Vietnam: Floods - IRIN: 14-Aug-08
IRIN
VIETNAM: Relief being delivered to flood victims and damage assessments
underway
14 August 2008
HANOI, 14 August 2008 (IRIN) - Disaster assessment teams have headed
into parts of northern Vietnam that were hard hit by tropical storm
Kammuri, which caused flooding and landslides resulting in the deaths of
at least 119 and the evacuation of nearly 2,000 people, according to
government officials.
Kammuri battered the region on 8 and 9 August with high winds and heavy
rains, causing rivers to burst their banks, washing away houses and
roads, and bringing down walls of mud on homes.
On 13 August, the Central Committee for Flood and Storm Control (CCFSC)
reported 119 deaths, 40 missing and 86 injured. Some 798 houses have
been destroyed and 17,888 damaged, while 14,088 hectares of rice and
other crops were spoilt.
As of 12 August, troops had evacuated 1,824 families from flood areas in
Lao Cai province, the worst hit in terms of human losses, according to
the CCFSC.
A national newspaper, the Vietnam News, said rains, while weakening,
have continued to cause floods and landslides in Bac Kan province,
adding that most communes in the province's Pac Nam district remained
isolated.
The newspaper said 300 tourists stranded in the hill resort of Sapa
arrived back in Hanoi after the train service between the capital and
Lao Cai resumed on 14 August.
No international appeal expected
Meanwhile, the Office of the UN Resident Coordinator reported the
government has the capacity to deal with the current flood situation and
no international appeal is expected.
The Army has mobilised nearly 2,000 soldiers in search and rescue
operations, while two military planes have been used to transport 4.5
tonnes of food and water to victims in Yen Bai. The Ministry of Health
reported it has dispatched 50 medicine packs, 50 life jackets and
1,000kg of Chloramin B to the affected areas. The Centre for Water
Supply and Sanitation has sent one ton of chemicals to decontaminate
water resources in Phu Tho, Yen Bai, and Lao Cai Provinces.
Lao Cai authorities have provided VND3 million (US$180,000), 17 tonnes
of rice, one ton of instant noodles and other essential supplies to
flood-affected people.
Government authorities said troops were also trying to restore
communications networks in the affected areas.
Twenty-one inter-agency disaster management experts headed into the
three worst affected provinces of Yen Bai, Lao Cai and Phu Tho on 14
August to assess the impact of the storm.
"We have enough information about the damage and losses, but the needs
are not that clear," said Ugo Blanco, the UN Development Programme
Disaster Management Programme Officer in Hanoi.
The teams are composed of a number of specialists in water and
sanitation, children's nutrition and livelihoods from the government's
People's Aid Coordinating committee, PACCOM, and the Disaster Management
Working Group, which consists of humanitarian agencies, Blanco said. Two
UN specialists will focus on health facilities and supplies.
The teams are due back in Hanoi on 16 or 17 August and will share their
findings shortly after.
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