The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

SCIAF sends £30,000 to provide relief in Kerala

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Aid charity SCIAF has sent £30,000 to help thousands of people left homeless by the floods in Kerala, India.

More than 350 people have been killed, most in landslips, since the monsoon started in June.

About 725,000 people are now in emergency relief camps while thousands more are awaiting rescue, the Scottish Catholic Internatio­nal Aid Fund said.

SCIAF has sent funds to provide rice, oil, beans, biscuits and basic household items such as soap, toothpaste and buckets to those affected by the floods.

Staff from its partner Caritas India are on the ground providing food, water purificati­on tablets and hygiene kits to 20,000 families and will also be making money available for “cash for work” schemes to pay local people to clear flood debris.

Father Paul Moonjely, executive director of Caritas India, said: “Farmers, daily wage workers and agricultur­al labourers won’t earn anything for the next two to three months.

“Thousands have no homes to go back to.

“There’s need for food, clothes, beds, mosquito nets, medicines, drinking water supplies and temporary shelters.

“Sanitation and hygiene has been severely compromise­d and the risk of epidemics is at an all-time high.

“After all these needs are met, there is a need for longer-term rehabilita­tion, reconstruc­tion and livelihood support for affected families.”

SCIAF and Caritas India are targeting those who are particular­ly vulnerable, such as families who have lost their homes, families with disabled members and households headed by women.

As well as providing immediate assistance they will continue to work with those affected by the floods to help them rebuild their homes and livelihood­s.

 ?? Picture: Getty Images. ?? Flooding has caused devastatio­n in India.
Picture: Getty Images. Flooding has caused devastatio­n in India.

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