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By Scott Bobb
Caia, Central Mozambique
14 March 2007
For weeks, relief officials have been trying to cope with a human disaster caused by flooding in central Mozambique's Zambezi River basin. The floods have destroyed the homes and crops of more than 140,000 people. Correspondent Scott Bobb visited the region and reports that after the initial rescue operations the situation is stabilizing2. But he says more people are arriving in the camps every day.
Woman walks by a water truck at Chupanga camp
The people displaced by the worst floods in six years have gathered in 90 camps scattered3 over four provinces in central Mozambique.
The largest camp, with more than 8,000 people, is located near the village of Chupanga, about 100 kilometers up the Zambezi River from the Indian Ocean.
The women pound grain in mortars4 as at home, only here they are surrounded by rows of white tents and straw shelters covered with blue plastic sheets.
Residents who are registered receive a ration1 of (mealie) maize5 - the staple6 here - as well as lentil beans and cooking oil. Sometimes there are other goods, like salt and soap.
Students in tent classrooms
School is resuming inside three large tents. More than 700 primary schoolchildren are attending classes in these temporary classrooms donated by UNICEF, the U.N. children's fund. They also receive school materials, books and some clothes.
Officials say it is important for the children to regain7 some order in their lives. But many children are not enrolled8. Some from isolated9 areas and have never been to school.
Nearby, under two tents, the Red Cross has set up a health unit that treats nearly 200 people a day. They give immunizations that are vital to control outbreaks of disease. So far they have managed to prevent cholera10, but malaria11, bronchitis and diarrhea are common.
Medical workers say many children have no vaccination12 cards, which means they have never had access to the health care system.
The chief medical officer is Caetano Antonio Nota, a nurse practitioner13. He says that besides trying to cure the sick his team also tries to educate people about good hygiene14 and health care.
"We want to take advantage of this large gathering15 of people to send out our message that whenever they go back to their homes, they should respect these basic health principles," Nota says.
The center of the relief efforts is located in Caia, the provincial16 capital of Sofala.
Alex Claudon
Red Cross Coordinator17 Alex Claudon is standing18 in the sun on Caia's airstrip. He is overseeing the loading of medical supplies for a camp of displaced people that has been isolated by the floods. He says many flood victims still have received no help.
"We know that it is going to rain more. We know that those people are without shelter," Claudon says. 'And this is why we run this quite expensive air operation."
The relief groups meet every evening at the government's disaster coordination19 agency, the INGC (Instituto Nacional de Gestao de Calamidades), located in a two-room cement building on one end of Caia's main road.
INGC Deputy-Director Joao Ribeiro says the government wants to relocate displaced people to places where there are schools and health clinics.
"We hope to resettle these people in permanent areas in higher zones," Ribeiro says. "We know that the more productive land lies in the lower zones and the land in the higher zones is less productive. So we have to consider building dikes and irrigation systems."
But he says the government does not have the funds for such projects and will need help.
International donors20 say they will consider helping21 with resettlement if all parties agree to it. But in the meantime they are focused on supporting the victims for at least six more months until they can plant and harvest new crops, hoping all the while that new rains do not aggravate22 their already considerable task.
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