People Affected by Ecuador Earthquake

Ecuador Earthquake — How to Help Children and Families Today

The strongest earthquake to hit Ecuador in decades has killed nearly 600 people and affected at least 250,000 children. UNICEF assistance and emergency supplies are reaching affected areas.

Update 5/5: "Bringing Back Happiness" at a shelter in Chamanga

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In shelters all along Ecuador's affected coast, UNICEF is working to introduce the "Retorno a la Alegria," or Back to Happiness, program to help children who have been traumatized by the disaster regain a sense of normalcy.

Belen Carillo, UNICEF Ecuador child protection specialst, with Kimberly,6, at the “Y” encampment just outside of San Jose de Chamanga, Ecuador.

Belen Carillo, a UNICEF child protection specialist, with Kimberly, 6, at the “Y” encampment just outside of San Jose de Chamanga, Ecuador. Some 250 displaced families are living at the shelter. © UNICEFUSA/2016/Sandler

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Update 4/28: UNICEF delivers lifesaving relief to thousands of children

As the number of affected Ecuadorian children climbs to at least 250,000, UNICEF has delivered large amounts of lifesaving supplies to northwest Ecuador, the region most devastated by the earthquake.  

A recent UNICEF airlift of 86 metric tons included relief items such as as 10,000 fleece blankets, 300 plastic tarps, more than 100 large tents, 4,000 insecticide-treated bednets, 250,000 Vitamin A capsules and diarrhea treatment kits.  

Art supplies — providing psychosocial support for children at risk of post-disaster trauma — are also arriving.

A young boy, potentially at risk for post-disaster trauma, colors happily in a UNICEF-supported, child-friendly space in Portoviejo, Ecuador, on April 19, three days after the quake. © UNICEF/ECU/2016/Castellanos

“We need to get these supplies to children, and we need to do this quickly,” said Grant Leaity, UNICEF Representative in Ecuador“The longer children go without shelter, safe water and protection from disease, the higher the risks to their health and well-being.” 

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Update 4/21: See how Ecuador is starting on the long road to recovery — with your help.

Please support our emergency relief efforts in Ecuador

Below, four photos (courtesy of UNICEF/Ecuador) from Pedernales, one of the Ecuadorian cities most devastated by the recent earthquake, offer a glimpse of the damage.

But these pictures also show how the support of thousands of donors like you — and the work of UNICEF and our partners — is beginning to help kids and their families recover.

This photo and the three above: ©UNICEF/ECU/2016/Castellanos

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Update 4/19: How can you help Ecuador? What are the best ways to support earthquake relief?

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Please support our emergency relief efforts in Ecuador

The video clip above shows a staff member in UNICEF's global warehouse in Copenhagen packing water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH) supplies and shelter items that will be airlifted to Quito, Ecuador.

Some have asked us about donating goods here in the U.S. for the relief effort in Ecuador. While we are grateful for the desire to help, UNICEF does not accept non-cash goods. Why? 

Monetary donations are the fastest and most efficient way to provide assistance. Donated goods must be screened, sorted, stored and transported. UNICEF pre-positions supplies to speed up delivery and sources them locally whenever possible. 

A blanket donated today can take weeks, or even months, to arrive in Ecuador. A dollar donated today, however, will be deployed tomorrow to buy lifesaving supplies.

We also purchase supplies in bulk to save money. That means your monetary donation will get more supplies to more kids in need than your donation of non-cash goods.

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Update 4/18: UNICEF is on the ground in Ecuador, helping children.

Sadly, the death toll from the Ecuador earthquake has risen to at least 350. Tens of thousands of Colombian refugees are also living in the most affected region on Ecuador's north-west Pacific coast.

Initial reports indicate that as many as 150,000 children may be directly affected.

A photograph from UNICEF Ecuador's Twitter feed depicting some of the devastation from the recent earthquake.

UNICEF, along with our partners, is providing water and sanitation supplies, insecticide-treated mosquito netting, school kits and tents.

We are also working in Ecuador to prevent the spread of disease, protect and reunite children separated from their families, provide traumatized children with psychosocial support and offer temporary learning opportunities.

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4/17: UNICEF aid beginning to arrive in Ecuador

From UNICEF Ecuador's Twitter feed: photos of mosquito nets and other supplies arriving in the affected zones in support of the Ecuadorian Government's relief efforts:

 

4/16: State of emergency declared; Ecuador earthquake kills at least 200

A powerful earthquake has struck near Ecuador's central coast, registering 7.8 on the Richter scale, killing more than 200 people and causing damage as far away as Quito, the nation's capital, some 100 kilometers from the epicenter. The country's vice president Jorge Glas called it "the strongest quake we have faced in decades." Ecuador's government has declared a state of emergency in six provinces.

7.8 Earthquake - 27 km sse of Musine, Ecuador

Damage assessments ongoing; relief supplies pre-positioned

The full extent of casualties and damage is not yet known.  Early reports describe devastated villages in northwestern coastal areas and collapsed buildings in Guayaquil. UNICEF Ecuador is working to assess the needs of children and families affected by the earthquake. Supplies like water kits and tents have been pre-positioned by UNICEF in surrounding countries, ready to meet the needs of children and families.

How you can help UNICEF's earthquake relief efforts in Ecuador

Every year, UNICEF responds to more than 250 humanitarian emergencies — hurricanes, earthquakes and conflicts across the globe. With more than 11,000 staff worldwide and 350 warehouses globally, UNICEF stands ready to provide food, water, shelter, protection and health care — before, during and after a crisis. Learn more about UNICEF's humanitarian work in the aftermath of earthquakes, and please support UNICEF's emergency relief efforts in Ecuador

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UNICEF in Ecuador

UNICEF has been working in Ecuador since 1973 to promote the well-being of the country's children and adolescents. For more than 40 years, UNICEF has advocated for their rights to quality education, good health, nutrition and protection from the first moment of life.

Ecuador is prone to natural disasters (floods, earthquakes, volcanic eruptions and tsunamis), and UNICEF has dedicated its efforts to emergency risk education and the strengthening of strategic capacities to prepare for and respond to emergencies.

UNICEF has been working to help children and families in Ecuador for more than four decades.

Images: Map: Courtesy of Pacific Disaster Center; Bottom:  Archival photo of children gathering near a block of latrines built with UNICEF support in Communa La Cocha, in the province of Cotopaxi. © UNICEF/UNI53956/Horner

© UNICEF/UNI51234/Horner

HOW TO HELP

There are many ways to make a difference

War, famine, poverty, natural disasters — threats to the world's children keep coming. But UNICEF won't stop working to keep children healthy and safe.

UNICEF works in over 190 countries and territories — more places than any other children's organization. UNICEF has the world's largest humanitarian warehouse and, when disaster strikes, can get supplies almost anywhere within 72 hours. Constantly innovating, always advocating for a better world for children, UNICEF works to ensure that every child can grow up healthy, educated, protected and respected.

Would you like to help give all children the opportunity to reach their full potential? There are many ways to get involved.

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