Salvation Army medical teams are continuing to work in the aftermath
of the Java earthquake. The teams - known as Compassion in Action
units - have now moved on to the villages of Plesedan and Mandungan,
near Sleman, and the villages of Krasaan and Sumberharjo, near Bantul.
Two hundred and thirty-five people have received individual medical
treatment, and in Kaliyan village, a sub-district of Gantiwarno, Klaten,
67 families were given gasoline stoves. In Maguwo, 28 families received
gasoline stoves and sacks of rice, and counselling services and a play
programme for children were provided. Major Dina Ismael, Major Amelia
Tatilang, Jenny Haurissa and Desy Harisandi visited the office of the
Governor and met with the Executive Secretary to discuss further ways
in which The Salvation Army can help in the wake of the disaster.
This resulted in the Salvation Army teams being allocated the district
of Bauran, which until then had received no aid. Following the meeting
the teams went straight to the area and found that 98 per cent of the
houses had been demolished. Adding to the anxieties of the residents
was the fact that the Merapi volcano in nearby Yogya appears to be on
the verge of erupting, an event which would bring further chaos to the
area. Donations to The Salvation Army's South Pacific and East Asia
Disaster Fund can be made online by clicking on the button below: