Burma three months on: Food shortages and earning a living biggest challenge

Burmese children and their families are still in need of international assistance to help rebuild their lives, three months after Cyclone Nargis devastated the country.

Friday 1 August 2008

Save the Children, the biggest international aid agency responding in Myanmar (Burma), has already reached over half a million people, including 225,000 children.

"A great deal has been achieved in the last three months, but there is still so much more work to do. It will take years for these families to rebuild their lives. It's vital that aid agencies, like Save the Children, have enough money to keep working," says Guy Cave, Director of Programmes for Save the Children in Myanmar.

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Save the Children's immediate response has included giving out plastic sheeting to 100,000 families to build shelters, distributing 1.9 million kgs of rice, 96,000 sachets of diarrhoea treatment, 10,500 mosquito nets, 7,000 blankets and 14,000 bars of soap.

As the response moves into the rehabilitation phase, we'll be helping children get back to school, helping parents to start earning money again and looking after children who were orphaned or separated by the cyclone.

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