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http://www.reliefweb.int/rw/rwb.nsf/db900sid/EDIS-7WKLYT?OpenDocument&rc=5&emid=TS-2009-000209-ASM
Samoa: Hands and feet of tsunami response
Source: International Federation of Red Cross And Red Crescent Societies (IFRC)
Date: 06 Oct 2009
Rosemarie North, IFRC, in Samoa
Nearly a week after an earthquake and tsunami that caused the worst disaster in living
memory, tools and water are top priorities for the Samoa Red Cross Society response.
Bush knives, shovels, hammers and nails are being procured by the Samoa Red Cross
Society, which is supported by 11 members of a Field Assessment and Coordination Team
(FACT) sent by the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies.
With these tools, an estimated 3,500 people who left their coastal homes will now be able
to establish latrines, build more secure shelters and tend agricultural plots.
Clean drinking water
At the same time, the Red Cross is continuing to truck water and water containers to
affected areas. A FACT member specialising in water and sanitation is investigating
longer-term options for re-establishing clean drinking water and safe toilets.
The disaster took 142 lives and left seven missing from two villages. More than 335 people
received medical treatment for injuries. Thirty-two people remain in hospital.
A series of three tsunamis, whose highest swell was 11 metres, destroyed many houses
along the low-lying southern coast of Upolu, where tourism and relaxed beach fale
(houses) were a way of life.
Higher ground
Some people whose houses remain intact feel insecure on the coast and are camping on
higher ground, often on other plots of land they own.
The Samoa Red Cross is working with other agencies to make sure each settlement is
being reached, and people housed with friends and family are also receiving distributions
of aid. Red Cross teams continue to check that people's most urgent needs are being met.
Early on Monday, a Samoa Red Cross assessment team went to Manono Island between
Upolu and Savai'i in response to reports of hardship there. Other priorities are providing
soap and sanitary towels for women, promoting hygienic practices and monitoring disease.

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Volunteers are key
In all this work, Red Cross volunteers are key, says Tautala Mauala, Secretary General of
the Samoa Red Cross.
"They're so great. They are the hands and feet of all this," she says.
When church bells rang out in a tsunami warning after the 06.50 earthquake on 29
September, the Secretary General jumped into her car. "I was thinking immediately of our
response and I was mobilizing our volunteers," she said.
"We've had lots of drills in tsunami preparedness since the Indian Ocean tsunami. Now the
volunteers know where to go. They have identified places to go on higher ground for all the
villages."
Terrible destruction
But after the all-clear was sounded, news started to arrive of terrible destruction on the
southern coast of Upolu, Samoa's main island.
The Samoa Red Cross's 130 volunteers immediately undertook assessments and began
distributing food, water, tarpaulins and blankets.
Within the first three days, volunteers and staff delivered more than tarpaulins, blankets,
hygiene kits, boxes or sacks of clothing, and countless other items including toys, surgical
masks, body bags, medical equipment, food, cooking and eating utensils and cooking pots.
Aid workers
In addition, Red Cross volunteers have cooked and served food to dozens of nurses,
doctors, police and aid workers active in the affected area.
In Samoa, as the Samoa Red Cross continues to provide humanitarian assistance, the
IFRC is appealing for 2.9 million Swiss francs to provide emergency relief, health, water
and sanitation, shelter, psychosocial support, restoring family links, livelihoods, disaster
risk reduction and capacity building. The relief and recovery operation in Samoa will
support 15,000 of the most vulnerable people and will be carried out over an 18-month
timeframe.