Caritas is appealing for US$1.1 million to help people hit by massive flooding in north and northeastern Brazil.
An estimated one million people have been
affected and over 400,000 people still canât return to their homes after weeks of heavy rain caused massive flooding at the beginning of May. Forty-nine people in 12 states have so
far died in the floods.
âThere are people still living in houses full of water, which are damp and which smell unbearable,â says Lucineth Cordeiro
Machado, from the local Caritas in the region of Maranhão.
Caritas plans to initially help 25,000 people cover their basic needs. These people will receive a food basket
containing rice, flour, beans, oil, milk and tinned fish; hygiene kits, drinkable water and access to shelter.
Caritas will then focus on 200 vulnerable families (1000 people) to provide
them with help rebuilding their homes and livelihoods. These families will include ones comprising young children, the aged and families headed by women.
Around 90,000 families have been
made homeless and depend on public shelters. Up to 400,000 children are not attending school because roads have been closed and school buildings are being used to house people who
canât return to their homes.
Caritasâ emergency programme to help the flood vicitms is planned to last one year. Caritas is continuing assessments in the
north of the country to ascertain the needs of the flood victims.
Brazilâs arid northeast is traditionally associated with drought. The current rains there are forecast to
persist for at least another two weeks.
For more information, please contact Michelle Hough  on +39 06 69879721/+39 334 2344136 or hough@caritas.va
[ Any views expressed in this article are those of the writer and not of Reuters. ]
Flood-affected villagers make their way through the cyclone-hit area of Shabakhali in the Sundarbans delta, about 100 km (62 miles) southeast from the eastern Indian city of Kolkata May 27, 2009. ...