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Social justice news
April 2002

Are your links growing lurid?
Catholic Peace Fellowship makes timely revival
Colombian Bishops issue 10-point plan for peace
CRS responds to Afghanistan earthquake
Did reform or economy lighten the load on states' welfare rolls?
Foreign aid boost makes a commendable step toward reducing global want
USCCB issues statement on Middle East violence
USCCB takes a leap into the future
Will bishops face felony charges because of clergy sex abuses?

CRS responds to Afghanistan earthquake
As rescue efforts fade and relief activities intensify in northeastern Afghanistan's Baghlan province, Catholic Relief Services (CRS) is sending a variety of relief items to the leveled Nahrin district, where an estimated 30,000 - 50,000 people are homeless after a series of earthquakes and aftershocks rocked the area March 26. Between 1,200 and 5,000 are feared dead because of the earthquakes, which centered in the Hindu Kush Mountains, about 75 miles north of the capital, Kabul. The strongest of the earthquakes measured 6.0 on the Richter Scale and was felt as far away as Peshawar and Islamabad, Pakistan.

The supplies, which complement the broad relief effort coordinated by the Afghan interim government and UN Emergency Task Force established for the crisis, include 1,000 stoves, with a month's worth of coal (10 tons in total), and 1,000 sets of cooking pots, plates, cups and eating utensils for a family of six.

"The town of Narhin, along with many of the outlying villages, is largely destroyed," said David Swanson, CRS' Head of Office in Kabul. "As a result, all these thousands of people have no place to sleep, little to wear and nothing to cook or eat with not to mention, of course, the unspeakable tragedy they're suffering."

CRS is also planning with local partners to distribute 3,100 tents, 12,000 blankets and 1,500 winter jackets to the most needy quake survivors. The relief items are being transported from CRS' warehouse in Peshawar, Pakistan, to Kabul by road; airlifted to the northern Afghan city of Mazar-i-Sharif; and trucked to Narhin. Relief operations have thus far been complicated by treacherous road conditions between Kabul and Narhin, marked by damaged tunnels, snow blocked mountain passes, landslides triggered by the earthquakes and the country's ubiquitous threat of landmines.

Swanson added that while it's vital to meet the immediate needs of those affected by the earthquake, "this cannot distract us from continuing to address the massive, long-term development needs facing the entire country the need to rebuild schools along with agriculture, water and health systems."

The earthquakes, the strongest of which centered in the Hindu Kush Mountains approximately 75 miles north of Kabul on Monday, have exacerbated the misery of tens of thousands in Baghlan province, many of them recent refugees, having returned to rebuild their lives after fleeing Afghanistan's wars and unrelenting drought Shelter and blankets are among the most urgent needs for thousands left homeless by a series of earthquakes in Afghanistan's remote northern province of Baghlan, Catholic Relief Services (CRS) staff in the country are reporting.

"Suitable shelter and blankets are the critical, immediate needs," said Swanson. "It is still very cold in this remote, mountainous region."

Catholic Relief Services is the official overseas relief and development agency of the U.S. Catholic community. Catholic Relief Services provides assistance on the basis of need, not race, creed or nationality. To contribute to Catholic Relief Services efforts, send donations to:

Catholic Relief Services
P.O. Box 17090
Baltimore, MD 21203-7090
1-800-736-3467

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