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ChildFund Indonesia is helping children in Sulawesi whose lives were devastated by the powerful tsunami and earthquake that hit the island in September.

Officials have confirmed that more than 2,000 people lost their lives and almost 80,000 people were displaced following a 7.4 magnitude earthquake and a tsunami on September 28.

The disasters destroyed villages, cutting off essential services like water and electricity, and leaving more than 46,000 children in urgent need of aidBelow we’ll explain how we’re providing disaster relief to children in the affected areas.

Child-Centred Disaster Relief

ChildFund Indonesia country director Bridgette Thorold said the generosity of international donors, including Australians, has helped ChildFund respond to the needs of children.

“In the immediate aftermath of the earthquake on Sulawesi, ChildFund in partnership with a local NGO is assisting children and their families affected by the earthquake through family kits to enable basic shelter, personal care and hygiene,” Bridgette said.

“This is very important in ensuring a sense of dignity and well-being.

“We are also establishing Child-Centered Spaces, which provide children with opportunity for recreational and stimulating activities. These are critical in providing a safe, supervised routine for social interaction that enable children to overcome psychological effects of the disaster.

“Volunteers who run these facilities are also being trained to recognise signs of psychosocial distress in children, to support children manage these behaviours and to refer for professional help when necessary.”

The place where 10-year-old Nazwa’s home used to be is now nothing more than a pile of rubble.

It has been more than a week since her village in west Palu, in the island of Sulawesi, was hit by the most devastating earthquake and tsunami Indonesia has experienced in almost a decade.

Nazwa, her father Muslimin and mother Novita, remember fearing for their lives when the 7.4 magnitude earthquake hit just after 6pm on 28 September.

The shock caused liquefaction, a phenomenon that causes soil to behave like liquid, which led to entire villages being swept away.

“About 1,045 houses are gone, swallowed, and destroyed in this village alone,” Muslimin said.

This was followed by a tsunami that struck Talise beach in Palu City, and the beach in Donggala, both on the west coast of Sulawesi island. By the first week of October, authorities had confirmed 1,948 deaths, 10,679 people seriously injured and 835 people still missing.

Numbers are expected to rise as people are still trapped under collapsed buildings and rescue teams continue to search affected areas.

There are 74,444 displaced people across 190 evacuation centres, and an estimated 46,000 children are in urgent need of assistance.