing core relief items, but many of the areas affected are logistically very challenging to reach so we are not likely to know the full impact of earthquake for days to come as teams access these remote areas. Even here Port au Prince we continue to experience aftershocks.

Already as of June we have been forced to deliver aid supplies to the area by boat or plane due to increased insecurity on the roads. The earthquake has added to this by damaging many of the access roads with landslides. It has hit communities that were already suffering from high levels of malnutrition and hunger, and this is going to make a bad situation worse.

On top of this we also have a tropical depression headed towards the island, which may cause further damage and make recovery efforts even more challenging. Now more than ever international assistance and aid is needed to support the people of Haiti.

We know from past experience both in Haiti and other emergencies that women and girls are often the worst affected by these types of natural disasters, facing compounding stresses and higher threats of violence. CARE will be undertaking an assessment of the specific needs of women and girls and making sure it takes their specific concerns and voices into account in the response we mount.”

The earthquake, that hit Haiti on Saturday 14th August, has affected three of the departments in the south of the island where CARE has been running food security and other programming. In the areas where CARE programmes initial assessments show that there are 107 deaths, over 600 injured and more than 1,100 homes destroyed, with some 100 people still unaccounted for. CARE has cyclone response supply kits already pre-positioned which will be sent to affected communities.

CARE Haiti is looking to raise US$20 million to help those worst affected in the aftermath of the earthquake.

For More Information:
Rachel Kent
Senior Press Officer
Rachel.Kent@care.org

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