Cobertura total: Vivienda & Refugio
16.05.2008
Cyclone Nargis that wrecked Burma brought back horror memories to the villagers of Southkhali in Bangladesh. People here continue to live in makeshift shelters with little protection from wind and rain. Last year’s cyclone Sidr had killed thousands of people and left millions homeless in Bangladesh.
Leer másTemas relacionados: [Sur de Asia] [Bangladesh] [Ayuda] Imagen: Little protection /Photo credit: BBC
|
15.05.2008
A number of international aid organizations and foreign governments are helping Chinese authorities respond to the Monday earthquake that claimed over tens of thousands of lives and destroyed 3.5 million homes.
Leer másOrganización: InterAction: American Council on Voluntary International Action Temas relacionados: [Estados Unidos] [China] [Activismo] [Voluntariado] [Cooperación Internacional] [Emergencias] [Ayuda] Imagen: Temporary living arrangements after the May 12 earthquake in China. © BruceLee (flickr)
|
12.05.2008
More than 27,000 people in the Irrawaddy delta region of Burma -- one of the areas hardest hit by Cyclone Nargis -- have received food aid and other crucial supplies, a UN food agency announced yesterday.
Leer másOrganización: United Nations Temas relacionados: [Myanmar] [Naciones Unidas] [Alimentos] [Emergencias] [Ayuda] Imagen: Playing despite the destruction. © Azmil77 (flickr)
|
12.05.2008
Displaced by devastating floods more than two decades ago, residents of Bihar in eastern India have been forced to live on a century-old British constructed levee. Living in abject poverty and in fear of criminals, these landless farm workers have not seen any government official in the last 25 years.
Leer másTemas relacionados: [Sur de Asia] [Ríos] [Pobreza] [Tierra] [Ayuda] Imagen: About 400 families are living on the levee / Photo credit: Prashant Ravi / BBC
|
07.05.2008
Five days after Cyclone Nargis hit parts of Myanmar, international aid has begun to arrive. Latest estimates claim over 22,000 people have perished and twice as many gone missing, leaving a million people homeless. The Irrawaddy delta still remains cut off from the world.
Leer másTemas relacionados: [Naciones Unidas] [Enfermedad/Tratamiento] [Agua/Sanidad] [Ayuda] Imagen: Devastation all around / Photo credit: AP
|
07.05.2008
Like Kiribati and Tuvalu, the islands of the Torres Strait are slowly being submerged. But unlike their Pacific neighbours, the plight of their inhabitants is being overlooked.
Leer másFrom: The Independent Temas relacionados: [Australia] [Cambio Climático] [Tierra] Imagen: Low-lying coral cays threatened by sealevel rise. Credit: Matt Binns
|
08.04.2008
Tiada hari tanpa penggusuran di Jakarta. Di tanah si Pitung ini kebanyakan berisi cerita duka tentang jutaan keluarga yang kehilangan tempat tinggalnya, ruang usahanya, termasuk warisan budaya. Catatan akhir tahun LBH Jakarta tahun 2007 menunjukkan penggusuran naik dari 9 kasus gusuran sepanjang 2006 menjadi 10 kasus gusuran di tahun 2007. Sementara, jumlah korban gusuran meningkat pesat dari tahun 2006 sebanyak 1.883 KK menjadi 5.935 kk tergusur.
Leer másTemas relacionados: [Indonesia] [Justicia y Crimen] [Gobierno] [Derechos Civiles] [Derechos Humanos] [Pobreza] [Ciudades] Imagen: Salah Satu Aksi Penggusuran di Jakarta
|
02.04.2008
Social stigmas attached to leprosy continue unabated in India, home to over 50% of the world's leprosy patients. Ostracised by society and lacking government support, it is ghettos like the Village of Hope in Delhi that offer shelter, companionship and dignity to those afflicted by the disease, writes Aditi Rao.
Leer másTemas relacionados: [Sur de Asia] [Enfermedad/Tratamiento] [Salud] [Exclusión Social] Imagen: A beggar with leprosy/ Photo credit: Marc Shandro/ Flickr
|
13.03.2008
The Borderless World Foundation, a Pune-based NGO, has a mission to provide shelter for young girls orphaned by violence in the north Indian state of Jammu and Kashmir. In these baseras or homes, they find much-needed affection and care, which they have been bereft of.
