International agency Oxfam today flew relief supplies for 70,000 people from the UK to Liberia. The aid is in response to the escalating humanitarian crisis as people continue to flee the political violence affecting Ivory Coast.
International agency Oxfam today flew relief supplies for 70,000 people from the UK to Liberia. The aid is in response to the escalating humanitarian crisis as people continue to flee the political violence affecting Ivory Coast.
Oxfam has flown essential relief supplies into Liberia as the crisis escalates. |
The agency airlifted water tanks and drilling equipment, together with essential supplies such as latrines, to help provide clean water and safe sanitation to the increasing number of refugees fleeing to villages along the Ivory Coast-Liberia border.
Nearly 77,000 people have so far crossed into Liberia, but this number continues to rise as insecurity worsens.
“People are arriving in Liberia with next to nothing and are being forced to live in makeshift structures with little in the way of essential shelter, water or food,” said Chals Wontewe, Oxfam’s Country Director in Liberia.
“Poor communities in Liberia have been helping refugees for months now, but the recent influx of refugees has stretched their meagre resources to the limit.”
Oxfam supplies will be transported overland to Nimba county and Grand Gedeh in the east of Liberia where camps are being prepared for an anticipated quarter of a million refugees.
The crisis in the region began almost four months ago following the contested presidential election in Ivory Coast, which has caused months of instability, abuse and violent clashes in the country, leaving hundreds dead and thousands displaced from their homes.
Oxfam has been working in Liberia for more than a decade and is gearing up its response to the escalating humanitarian crisis. It has deployed humanitarian experts to the worst-affected area and is planning to provide seeds and agricultural support to host families who have used up their food stocks supporting refugees in their own homes.
The agency is also monitoring the situation in other neighbouring countries where hundreds of refugees have already fled.