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Article from Oxfam International: http://www.oxfam.org/en/programs/emergencies/bangladesh_cyclone_2007/index.htm
Published: 21 November 2007

Bangladesh cyclone 2007

 
Image: Buildings damaged by the Bangladesh cyclone, Nov 2007. Oxfam is working with local partners to provide relief. Credit: Oxfam
Buildings damaged by the Bangladesh cyclone, Nov 2007. Oxfam is working with local partners to provide relief. Credit: Oxfam
More than 8 million people are thought to have been affected by Cyclone Sidr which battered coastal areas of Bangladesh during the night of 15 November.

Tens of thousands of people in Bangladesh urgently need food and shelter.

The situation

The massive loss and damage to crops – estimated at between 50 - 95 per cent in coastal zones – will have immediate and long-term devastating effects on the country. Bangladesh had already lost crops in northern and central areas after severe floods in July. Oxfam fears the combined impact of these two disasters on one of the world's poorest countries could be massive.

Donate now to Oxfam's Bangladesh Cyclone Appeal

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The cyclone damaged power and communications networks, killed livestock and caused tidal surges which swept away scores of people.

Many people have been returning to their homes from the evacuation shelters, only to find their houses are devastated. They have been assembling make-shift housing from the debris or sleeping in the open-air.

"There are many villages in remote areas, including on sandbank islands, that are yet to be reached. We don't know the losses sustained in those regions. It could take weeks before we know exactly how bad this cyclone was."
– Heather Blackwell, Head of Oxfam International in Bangladesh

Oxfam's response

Before the cyclone struck, around 1,000 volunteers from our Bangladeshi partner organizations helped to evacuate villagers.

We are currently coordinating and sharing information with the Bangladeshi government. Through our local partner organizations, we have started delivering aid in some of the worst affected districts in southern Bangladesh. Part of our work includes giving cash in return for clean-up work - mobilizing people to remove debris and clear out water points and sanitation facilities.

What next?

In addition to our field work, Oxfam carried out focus groups and discussions with cyclone survivors, aid workers, government officials and others involved in the relief effort. Estimates by the government and aid agencies show that 264,958 families (or 1,324,790 people) remain in need of transitional shelters and
do not have any capacity to cope on their own.

Our latest briefing note "After the cyclone: lessons from a disaster" describes what needs to be done now in order to ensure an appropriate and effective response to the disaster.

Latest news and stories

14 February 2008
More than 1.3m people affected by the Bangladesh cyclone are still living in temporary shelter as the monsoon rains approach, international agency Oxfam warned today. Three months to the day after Cyclone Sidr killed 4,000 people and destroyed millions of homes, Oxfam is concerned that despite an energetic initial response the current recovery efforts are not meeting the massive needs of cyclone-affected communities.
12 December 2007
Shankita Sarkar is a volunteer for Oxfam's partner organization, Rupantar. She talked to us about her work responding to the cyclone.
04 December 2007
The people of Bangladesh are still picking up the pieces after their country was battered by Sidr. The intense storm killed more than 3,000 people, wrecked hundreds of thousands of homes and caused massive loss and damage to crops. In total the storm is thought to have affected more than seven million people.
20 November 2007
Early warning systems and shelters saved an estimated 100,000 lives in last week’s Cyclone Sidr, but Oxfam is warning that without a massive international response the country faces its worst humanitarian crisis in decades. Devastation of the country’s agriculture from both the cyclone in the south and this summer’s severe floods in the north have led to increasing food prices, while fuel prices have rocketed by 50 per cent.
19 November 2007
Tens of thousands of people in Bangladesh urgently need food and shelter after a cyclone hit the country on Thursday night, international aid agency Oxfam said today. Oxfam through our Bangladeshi partner organizations have started delivering aid in some of the worst affected districts in southern Bangladesh.
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