Sri Lanka: MSF response to Cyclone Ditwah

An MSF emergency team is in Sri Lanka now actively assessing needs following the widespread flooding and landslides caused by Cyclone Ditwah. The Government of Sri Lanka has declared a nationwide state of emergency, confirming that all districts in the country have been severely affected.

In Colombo, MSF is working together with locally led organisations to distribute hygiene kits to evacuated people in four emergency shelters around the capital. We have already donated 500 non-food item kits, and will donate 250 maternity kits and 400 dignity kits.

In Badulla, one of the most severely affected areas, a 7-person team specializing in health care, logistics, and water and sanitation is on the ground to identify longer term needs in rural areas.

Our teams are also preparing for the arrival of 1,000 winterised family tents and 1,000 items of plastic sheeting.

Disasters like these can affect continuity of care as well as people’s access to essential medicines for non-communicable and other diseases. Mental health care is a concern for MSF and it is also critical that people can access clean water to prevent the outbreak of waterborne diseases.

The sheer scale of the devastation caused by Cyclone Ditwah across the country is unbelievable, but we’ve seen an incredible response to this natural disaster from Sri Lankans themselves. We’re supporting local organizations responding to immediate needs, and have a team assessing some of the hardest hit areas as we see how we can best help people get back on their feet.
David Croft
MSF emergency coordinator in Sri Lanka
MSF is working with local partners to provide essential support to families displaced by Cyclone Ditwah’s floods and landslides. We are distributing dignity kits and dry ration kits to families living in emergency shelters around Hanwella, near Colombo. ©️Deepak Bhatia
MSF is responding to the destruction caused by Cyclone Ditwah’s floods. The residential settlement near the Kaduwela River, a tributary of the Kelani River in the suburb of Kaduwela, Colombo, was destroyed, forcing families to seek shelter in temporary tents. ©️Deepak Bhatia





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