Leer másOrganización: OneWorld South Asia Temas relacionados: [Sur de Asia] [Niños] [Educación] [Derechos Humanos] [Terrorismo] Imagen: Kashmiri girls are now learning to smile again
|
20.02.2008
Even after three months of Cyclone Sidr hitting Bangladesh, some 1.3 million affected people are living under plastic sheeting, tarpaulins and other basic shelters exposing them to the approaching monsoon rains. Oxfam says that it is vital that the government and the international community urgently devise a better plan.
Leer másTemas relacionados: [Sur de Asia] [Emergencias] [Cambio Climático] |
04.02.2008
With global urban population expecting to rise to over five billion by 2025, there is a need to evolve sustainable urbanisation processes, says architect Dr. Nizamuddin Ahmed. In his vivid description of the city of Dhaka, he speaks of using architecture beyond the purely commercial to create better living environments.
Leer másTemas relacionados: [Bangladesh] [Sur de Asia] [Desarrollo] [Ciudades] [Población] [Ambiente] [Globalización] |
29.01.2008
Street names and buildings in India once linked people to their local culture, geography and livelihoods. To deal with this loss of identity and regain the richness of its architectural landscape, India needs to research and document traditional houses in villages and old towns, writes architectural consultant Kiran Keswani.
Leer másTemas relacionados: [India] [Sur de Asia] [Ciudades] [Ambiente] [Cultura] [Conocimiento] Imagen: Verandah with wooden columns in Cuddapah, Andhra/Photo credit: India Together
|
14.01.2008
The Harry Chapin Media Awards were created in 1982 to encourage the media to tell stories of hunger and poverty. These global awards recognise work on causes of economic poverty and forces leading to self-reliance of poor. The current deadline for submitting entries is February 1, 2008.
Leer másTemas relacionados: [Agricultura] [Alimentos] [Pobreza] [Desnutrición] [Información & Medios] [Medios] [MDGs] Imagen: The story of hunger © New Internationalist
|
10.01.2008
While the Bangladesh cyclone claimed thousands of lives and left millions homeless, there remain large parts of the population who have gone missing. Bangladesh Red Crescent is now working on a database of those missing, mostly women and children, to help link them up with their loved ones.
Leer másTemas relacionados: [Bangladesh] [Sur de Asia] [Niños] [Emergencias] Imagen: Faridabegum Musulli bemoans her missing husband/ Photo credit:IRIN/David Swanson
|
21.12.2007
Three years after Sri Lanka was hit by tsunami, people are disappointed at the pace of reconstruction work. An aid worker admits that there has been a disconnect between intended efforts and what has actually materialised.
Leer másTemas relacionados: [Sur de Asia] [Ayuda] [Construcción de Capacidades] Imagen: The train wreck in Pereliya Village in Galle district, southern Sri Lanka a day after the tsunami hit, December 27, 2004 / Photo credit: Amantha Perera / IRIN
|
18.12.2007
Indian capital New Delhi is busy transforming itself into a modern city before the Commonwealth Games to be held in 2010. In the process, Delhi’s poor are being uprooted and left alone to fend for themselves.
Leer másTemas relacionados: [Sur de Asia] [Ciudades] [Población] [Pobreza] |
13.12.2007
The poor of Karachi in the Sindh province of Pakistan face evictions from the main city. They are being thrown out on the outskirts to make way for global capital and emerging middle class.
Leer másTemas relacionados: [Sur de Asia] [Ciudades] [Población] [Pobreza] |
04.12.2007
UNICEF, in collaboration with Save the Children International Alliance, has already built 27 day-care centres in eight cyclone-affected districts of Bangladesh. It plans to build 380 more safe spaces in next few weeks to assist 20,000 child victims to help them recover from the calamity.
Leer másTemas relacionados: [Sur de Asia] [Emergencias] Imagen: Cyclone-affected children being taken care of / Photo credit: Unicef
|
26.11.2007
Even while 3,000 and more people were killed by the deadly storm, local volunteers shouting warnings about the impending cyclone on loudspeakers saved thousands of lives in Bangladesh. This simple, inexpensive and effective warning model is now inspiring policymakers in developing countries.
Leer másTemas relacionados: [Sur de Asia] [Bangladesh] [Ayuda] [Voluntariado] [Conocimiento] |
23.11.2007
The World Bank has announced $250 million in aid for the recovery and rehabilitation of millions of Bangladeshis affected by Cyclone Sidr. Part of the funds will also be used to strengthen the country’s disaster mitigation systems.
Leer másTemas relacionados: [Bangladesh] [Sur de Asia] [Ayuda] [Emergencias] [Oceanos] |



