7 August 2024 - India

INDIA: More than 1,580 children displaced in one of India’s deadliest landslides

Save the Children press release graphic
The landslides, which struck Wayanad, a district in the Western Ghats Mountain range that is vulnerable to landslides during the monsoon season, is one of India’s worst landslide disasters in recent history. [2]
Parts of Asia have been battered by typhoons, storms and heavy rain leading to landslides and floods in recent weeks, including floods in eastern Afghanistan which saw 1,500 children lose their homes.
India’s Council on Energy Environment and Water said in a report this year that climate change influences India’s monsoon season and 55 of India’s 5,000 subdistricts have experienced an increase in rainfall over the past decade[3] while nearly 3% of the country, including New Delhi, has experienced “excessive rainfall” over the past 40 years.[4]
Sudarshan Suchi, CEO of Bal Raksha Bharat [Save the Children in India], said:
“In an instant, the landslides took away everything that these children held dear – their homes, toys, their loved ones and their friends. Disasters like this, brought about by extreme weather, are not isolated incidents.
But first we need to focus on the effect that this disaster has had on the children of Wayanad and we must support their wellbeing. Bal Raksha Bharat is now supporting affected families, including through our child-friendly spaces which offer a place where kids can rest, play, socialize, learn or express themselves as they start to rebuild their lives.”
Bal Raksha Bharat, also known as Save the Children India, is helping 2,500 households affected by the landslides in Kerala in partnership with local self-government organizations.
We are also distributing hygiene and dignity kits to 1,000 women and adolescent girls in addition to education kits for children aged 3-14 years old.[5] We are also setting up 10 spaces where children in the worst affected areas can take shelter and play and have already started offering psychosocial first aid to children affected by the landslides.
About Bal Raksha Bharat 
Save the Children has worked in India since the 1940s, setting up its first Delhi office in the early 1970s, and has been a registered Indian entity, Bal Raksha Bharat, since 2008. The organisation is dedicated to improving the lives of children through education, healthcare, and protection with a focus on ensuring that every child has the opportunity to thrive. The organization works tirelessly to address the root causes of child poverty and vulnerability. 
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For more information or for media interviews please contact:
Amy Sawitta Lefevre, Global Media Manager (Asia): amy.lefevre@savethechildren.org
Our media out of hours (BST) contact is media@savethechildren.org.uk / +44(0)7831 650409

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