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Two Years after the Tsunami: Rebuilding Communities |
22 Dec 2006 - On December 26, 2004, the people of Aceh, Indonesia, already suffering from years of civil strife, saw their world turn upside down, first by violent tremors and then by cataclysmic waves. Whole families, homes and schools, farms and fisheries and entire communities vanished.
Emergency Response
The International Rescue Committee has been working in Aceh since 2001 as part of the CARDI consortium, providing much needed humanitarian support to communities displaced by the civil conflict. When the tsunami struck, we immediately dispatched emergency teams to join our staff already on the ground aiding survivors.
In the year following the disaster, the IRC reached 153,000 people with safe drinking water, treated 58,000 people through mobile health clinics, helped more than10,000 children return to school and enabled 23,000 people to regain a secure income to support their families.
Watch a video profile, narrated by Tom Brokaw > Two Years On
Throughout 2006, we have helped more than 40 hard-hit communities rebuild and revitalize their economies, supporting them as they design and manage their own recovery projects.
We also work with local organizations and government agencies to increase the quality of education, improve the health of mothers and children, reduce the vulnerability of tsunami survivors to water-borne disease, and reconstruct vital water systems, roads and markets.
Download our Aceh team's report > (PDF 7.39 MB)
News Alert: IRC Responds to Aceh Flooding (26 Dec 06)
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The IRC is helping more than 40 hard-hit communities in devastated Aceh, Indonesia, rebuild and revitalize their economies. Photo: Peter Biro/The IRC
Children in Aceh draw a map of what their village looked like before the tsunami as part of an IRC project that is helping commuities rebuild. Photo: The IRC | |
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