situation report #3 response to nepal … hfi no.3 nepal... · as of 18 may 2015 18:00 pm i. key...
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Jl. Kyai Haji Wahid Hasyim No.2 Menteng, Jakarta Pusat 10340 Phone: +62 21 3928756, Fax: +62 21 39837302
www.humanitarianforumindonesia.org / [email protected] FB page: Humanitarian Forum Indonesia / Twitter: @HF_Indonesia
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SITUATION REPORT #3
RESPONSE TO NEPAL EARTHQUAKE
HUMANITARIAN FORUM INDONESIA
As of 18 May 2015 18:00 PM
I. Key Information
Earthquake: 7.8 Richter scale
Day, Date : Saturday 25 April 2015 and Tuesday 12 May 2015
Location : Nepal
Victims : 20,000 injured people
Destroyed houses : 489,000 houses
Damaged houses : 260,000 houses
II. Description of Situation
According to Situation Report Number 5 (launched at 15 May 2015) by UNOCHA (United Nations
Office for Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs), nearly 489,000 homes were destroyed, another
260,000 damaged and 945 health facilities damaged. There were reports of additional damage to
already vulnerable buildings following the 12 May quake. This prompted new rapid assessment,
including in Charikot Municipality, in Dolakha District (on13 and 14 May) and Makawanpur (14 May).
As of 15 May, the National Emergency Operations Center (NEOC) reported a total of 8,462 deaths
and another 20,000 people injured). There are 216 displacement sites across, 123 Village
Development Committees, 159,211 tarpaulins distributed (cumulative from 25 April earthquake).
Partners continue to reach more of the remote and hard-to-reach areas in the most affected
districts. The focus is also on ensuring that pipelines are in place before the monsoon season starts.
Access remains a critical issue, especially as aftershocks continue to generate landslides. The coming
monsoon is expected to aggravate the condition of the roads, further hampering aid efforts. In
Charikot, over 50 percents of houses seem to be uninhabitable. Further north, in Singati and in
surrounding villages, the assessment team observed total devastation of homes and reported
limited supplies of food and water. Additional needs may be expected as infrastructure was also
heavily impacted. In Makawanpur District, partners reported less damage than in surrounding
districts. However, quality tarpaulins and support for reestablishment of damaged schools are still
required.
Resources Mobilization
The revised appeal is seeking from $413 million to $423 million to further scale up the ongoing relief
efforts. As of 15 May, the OCHA’s Financial Tracking Service reports that US$168 million was
provided for the Nepal earthquake response.This includes in-kind, bilateral and multi-lateral
contributions from 53 States, regional bodies and private donors.
Jl. Kyai Haji Wahid Hasyim No.2 Menteng, Jakarta Pusat 10340 Phone: +62 21 3928756, Fax: +62 21 39837302
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Over 100 Foreign Medical Teams (FMTs) also deployed to support the relief operation. Mobile
medical teams have expanded services to reach remote communities by foot and airlift to provide
vital medical care. During the first week of the response, over 10,000 health cases have been treated
by FMTs. Field hospitals were also established in 5 locations : Dhunche (Rasuwa District), Chautara
(Sindhupalchowk District), Bidur (Nuwakot District), Ramechhap District and Kantipur Hospital
(Kathmandu) to provide medical care including surgical and obstetric services for about six months.
Clusters
UN OCHA has set up 11 clusters : Camp Coordination and Camp Management, Early Recovery,
Education, Emergency Telecommunications, Food Security, Health, Logistics, Nutrition, Protection,
Shelter and WASH (Water, Sanitation and Hygiene). These clusters will have daily meeting and
facilitates coordination and sharing information for those assisting emergency respond in Nepal.
Gaps & Constraints:
- Additional CCCM district focal points are required to ensure coverage of the large
geographical area in nine districts.
- The technical team dispatched for building assessments in Dolakha, Sindhupalchowk,
Ramechhap, and Sindhuli districts are now on ‘stand-by’ following the 12 May earthquake
and are unable to reach remote VDCs due to the risk of aftershocks, landslides and further
building collapse.
- Local people started working on debris management are at risk due to ongoing aftershocks
- A cluster partner focal point to support Okhaldhunga to coordinate the education response
has yet to be identified.
- The movement of equipment into the country and to field locations remains a challenge
- There is only a window of 7 to 10 days to purchase agricultural inputs and dispatch them to
meet planting season schedules, coinciding with the onset of the monsoon rains. There is an
urgent need to advocate additional resources.
- In terms of agricultural inputs, less than 9 percents of the needs are currently being met.
- Management of injury and trauma arising from the 12 May earthquake.
- There remains an urgent need to identify step down centres for the post rehabilitation care
in the most affected areas.
- Ongoing need of tents for curative and maternity services.
- Packing materials left on the tarmac at Kathmandu Airport by organisations or their freight
forwarders are posing a serious security risk to air operations.
- Incoming road cargo movemen
- Partners require additional resources to implement nutrition programmes.
