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Christianity Today, Week of February 28
World Relief Continues Rescues in Mozambique, Commits to Rebuilding Region
By World Relief news staff | With at least 35 of
its staff still missing and its offices and program records under water, World Relief
faces a challenge in Mozambique unlike any other disaster it's ever faced.
World Relief continues search-and-rescue operations in flooded southern Mozambique,
where thousands remain trapped in trees and on roof tops without food or clean water. One
of the many people World Relief's Dr. Pieter Ernst rescued was a seven-year-old-boy he
found sitting on the highest point of his almost completely submerged hut. The boy was
holding his two-week-old sister as his legs dangled in the water. He told Ernst that his
mother had drowned inside.
As World Relief's President, Clive Calver, worked with several South African pastors to
rescue people this week, he noted, "the snakes are also looking for dry ground and
ending up in the trees with the people."
National Public Radio's Kenneth Tucker joined Calver and Ernst during yesterday's
rescue operation. The account, which aired on "All Things Considered," can be
heard at www.npr.org/news/world.
"The end will be worse than the beginning," predicts Galen Carey, World
Relief's Mozambique Director, referring to additional flood water on its way and expected
epidemics of cholera and malaria.
World Relief was the largest international aid agency working in southern Gaza
Province, site of the worst flooding. Its community development programs were helping more
than 45,000 families with health education and loans to start small businesses so families
can provide for their own needs. "Homes, businesses, schools, churches, hospitals
they're all under water now," says Calver.
"While at the moment we're focused on the short-term crises of rescue and cholera,
the real problems are the medium and long-range ones," Calver explains. "The
medium-term crisis is that the harvest is gone.
The long-term is that all the family businesses and homes are destroyed."
In the midst of the chaos, World Relief staff, who have lost their own homes, continue
working with neighboring churches to rescue those stranded and help with emergency health
needs in the camps for displaced people. Once flood waters recede, World Relief will
distribute seeds and tools for replanting crops and resupply markets with food.
"The Mozambicans work hard; they just need the tools to rebuild," Calver
states.
2. Abstracts from "Challenges for
the Church: AIDS, Malaria, and Tuberculosis" ABSTRACTS: MALARIA
A Malaria Success through Early
Diagnosis and Treatment in Mozambique [Dr. Pieter Ernst, World Relief, Mozambique]
The three primary factors believed to
account for the decline in malaria in the project area are 1) the training of animators,
2) the attitude and spirit of the animators, and 3) fee for service. Each volunteer
trained by an animator is responsible to convey messages to ten households. One of the key
messages is to seek treatment within 24 hours. A "soccorista" sits at the health
post and receives a slight payment for consultation and medicine for malaria, diarrhea,
and eye infections.
http://www.ccih.org/forum/0110-09.htm
3. Vurhonga - A new Dawn "a Child Survival Project in Mozambique"
http://www.ccih.org/forum/9710-02.htm
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