SPARC Extends a Modest Helping Hand
SPARC was one of the first organizations to respond to the earthquake disaster, despite lacking any kind of resources, including vehicles. Friends of SPARC staff started to donate massively, both in kind and in cash, and it started to distribute relief goods within the initial 48 hours in Balakot. It tried to rescue the maximum number of children from schools in Balakot, and later hired labor to recover bodies from the collapsed schools. Till to date, SPARC has received Rs 1,786,517 details of which are given on SPARC's website under the link Comforting Children.
Some of the Frontier CRCs sent volunteers to help with the relief efforts, and CRC Faisalabad played a pivotal role in giving massive assistance in kind. It sent its teams to help with the relief efforts, several trucks of relief goods, and spent both the Eids in Balakot with the quake-affected children.
In addition, SPARC is helping in getting a school operated at the Jalalabad Camp in Muzaffarabad and has so far distributed jackets worth Rs 300,000 amongst children and adults in Kashmir and Mansehra District.
More than 250 tents have so far been distributed in Balakot and Muzaffarabad areas. More than 90 of these tents were given to SPARC by Save the Children USA, and about 20 by Sungi, and ten by Plan. The remaining SPARC got ordered on its own. SPARC also provided five television sets to the Childrens' Hospital at PIMS Hospital in Islamabad and at Polyclinic. This was done at the height of these two hospitals flooded by child victims in October.
More than three months have passed since the earthquake and work instead of lessening is in fact increasing. The only relief provided so far is the removal of bodies from the rubble that has provided respite to the local populace from the stench. Otherwise, the agony continues unabated while one meeting after another is taking place in warm quarters over umpteen cups of coffee. ¦
It is difficult to go on says Adeel:
The four-storey building of a private educational institution in Balakot, which had been reduced to rubble in the devastating October 8 earthquake, burying alive about 300 students, now imparts education to only 50 children in tents.
With most students still traumatized and recalling the horror quake and their deceased friends, the school has been facing multiple problems. The Shaheen Model School and College of Commerce , affiliated with the Lahore Comsats University , was once a known and prestigious educational institution here in the Nara Area. The calamity turned the Balakot Tehsil of Mansehra District into a ghost town, with ruined buildings and piles of debris scattered all around. The school was no exception.
Students now studying there in tents said that most surviving students had either left the area or the school. “All those familiar faces have vanished. Even five of our female teachers are no longer with us,” said Adeel Ahmad, a student of class 8 in the school. “About 300 out of the 560 students were killed,” he said. Remembering five of his fellow students, he said it was difficult for him and other survivors to adjust to the harsh reality. “As piles of debris and rubble of fallen buildings are spread across the town, it has become almost impossible for us to come to terms with the new life,” he said. ¦
Toolkit for Child Protection Systems for Local NGOs
Save the Children UK's Ensuring a Child-Safe Organization (ECSO) Project has developed a ‘training toolkit' aimed at helping local agencies working in Tsunami –affected areas. It contains three modules for trainings that SC-UK can provide to local agencies in the quake-affected areas. However, if agencies wish to conduct their own trainings, they can choose to receive the toolkit and do it on their own. Alternatively, SC-UK can provide training of trainers along with the distribution of toolkit. The toolkit is written in user-friendly format, and includes materials that encourage active discussion among participants. An ECSO Award, validated by Save the Children, Unicef and ECPAT, is granted to organizations that successfully implement their child protection system. ¦ w ww.crin.org
Why Schools Collapsed?
Over 84% primary schools, 74% secondary schools, 12 out of 14 degree colleges and two universities and 85% hospitals were destroyed and at least 17,000 children died in school collapses. There is a growing demand from citizens groups for an investigation into why so many schools - some 10,000 -came down, in the earthquake.
The region is littered with flattened schools, eerily transformed into some of the largest graveyards of this devastated area. Some 8,000 schools collapsed in the NWFP and 2,000 in Kashmir region. All the schools collapsed in Muzaffarabad. It is widely recognized that, because of crumbling schools like this, children suffered the greatest blow from the quake.
Neither the federal nor the provincial government has undertaken any investigation into the school collapse. Parents, meanwhile, are not waiting for the government. Prompted by growing fears, they are taking matters into their own hands, directly confronting school administrations about safety. ¦
Saeed Awan Wins Award
Mr. Saeed Awan, Director of Centre for the Improvement of Working Conditions & Environment (CIWCE), Lahore, is the first ever Pakistani to receive the Tech Award for Innovations benefiting Humanity for the year 2005 awarded by the Tech Museum of Innovations, USA, on November 9.
He was also declared as the best Laureate of all in his category and received a cash prize of US$ 50,000. An international panel of judges from Santa Clara University in California reviewed nominations from 80 countries for over 560 innovations and selected his work. The Award has been given to Mr Awan for designing a carpet weaving loom, which significantly reduces the hazards of the carpet weavers and enhances their productivity and helps in the fight against hazardous child labor in this sector. ¦
Celebrity Visits Queen Rania Brings Goodies
Queen Rania of Jordan flew into Muzaffarabad on Oct 29 to express solidarity and support with the affected people. The Queen also brought a consignment of relief goods with her. She said, “This is one of the biggest natural disasters we have ever seen. She however, added that the worse thing was the emotional and physical aftershocks. “These are going to be worse if we do not increase the humanitarian aid effort now,” she said.
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