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| Photo: Reuters, Stringer |
| A boy looks over a flooded field after Cyclone Nargis ripped through the country and devastated its food belt, the Irrawaddy Delta, just before planting season. |
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When cyclone Nargis hit Myanmar 130,000 people were killed or went missing. More than two million were in urgent need of assistance including food, shelter, medical care, and water and sanitation.
The storm devastated whole villages, destroyed houses, livestock and farming equipment. With only a few weeks left for preparing their paddies and getting rice seeds into the ground, International Medical Corps and its partner are focusing on rebuilding the farmer’s capacity to be able to work their land and harvest crops later in the year. Through this initiative long-term food insecurity and a sharp drop in community income levels will hopefully be avoided.
International Medical Corps and its partner will provide farming equipment, including tractors to replace the water buffalos that died in the cyclone, fuel, and seeds. A village committee will be in charge of the equipment, making sure that as many people as possible will benefit from it.
International Medical Corps is also cooperating with the International Organization of Migration (IOM). IMC has received essential medicines, medical equipment, and relief supplies from MAP International for its emergency response, which will be used for humanitarian support with mobile clinics and mental health activities run by IOM’s Yangon team in the affected areas of the delta. The MAP shipment will be handed over to IOM which has been working in the health sector in Myanmar for several years and was able to rapidly shift its ongoing operations to the hard-hit delta area.
"In that one night, my whole life was destroyed": Read one man’s journey of survival
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