Tsunami survivors face long lines for clean water - Oxfam

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The emergency system for distributing clean water in Palu is straining to meet demand as thousands of people spend an eleventh night sleeping outdoors after a devastating earthquake and tsunami hit the island of Sulawesi in Indonesia, Oxfam warned today.

Oxfam water engineer Bagus Setyawan said that with the temperature often reaches 95 degrees farenheit during the day, people were desperate for water.

“Long lines of people appear next to the water truck in the crumbling city of Palu,” Mr. Setyawan said. “They may have to queue several times a day as they do not have suitable containers in which to store water.”

Water pipes were damaged in the 7.5-magnitude earthquake that struck on September 28, and the city has become dependent on a fleet of water trucks that are under huge strain to meet demand.

Truck drivers are forced to waste valuable hours waiting to refill at the one water treatment plant in Palu.  Smaller rural communities have no electricity or fuel to pump water from the ground, and some remain cut off by landslides or damaged roads.

Mr. Setyawan said there were very few toilets in the makeshift camps that had appeared in paddy rice fields and along roads to accommodate some of the city’s 70,000 evacuees.

In one location, there are just three or four toilets shared between 600 to 700 people, with many people being forced to defecate in the open. Oxfam warned that water-borne diseases can spread quickly in such circumstances.

“The water distribution network is struggling to meet demand in Palu City, let alone in smaller communities that may be more than three hours away by truck,” Mr. Setyawan said.  “People are complaining about the lack of clean water and toilets. There is a desperate need for more water treatment facilities and for toilets to prevent the spread of disease.”

Oxfam is bringing in water treatment equipment that can produce over 5 gallons of clean water per minute from a bore hole – enough for around 500 people per day. More equipment is due to arrive in the coming days, which will increase capacity by six times.

Oxfam is distributing 1,000 hygiene kits consisting of a safe container for transporting water, soap, toothbrushes, toothpaste and sanitary napkins.

Oxfam is working alongside a network of local organizations called the Humanitarian Knowledge Hub.

Adi Tuati, from Oxfam’s partner CIS Timor, said: “The survivors of the earthquake desperately need clean water. In this case, some survivors had a well and we were able to use a piece of equipment called a sky hydrant to purify the water ready for use.”

Donations to Oxfam America’s Indonesia Tsunami Emergency Appeal can be made here.

Press contact

For more information, contact:

Lauren Hartnett
Humanitarian Media Lead
New York, NY
Cell: (203) 247-3920
Email: [email protected]

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