Flooding chaos drives families onto safe hill
Recent flooding has claimed another victim, a child in Kratie
province who drowned, bringing the total death toll to 30, Keo Vy,
cabinet director at the National Committee for Disaster Management
(NCDM), said yesterday.
While water levels are declining across the 12 provinces affected by
flooding, the situation is still dire for villagers evacuated to safe
hills in Kratie.
“This year’s flooding is more terrible than in any previous years,”
said Srey Mai, deputy chief of Prek Kov village in Kratie’s Chet Borei
district.
“It’s been difficult living here since our houses were flooded, but
the government, local authorities and NGOs have paid more attention in
supporting us with enough supplies,” Mai said.
The scene at Ta Khem has been one of utter disorder, said Julia
Henning, communications coordinator at Samaritan’s Purse, an NGO that
has distributed food to more than 1,000 children on the safe hill.
“It was very chaotic,” she said.
Henning said evacuees are living without mosquito nets, proper
toilets and enough food, while the safe hill’s lone health centre offers
only diarrhoea medicine and salt tablets, supplies of which are both
running low. The makeshift shelters raised by the newcomers – a mix of
“tarp and sticks” – are far from adequate, she added.
“The cattle had better shelter than they did.”
Henning said the young were the worst affected, with many having to
be treated for cuts that became infected because of the water and poor
living conditions.
But as the roads are clearing thanks to lower water levels, supplies are finally coming into Ta Khem.
“The kids were all dragging their feet when they [first] came, but now they’re looking pretty bright-eyed,” Henning said.
In preparations for the floods, the government said earlier this year
that it would provide human resources, equipment and 10,000 tonnes of
rice and other foods, according to deputy director of the NCDM Nhim
Vanda.
Despite the help, no one in Ta Khem is certain exactly when they will be returning.
Mai said he might stay another month, but he remains anxious. “I’m worried about people getting sick, especially the children.”
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