UK public helps aid agencies reach more than 1.6 million people in Nepal

One year on from one of the worst natural disasters in Nepal’s history, the UK public has donated £87 million to the DEC Nepal Earthquake Appeal helping 13 of the UK’s leading aid agencies to reach more than 1.6 million people with relief.
 

Our member agencies used DEC funds to reach 50 percent more people than originally planned with food, water shelter, cash, medical care and essential supplies, despite the treacherous terrain, adverse weather conditions and a country-wide fuel crisis.
 

However, while overall 83 percent of affected families have received some sort of shelter support to help repair or rebuild their damaged homes, agencies are concerned that reconstruction of permanent housing is yet to start in earnest and the National Reconstruction Authority has said that homes will not be rebuilt before the monsoon in June. 
 

To help provide a transitional solution, DEC agencies have trained 180 masons and provided 67,000 shelter kits to some of the 893,000 families whose homes were destroyed or damaged in the quake.
 

The DEC’s Chief Executive Saleh Saeed said:
 

“One year on from Nepal’s worst natural disaster in decades, we can be proud of how much has been achieved across some of the worst-hit remote parts of the country. Lives were saved through clean water, emergency shelter and healthcare.
 

“The past year has not been easy for survivors and at times aid workers have had to struggle to provide people with the help they need. Member agency staff and partners have hiked for up to two days, hired mules, tractors and helicopters in order to get shelter supplies, food and hygiene equipment to remote mountain villages. Now the even tougher task of rebuilding shattered homes and rejuvenating lost incomes is getting underway. We will continue to work with local carpenters, business people and Nepali organisations to rebuild for years to come.”
 

As the emergency moves from immediate relief to long-term recovery, there is still a great deal of work to be done. As many as 26,000 people remain displaced from their homes – down from 117,000 people following the quake – and the government’s plans for rebuilding are far behind schedule.
 

Member agencies have voiced concern that the poorest and most marginalised in Nepal are missing out on the proposed rebuilding grant because they don’t have the paperwork required. They also argue the planned government loan of approximately £1000 to help those who have lost their homes is not enough to cover the costs of repairs.
 

DEC members are calling for reconstruction and resettlement to be inclusive of women, older people, those who are landless and other marginalised groups, alongside their work on the ground.
 

Some agencies are paying people from communities affected by the quake to help the recovery effort and provide families with an income. For example in Dakchinkali, women are repairing an irrigation canal, helping the land withstand heavy rain in preparation of the monsoon season.
 

A new DEC update Nepal Earthquake Appeal: One year on shows how much has been achieved in the first six months, as well as highlighting the challenges aid agencies have faced.
 

Saeed said:
 

“In our push for ever greater transparency, the DEC is reporting the full financial details of how it raised and spent appeal funds and what was achieved, after the first phase of the response. Rather than asking our supporters to wait for less detailed highlights, which used to be covered in our annual report, we’re publishing more information and publishing it sooner. The UK public is always incredibly generous in response to our appeals and we think it is right that we repay their trust in us by continuing to raise the bar for the sector on transparency and accountability.”
 

“We believe that this information should be not just available but also as accessible as possible so today we are also launching a microsite we have dubbed ‘Aftershock’ that tells the whole story of the appeal, using not just facts and figures but also personal stories, photographs, audio and video.”
 

You can find both Nepal Earthquake: One Year On and Aftershock here.
 

Highlights from Nepal Earthquake Appeal: One year on include:

  • 29,000 hygiene kits were distributed benefitting 185,000 people
  • 90,000 people received unconditional cash transfers
  • 67,000 shelter kits and 38,000 corrugated galvanised iron bundles distributed
  • 233,000 people have access to safe drinking water through water point reconstruction and installed purification units.
  • 121,000 people have received medical treatment
  • 66,000 people benefitted from household kits (e.g. kitchen items, solar lamps)
  • 45,000 people benefitted from grain storage
  • 135,000 people benefitted from 48,000 food parcels, rice, lentils and cooking oil
  • DEC members constructed over 4,500 latrines for 53,000 people. These are both emergency and long-term facilities.
  • Agencies also distributed over 12,000 jerry cans and 26,000 hygiene kits to families and taught communities good hygiene practices.

The DEC itself raised £52 million towards the £87 million final total of the Nepal Earthquake Appeal, with our member agencies raising a further £32 million directly as part of the appeal.  We are grateful to the Department for International Development for £5 million in UK Aid Match, which helped boost early donations from the public and is included in the £52 million raised by the DEC.

END.

Notes to editors

 

  1. The DEC brings 13 leading UK aid charities together in times of crisis: ActionAid UK, Age International, British Red Cross, CAFOD, CARE International, Christian Aid, Concern Worldwide, Islamic Relief, Oxfam, Plan UK, Save the Children, Tearfund and World Vision; all collectively raising money to reach those in need quickly.
  2. Of the 1.6 million people reached with DEC funds, some people will have received different kinds of help from more than one DEC agency. For example it is likely that separate schemes providing large scale water delivery and weekly food vouchers targeting 50,000 of the most vulnerable families will have reached some of the same people.
  3. The numbers and activities quoted are the most recent available taken from progress reports provided to us by our members based on the first six months of their activities.