March Recovery Highlights
March 31st: Nias Island, Indonesia
The OBI surgical team arrived Thursday to join our two teams already there. The
hospital in Gunung Sitoli, the island’s largest city, is partially collapsed.
The surgical suite is intact but inoperable. Our team is working with local hospital
staff to repair the surgical facility and expect to begin doing emergency surgeries
within a few hours.
Our helicopter medical team scouted cut-off areas around Gunung Sitoli, provided
services for many injured and transported 20 patients back to the airport for
treatment at our clinic there.
OBI medical teams coordinated evacuation of critically injured patients utilizing
our chartered aircraft and a plane provided by Samaritan's Purse. The patients
were evacuated to a hospital in Medan, a large city in Sumatra unaffected by the
tsunami and earthquake.
OBI delivered three truckloads of emergency relief packages to the Port of Sibolga,
and has a charted boat ready to make the 80-mile trip across the straits to Nias
Island as soon as Indonesian government clears the shipment. Samaritan's Purse
has also provided food and relief supplies that will be transported on our charted
boat.
We are very worried about the people on the islands north of Nias. So far, there
has been no word from Simeulue of other islands closer to the earthquakes epicenter
than Nias. OBI is partnering with ELM, an Australian NGO utilizing the good ship
BATAVIA to provide relief and medical support for these outlying islands. OBI
and ELM are now loading the BATAVIA in Banda Aceh, and hope to sail on Sunday
with about 100 tons of food and relief supplies as well as an OBI medical team.
March 30th: Nias Island, Indonesia
While governments send condolences and many NGOs send promises of assessment
teams, Operation Blessing has already sent doctors, medicines to earthquake ravaged
Nias Island.
The island of Nias, just off the West coast of Sumatra, bore the brunt of Monday’s
8.7 rated earthquake. The island, with population of approximately 500,000, including
over 450,000 Christians, is suffering and crying out for help. As I write this,
less than 48 hours after Monday’s quake, Operation Blessing Indonesia is
already on the ground providing desperately needed emergency medical care for
survivors, many of whom have lost limbs and suffered life threatening injuries
caused by buildings that crumbled and collapsed.
Wednesday morning the first OB medical team arrived in Nias at the Gunung Sitoli
airport in a plane provided by OBI partner Samaritan’s Purse. The
team immediately set up at the airport and is serving a multitude of seriously
injured patients as night falls. No other medical teams have arrived, and the
need is desperate. Reports are that the hospital collapsed in the quake. Within
an hour our second team, consisting of surgeons and paramedics will land at the
same airport in a plane OBI chartered out of Medan. Arrangements have been made
with the local Bupati for our team to set up in the center of town at the government
office headquarters. By later tonight OBI will have 18 people on the ground providing
medical services. Tomorrow we have a plane chartered to bring in a third OB medical
team of nine doctors, paramedics and nurses.
OBI partner Mission Aviation Fellowship (MAF) has dedicated a plane to
support OBI efforts. In addition OBI has contracted a charter airplane for the
next five days to ferry medical teams, emergency rations and medicine, as well
as medical personal provided by other NGOs. Today we have one, and by tomorrow,
two helicopters dedicated to our efforts; one helicopter is provided by a CBN
Indonesia board member and one by Heli MIssion, a partnering Christian
NGO. All flights are coordinated by MAF.
OBI has charted a boat capable of transporting ten tons per trip and is positioning
it to shuttle two trips a day between the Sumatra Port of Sibolga and Nias Island.
We will ship 10,000 emergency relief food packages at first, then within five
days begin transporting 50 tons of rice donated by OBI partner Stop Hunger
Now.
- Bill Horan, OBI President
March 29th
OB Indonesia quickly sent search and emergency medical teams to survivors living
in earthquake affected areas.
March 24th
Update from Indonesia's Aceh province:
- We are currently running 2 main bases, 5 minor bases and 2 project locations.
- Every day more than 1,000 patients are receiving medical care through our
15 clinics.
- We are distributing 7,500 care packages every week.
- Every day we hire over 700 local people for clean up projects on Aceh's west
coast.
