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Refugees International es una organización con sede en Washington DC que aboga por poner fin a la crisis de refugiados y no recibe fondos gubernamentales ni de la ONU. Para obtener más información, visite www.refugeesinternational.org
Contacto: Dara McLeod; +1-202-828-0110 x225
dara@refugeesinternational.org
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Colombia’s Government Failing to Provide Essential Help to Flood Victims
Washington, DC – As Colombia’s President Juan Manuel Santos visits the United States this week, Refugees International (RI) is calling on his government to quickly disburse funding and respond to the hundreds of thousands of Colombians still struggling from the effects of severe flooding. Almost four months after President Santos declared a State of Emergency in Colombia, a serious humanitarian emergency still exists in many parts of the country. Thousands of people are not receiving basic assistance including food, water, sanitation, emergency shelter, and health care.
“The Colombian government is sitting on millions of dollars while thousands of vulnerable people are living in dire conditions,” said Alice Thomas, Climate Displacement Program Manager for Refugees International, who just returned from Colombia. “The government successfully raised money to help flood survivors. But a lack of coordination and a cumbersome bureaucratic process has meant that the money raised is not being used to provide aid to people who desperately need food, clean water, and shelter.”
The Colombian government – through Colombia Humanitaria, a newly created funding mechanism launched in late December – has hundreds of millions of dollars at its disposal for emergency care, recovery, and rehabilitation. But Refugees International found that setting up this new parallel system, which relies largely on private actors, has taken significant time and been wrought with challenges and delays. An RI team visited dozens of communities that are still without water and sanitation, as well as numerous areas where people are living in sub-human conditions in makeshift shelters. The situation is particularly alarming in Atlántico, where the breach of the Dique Canal has left large areas still underwater. Thousands of people are living without proper sanitation and drinking water. In numerous instances, displaced families who had been residing in educational facilities were forced to leave to allow schools to reopen.
The severity of the emergency has overwhelmed the capacity of existing government aid agencies and non-government organizations. There is a lack of coordination among the confusing array of actors now involved in the response, as well as a lack of information on the specific needs of the people who have been affected by the floods. The specter of corruption is also further hindering the quick distribution of aid. In Córdoba, allegations of fraud and collusion by the government and food providers have prevented the distribution of 44,179 food kits and 26,844 personal hygiene kits. When Refugees International was in Colombia last month, these were still sitting unused in a warehouse.
With the new rainy season already underway, municipalities in many places lack the necessary infrastructure and resources to respond to further flooding. As one distraught mother living outside of Ayapel told RI: “There are two things that are the hardest: One is the flooding. But the second thing is the lack of help from the government. Because we are poor and live far away, the government has forgotten us.”
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Refugees International is a Washington DC-based organization that advocates to end refugee crises and receives no government or UN funding. For more information, go to www.refugeesinternational.org