- Lack of skilled nutrition staff at the community level.
- Mainstreaming protection issues in other clusters needs to be systematically followed up.
Jl. Kyai Haji Wahid Hasyim No.2 Menteng, Jakarta Pusat 10340 Phone: +62 21 3928756, Fax: +62 21 39837302
www.humanitarianforumindonesia.org / [email protected] FB page: Humanitarian Forum Indonesia / Twitter: @HF_Indonesia
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- There is a need for a coherent monitoring structure of aid and service delivery in the
affected areas.
- There is limited information management capacity at the district level.
- In addition to those distributed, there remain 397,501 tarps en route to Nepal, with 71,429
in the process of distribution. Pipeline analysis of tarps is now more critical due to the
expected increase in caseload resulting from the recent earthquake.
- Areas impacted by the recent earthquake will invariably require re-assessment and also an
expansion of distribution of emergency non-food items, tarps, and blankets.
- Additional caseload following the 12 May earthquake has not yet been determined.
- There is an increase in demand for WASH support to hospitals in the open air.
Response from Indonesian government and society
Field Hospital by Indonesia located in Satungal village is still giving health care. The medical team is
under coordination by Liaison Officer from HFI board that is also Vice Chairman of MDMC, Ms.
Rahmawati Husein. The field hospital will be officially handed over to the government of Nepal at
the end of May 2015. Meanwhile, the medical teams that are still giving health care are from MDM,
DMC-Dompet Dhuafa, Rebana Indonesia and the government of Indonesia, while PKPU is still
focusing on humanitarian assistance and distributing aids in Gorkha and Kathmandu. The Indonesian
team is still focusing on health care and shelter. The second medical team has already departed on
Saturday night, 16 May 2015. They flew with commercial flights because there is no more
deployment from the government.
Source : Rahmawati Husein,
Coordination of the second
medical team in Nepal
Jl. Kyai Haji Wahid Hasyim No.2 Menteng, Jakarta Pusat 10340 Phone: +62 21 3928756, Fax: +62 21 39837302
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III. Humanitarian Needs and Response from HFI Family
1. Disaster Management Centre - Dompet Dhuafa (DMC-DD)
DMC deployed 3 persons on Friday, 15 May 2015, Ahmad Riyadi, Suherman and Taufan Y.
Nugroho. One of them, Mr. Suherman, is a doctor, who now is joining field hospital in
Satungal. On Monday, 18 May 2015 DMC again would deploy 2 persons, Syamsul Ardiansyah
and Abdul Aziz. DMC is focusing on shelter by giving shelter tool kits.
2. PKPU
DRM PKPU has done activities such as:
- Coordination with international organizations
- Evacuation and Search and Rescue all buried people in 5 location points in Gorkha and
Kathmandu
- Distribution of food packages for 1.150 families
Source : Victor Rembeth, medical services in Satungal’s field hospital
Source : Rahmawati
Husein, Coordination
with village stakeholders
to fulfill basic needs and
tarpaulin aids for rainy
season
Jl. Kyai Haji Wahid Hasyim No.2 Menteng, Jakarta Pusat 10340 Phone: +62 21 3928756, Fax: +62 21 39837302
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- Distribution of 500 tin roofs for 50 houses
- Medical services for more than 5000 patients in 7 location points in Kathmandu and
Gorkha.
- Trauma Healing and living together with survivors in Jhigate, Teragaung and Bayapani
village.
2
PKPU is still giving mobile health care on this week.
2https://www.facebook.com/165909420102027/photos/pcb.1160751607284465/11607515739511
35/?type=1&theater
Psychosocial: playing together with the earthquake survivor children and distributing logistic for the
affected people
Jl. Kyai Haji Wahid Hasyim No.2 Menteng, Jakarta Pusat 10340 Phone: +62 21 3928756, Fax: +62 21 39837302
www.humanitarianforumindonesia.org / [email protected] FB page: Humanitarian Forum Indonesia / Twitter: @HF_Indonesia
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3. Muhammadiyah Disaster Management Centre (MDMC)
Rahmawati Husein, Deputy Chairman of Muhammadiyah Disaster Management Center
(MDMC) and also Vice Chairman of HFI Executive Board, simultaneously became as a Liaison
Officer (LO) of Indonesian Humanitarian Team deployed to Nepal. MDMC medical teams
coordinate with local volunteers and with the WHO and the government of Nepal. MDCM
has deployed the second medical team departed on Saturday 16 May 2015, Mr. Corona
Rintawan that would join field hospital in Satungal.
4. World Vision Indonesia / Wahana Visi Indonesia
World Vision is working to assess potential impacts to already displaced children and
communities following a powerful 7.4 magnitude earthquake which struck mid-afternoon on
May 12, near Namche Bazar. With a shallow depth of 19km it shook already vulnerable
structures causing widespread panic as people in Kathmandu and nearby districts evacuated
to open spaces. Reports of new deaths and injuries are being confirmed3. World Vision
International has distributed food items for 370 households, 2.020 tarpaulins and 600
blankets. WVI targets 100.000 pople in Gorkha, Lamjung, Sindhuli district, Sindhupalchowk
and Kathmandu valley (Kathmandu, Bakhtaour and Lalitpur district).
