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Sri Lanka
Despite the end of Sri Lanka’s civil war in May 2009, conflict-affected individuals continue to require humanitarian assistance in northern areas of the country. As of June 2012, approximately 6,000 individuals remained in the Manik Farm displacement camp, according to the U.N. In addition, the 440,700 individuals who have resettled to areas of origin in Northern Province continue to require humanitarian assistance, particularly shelter, livelihoods, and water, sanitation, and hygiene (WASH) support. As the Government of Sri Lanka reopens areas of Northern Province previously off limits for resettlement, additional returnees will require humanitarian assistance in areas of return.
USG HUMANITARIAN FUNDING PROVIDED IN FY 2012
USAID/OFDA Assistance to Sri Lanka |
$3,930,374* |
Total USAID Humanitarian Assistance to Sri Lanka |
$3,930,374 |
*This figure includes funding for both disaster response and disaster risk reduction activities (As of August 13, 2012).
Latest Sri Lanka Fact Sheet
Sri Lanka Complex Emergency Fact Sheet #1 (255kb) and map (472kb PDF)
Key Developments
On October 7, 2011, U.S. Ambassador Patricia A. Butenis re-declared a disaster due to the effects of the complex emergency in Sri Lanka. USAID/OFDA currently prioritizes returnee assistance in Sri Lanka through activities in agriculture and food security, economic recovery and market systems, humanitarian coordination and information management, shelter and settlements, and WASH, with a focus on laying the groundwork for long-term recovery initiatives. Since the disaster was first declared in Fiscal Year 2006, USAID/OFDA has provided nearly $40 million in response to the complex emergency in Sri Lanka.
@theOFDA
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theOFDA
MT @USAID: We are the largest provider of in-kind food aid + one of largest providers of cash-based food asst in the world. #WFD2012
5 hours 5 min ago.
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theOFDA
RT @UNICEF: Did you know handwashing with soap is the single most cost-effective health intervention ever? #iwashmyhands Please RT!
4 days 12 hours ago.
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theOFDA
Women and Girls Reduce Disaster Risk Every Day t.co/ZGNjnYIf #IDDR
4 days 16 hours ago.
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