Provide clean water to Indonesian survivors
More Information About this ProjectProject Needs and BeneficiariesReports of mind-numbing destruction and an estimated death toll of more than 79,000 people attest to the need for and difficulty of disaster response in this zone. ActivitiesCARE will distributing 200,000 bottles of sodium hypochlorite solution for water purification with buckets with lids and jerrycans in which people can store and safeguard their drinking water. Funding InformationTotal Funding Received to Date: $1,094 Funding InformationThis project is now in implementation and no longer available for funding. Received funds will be used to accomplish concrete objectives as indicated in the project's "Activities" section. Updates will be posted under the "Progress Report" tab as they become available. Donors' contributions and pledges to this project totaled $1,094. The original project funding goal was $20,000. Additional DocumentationThis project has provided additional documentation in a Microsoft Word file (projdoc.doc). ResourcesWhy this Project is ImportantPotential Long Term ImpactSurvival of tsunami and earthquake victims Prevention of major waterborne disease Project Message
CARE’s chief emergency operations officer, speaking from Banda Aceh, says, “It is absolute chaos.” Who is Running This ProjectContact
Susan Davis, Project SponsorOrganization
Learn more about CARE and the project team. CARE's Funded Projects on GlobalGivingWhere this Project is LocatedCountry
This project is located in For more information about Indonesia, read the Human Development Report on Indonesia or the Wikipedia entry for Indonesia. When this Project was UpdatedLast UpdatedThis project was last updated on January 23, 2007. Date Added to GlobalGivingThis project was added to the GlobalGiving project catalog on January 04, 2005. Latest Update from the FieldTsunami Two Year ReportBy CARE - Project organization, January 23, 2007 03:13 PM
The coastline of Indonesia was closest to the epicenter of the earthquake that triggered the 2004 tsunami. Of the approximately 230,000 people killed, more than half were in Indonesia. Working in Indonesia since 1967, CARE has helped more than 350,000 people gain access to clean water, distributed more than 1 million bottles of water Read 3 more "Updates from the Field" | Comment on this update How Else You Can Help |
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