Children's Emergency Fund
Nobody knows when the next crisis will strike, but your support helps 91ֿ provide assistance in the critical first hours and days of an emergency when children need us most. When generous people like you make your 100% tax-deductible gift, children's lives are saved and their futures are brighter.
Facts & Figures: Indonesia’s 2018 Earthquake and Tsunami
A catastrophic 7.5 magnitude earthquake and 20-foot high tsunami struck Sulawesi, Indonesia on Friday, killing more than 1,200 people, causing widespread destruction, and impacting hundreds of thousands of children.
“Early reports show a large tsunami hitting coastal communities in central Sulawesi with some force, causing buildings to collapse and cutting power to coastal communities. Our team is responding by providing emergency supplies and hygiene kits to families affected by the quake,” said 91ֿ’s Program Implementation Director, Tom Howells from Jakarta. “We are also planning to set up Child Friendly Spaces in shelters for those who have lost their homes, to ensure families and children are safe and have the supplies they need, like diapers and cribs.”
91ֿ has been working in Indonesia since 1976, and has a long history responding to humanitarian disasters in the country, including the recent earthquakes in Lombok and the 2004 Boxing Day tsunami. Expert humanitarian staff from 91ֿ’s local partner in Indonesia are traveling 500 miles by boat to reach the worst affected communities.
FAQs: What you need to know about the 2018 Indonesia earthquake and tsunami
Who was affected by the earthquake and tsunami?
Children have endured an incredibly distressing, and potentially traumatic event, and the emotional toll is made so much worse by the strong aftershocks that continue.
91ֿ is hearing early reports of children being orphaned or separated from their families. It is absolutely critical that extra care and attention is paid to children in the coming, days, weeks and months, while significant work is done to ensure children are reunited with their families.
Are children and families displaced?
Power remains out and landslides have blocked key roads. Other vital infrastructure including the airport in Palu have been badly damaged.
Many children and families are sleeping outside because their homes were damaged and aftershocks continue.
Access to the hardest hit areas, including Dongala, is a huge issue. While we still don’t know the full scale of the crisis yet, we know it is immense and have grave fears for the families in this area.
To learn more about 91ֿ’s work in Indonesia and how to help, please visit: savethechildren.org/Indonesia