5. Habitat for Humanity Indonesia
Habitat Nepal staff and local volunteers have begun a program of rubble removal and debris
clearance. Here, volunteers help families like Upendra Maharjan’s in Lalitpur district,
salvaging useable bricks and wood for reconstruction later. “We are lucky we have enough
food and water here. What we needed was the technical support to clear the rubble,”
Maharjan told the Nepali Times.
3 http://www.wvi.org/nepal-earthquake/pressrelease/nepal-gripped-another-earthquake
Source : Rahmawati Husein,
Health care in Satungal field
hospital
Jl. Kyai Haji Wahid Hasyim No.2 Menteng, Jakarta Pusat 10340 Phone: +62 21 3928756, Fax: +62 21 39837302
www.humanitarianforumindonesia.org / [email protected] FB page: Humanitarian Forum Indonesia / Twitter: @HF_Indonesia
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VI. Contact Information
Muhammadiyah Disaster Management Centre (MDMC)
Rahmawati Husein : +62 811 255 051 / [email protected]
Arif Nur Kholis : +62 822 3601 9722 / [email protected]
MDMC’s office is in Jakarta, Jln Menteng Raya no 62 / @MDMCIndonesia
DMC - Dompet Dhuafa
Asep Beny : +62 811 1851 464 / [email protected],
[email protected] / @asepbeny_dmc (on location)
Syamsul Ardiansyah : +62 811 9222 544 / +62 813 8087 8058 /
[email protected] / @syamsuladzic (on location)
DMC Dompet Dhuafa’s office is in Rempoa, Tangerang / @DMCDompetDhuafa
PKPU
M. Kaimuddin : +62 812 3098 025 / [email protected] /
@MKaimuddin (on location)
M. Jawad : +62 821 7610 3320 / [email protected] / @masdja (on location)
Subur : +62 812 8183 9049 (on location)
PKPU’s office is in Condet Raya, East Jakarta / @PKPU
Rumah Zakat
Heny Widiastuti : +62 811 2272 800 / [email protected]
Herlan : +62 813 1724 2416
RZ’s office is in Bandung, West Java / @rumahzakat
Wahana Visi Indonesia (national entity of World Vision Indonesia)
Yacobus Runtuwene : +62 818 0790 6509
Suryadi : +62 811 9501 462 / [email protected]
WVI’s office is in Bintaro, Banten / @WahanaVisi_ID
Habitat for Humanity Indonesia
Eddy Sianipar : +62 815 1438 3370 / [email protected]
HfHI’s office is in Jakarta / @HabitatID
Yakkum Emergency Response (YEU)
Hepi Rahmawati : +62 812 2784 8366 / [email protected] / @hepirahmawati
YEU’s office is in Yogyakarta / @yeu2001
Jl. Kyai Haji Wahid Hasyim No.2 Menteng, Jakarta Pusat 10340 Phone: +62 21 3928756, Fax: +62 21 39837302
www.humanitarianforumindonesia.org / [email protected] FB page: Humanitarian Forum Indonesia / Twitter: @HF_Indonesia
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Karina (Caritas Indonesia)
F.Sundoko : +62 812 8841 4872 / [email protected] / @fsundoko (on location)
Karina’s office is in Matraman, Jakarta
Secretariat of Humanitarian Forum Indonesia
J. Victor Rembeth : +62 812 1386 5028 / [email protected]
Surya Rahman M. : + 62 813 6046 9344 / [email protected]
Secretariat of HFI’s office is in Jl KH Wahid Hasyim 2 Jakarta Pusat
Phone : +62 21 3928756
Fax : +62 21 39837302
Email : [email protected]
Twitter : @HF_Indonesia
Humanitarian Forum Indonesia is a forum for 13 faith based humanitarian organizations, which are
Muhammadiyah Disaster Management Centre, Dompet Dhuafa, Wahana Visi Indonesia, Indonesian
Disaster Management Foundation, KARINA (Caritas Indonesia), Yakkum Emergency Unit, Association
of Community Empowerment, PKPU, Church World Services Indonesia, Habitat for Humanity
Indonesia, Rebana Indonesia Foundation, DRR Unit of the Union of Churches in Indonesia, and Rumah
Zakat.
Humanitarian Forum Indonesia is a member of ADRRN, National Platform for DRR, and Humanitarian
Country Team
Asian Disaster Reduction and Response Network
Manu Gupta : [email protected] / @manugupta2412
Mihir Joshi : +91 11 2617 4272 / [email protected] / @ADRRN1
National Society for Earthquake Technology (NSET) : A member of ADRRN in Nepal
Ramesh Guragain : [email protected]
Khadga Sen Oli : [email protected] / [email protected] / @khadgasenoli
@NSETNepal1