- Our team has 50 fogging machines operating every day. We have been in over
2,000 locations.
- We are committed to providing 300 fishing boats of various sizes to fishermen
and their families.
March 18th
Our recovery efforts in Indonesia are continuing to help survivors every day!
Here is an overview of what has been accomplished so far:
- 60,534 patients have received medical services (including 1,300 minor surgeries)
- 102,304 Emergency Relief Food & Hygiene packages have been distributed
- Over 1,100 tons of food and relief supplies have been delivered to the Aceh
Province
- Every day more than 500 men are employed in our Cash-For-Work programs
- 3,250 Cooking Kits have been distributed each containing a kerosene stove
- 50 fogging machines were deployed for mosquito control
- Boat Building and House Building projects have been launched for six communities
March 13th
Relief and recovery efforts began in Sri Lanka on January 3rd:
- We have had several medical teams treat the injured and sick in Sri Lanka
including volunteers from Singapore and India.
- Our teams visited all of the tsunami survivor's camps in the Ampara district
area. To date we have seen more than 15,000 patients, providing free medical
care and eye glasses.
- Four portable fogging machines and 2 microscopes were given to the local government.
- Since the Minister of Health's office in Kalmunai was washed away, we provided
furniture, computers and supplies to the newly rented facility.
- We shipped medicines worth 7 million dollars, giving it to the Medical Supply
Division in Colombo.
- Due to the Kalmunai's education department's request for school text books,
we procured 10,000.
- We have provided a total of ten boats with outboard engines and fishing gear
to 20 families (two families to a boat) living in a small community in Kalmunai.
- A camp comprising of 180 families in Akaraipattu have been receiving vegetables
and nutritious food daily.
Future plans in Sri Lanka include:
- Providing 100 boats to the most affected people in the Kalmunai area. We want
to help rebuild the homes of the same families.
- In cooperation with the Minister of Health in Kalmunai, we will continue providing
free medical care in camps as well as gift eye surgeries to patients at the
Base Hospital; the service is not currently available.
- Digging 150 bore wells in communities experiencing a water shortage.
March 4th
During December 28 - March 4th, OB Indonesia medical and relief teams have:
- Given 50,858 people general medical care
- Given 1,300 patients minor surgery
- Distributed 52,752 family relief packages and 29,250 personal packages
March 2nd
OB Thailand teams have been helping people rebuild their lives in several villages:
- Lam Kaen District (3 villages): boat building/repair teams have started 2
dozen boats and completed five
- Tap La Mu: 4 boat building teams are working; 4 are finished and 19 are in
"approval" stage. Villagers have made 270 squid pots.
- Ban Nai Rai:18 boats have been repaired and 2 new boats have been completed.
270 squid pots completed and have been delivered to 9 villages; 442 fishing
nets were purchased
- Ban Koh Nok: plans to build 56 new and repair old boats are underway.
March 1st
Indonesia: Last week our president Bill Horan attended ground-breaking ceremonies
in four coastal Aceh communities where Operation Blessing has government approval
to build approximately 3,400 homes. We have invited Habitat for Humanity Indonesia,
Samaritans Purse and United Way Indonesia as partners in the building projects.
Our long-term plans for each of these "adopted" communities include
clinics, boat building, revitalization of fishing industry and other livelihood
programs. We will also encourage select NGOs to fund projects such as rice paddy
renovation and schools in our adopted communities.
We have launched a boat building project in Meulaboh, Indonesia utilizing (5)
local boat builders. We have funded construction of a small riverside workshop
to shelter boat builders during the oncoming rainy season. the workshop has opened,
and work has begun on the first seven boats. We will also provide fishing families
with nets, lines and gear lost to the tsunami. We intend to replicate this operation
in each of the adopted Aceh communities.
Current efforts in adopted Indonesian communities are still focused on medical,
emergency hunger relief and Work-For-Cash. We currently employ over 400 Aceh workers
daily. Besides the obvious benefits to communities from clean up, debris removal,
boat building and mosquito fogging, the cash we pay workers is helping jump start
local economies and providing previously idle and despondent survivors with gainful
employment and hope for the future.
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