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Philippines: responding to Typhoon Tembin

Natural hazards

An earthquake, tsunami, flood or cyclone can have a devastating impact on entire communities.

Within a matter of minutes, natural hazards can affect the lives of tens of thousands of people. Hundreds or even thousands of people can be injured, homes and livelihoods destroyed. Access to clean water, healthcare services and transport can also be disrupted. The impact of each event varies greatly and our response must adapt to each situation.

Needs must be quickly identified, but accessing a disaster zone can be complex when roads are cut off. The first responders are people already on-site: community members, local authorities and aid organisations already present.

We keep pre-packaged kits to deploy for rapid relief and life-saving assistance. With projects in over 70 countries, we often have aid workers nearby when a disaster strikes. They can be reinforced with additional teams if a larger response is needed.

 
Response to flooding in Southern Africa - Malawi
Cyclone Idai & Southern Africa flooding

Malawi: “This time, the flooding has destroyed houses, not lives”

Voices from the Field 29 Mar 2019
 
Haiti earthquake - Tabarre
Haiti

The long road to recovery for earthquake survivors in Haiti

Project Update 30 Aug 2021
 
Haiti earthquake - Jérémy
Haiti

After the earthquake, a surgical team works nonstop

Interview 23 Aug 2021
 
Haiti earthquake
Haiti

Death, destruction and thousands of injured people in wake of Haiti earthquake

Project Update 17 Aug 2021
 
Goma - Free access to urgent health care
Democratic Republic of Congo

Helping each other after the eruption of Nyiragongo

Exposure. 11 Jun 2021
 
Sake - Free access to urgent health care for populations on the move
Democratic Republic of Congo

People struggling to find food, water, shelter after east DRC volcano eruption

Project Update 3 Jun 2021
 
Water distribution in Sake, North Kivu, DRC
Democratic Republic of Congo

Further assistance urgently needed for people following DRC volcano eruption

Project Update 31 May 2021
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13 June 2018