Model housing for tsunami survivors
The Saudi Charity Campaign for the Relief of the Earthquake and
Tsunami Victims in Asia (SCC) and IOM have started construction of a
model housing development for the tsunami-affected families in eastern
Sri Lanka.
Construction work is already underway on over 250 permanent houses
and infrastructure including a road network, two separate schools for
boys and girls and a multi-purpose hall in Ampara, on one of the areas
worst hit by the December 2004 tsunami.
The project follows an agreement signed between the SCC and IOM last
year for IOM to build permanent housing, infrastructure and other
facilities in Ampara district. Under the US$10 million agreement, IOM
will build 500 houses, a clinic, two schools, a market, a multi-purpose
hall, a mosque, a mini-stadium. It will also build roads and
landscaping.
The project will also provide two buses to serve the community.
"These people have lived in transitional, temporary shelters for the
past three years since the tsunami. We believe that this project will
help them to rebuild their lives by rebuilding their community," says
IOM Sri Lanka Chief of Mission Mohammed Abdi Ker.
Dr. Saed Al Orabi, Chairman of the SCC, is expected to visit South
Asia shortly to check on the progress of SCC-funded projects in the
region. "Saudi Arabia and the SCC are committed to humanity and bringing
relief to some of the most needy people in the world," says SCC-Colombo
Director Mohamed Abdurrahman Al-Moosa. |