How many pp does earthquake have
More than 12, people have been left injured and are still missing after the 7. There were further tremors late on Wednesday causing many to rush from their places of shelter into the streets. Haitian officials estimate there are , people in need of emergency assistance. The delivery of aid has been further hampered by heavy rains brought this week by Tropical Storm Grace. The UN Children's Fund Unicef says about , children have limited or no access to shelter, safe water and food.
Unicef also warned that many schools had been destroyed three weeks before they were due to reopen. Children have been out of school for months at a time because of the Covid pandemic combined with security challenges.
Anger is growing in many remote areas, where aid has yet to arrive. Some are missing and we don't have the means to go find them," a resident of the Maniche area told Agence France Press news agency.
Aid agencies and rescue workers are also having to contend with armed gangs who have attacked convoys travelling to the worst-hit areas. And Oxfam has given me that chance. Thanks to the incredible outpouring of support from the public and governments around the world, Oxfam helped more than half a million survivors with a range of support that included clean water and sanitation services, shelter, and income-generating opportunities.
We are working with local partners in Haiti to create initiatives to strengthen citizen participation , to influence government policies on agriculture, housing, and climate change , and to increase the dialogue between government leaders and their constituents.
We are supporting employment creation through the development of small enterprises and are building stronger and safer neighborhoods by supporting the construction of long-term sanitation services.
We are also supporting small scale farmers. Breadcrumb Home. Haiti Earthquake - our response. Learn more Haiti. Building the future Before the earthquake, Haiti was already one of the poorest countries in the western hemisphere. The earthquake left a lot of people unemployed, but it however gave us the drive to rebuild, not only our country, but also ourselves. Homes, churches and schools were among buildings flattened in the quake.
Some hospitals were left overwhelmed and in need of supplies as they struggled to treat the injured. It's hard enough to treat survivors of any natural disaster but when the hospitals themselves are under fear of collapse it makes it all the more difficult.
Les Cayes Ofatma hospital is deemed too unsafe so they've brought everyone outside. People swat away flies on hospital beds placed under makeshift tents and trees. You can hear people screaming in pain. One woman, Elsy, had only just woken up when the earthquake happened. Her son has a serious fracture to his leg. There simply aren't the facilities needed to treat people in this remote part of the country. One doctor comes to us, angry, asking why he has no medicine.
One woman we spoke to - who has a very bad broken leg and is also pregnant - has had no pain relief for two days. The people here need help, but at the moment not enough help is coming - and with a tropical storm close by it could become even more difficult.
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