During winter, more than 300,000 earthquake
survivors left their homes for the relative warmth and safety of displacement
camps at lower elevations. With the arrival of spring, those people returned to
their villages en masse to begin repairing their homes and preparing fields for
planting. In light of this large-scale migration, CARE revived its shelter
distribution activities in order make sure these returnees had a safe, sturdy
living environment during the reconstruction process. The need for improved
infrastructure, such as roads, culverts, bridges, community centers and schools
was immediate, so CARE provided people with cash-for-work opportunities and
other income-generation activities that would allow them to earn incomes while
improving their communities. For children, CARE began the immediate
construction of safe, sturdy temporary schools to help kids return to a sense
of normalcy. We also helped villages repair life-sustaining water supply
systems and establish community-based health clinics. In total, these important
recovery activities helped more than 175,000 people move forward with
rebuilding their lives.
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Some of the projects included:
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