Madagascar | Cyclone Emnati to make landfall
Madagascar prepares for another intense tropical cyclone, Emnati, to make landfall Tuesday. Humanity & Inclusion is working alongside targeted communities in their preparations and recovery.
Read moreMadagascar | After Batsirai, communities brace for second powerful cyclone
Experiencing one of its worst cyclone seasons in years, Madagascar prepares for a new storm: Emnati, while still recovering from the devastation of Batsirai. Humanity & Inclusion doubles-down on response efforts before it makes landfall.
Read moreMadagascar | Tropical storm threatens communities recovering from Cyclone Batsirai
While Humanity & Inclusion plans supply distributions to families who have lost everything in Cyclone Batsirai, the north of the island is experiencing Tropical Storm Dumako.
Read moreMadagascar | Casualties from Cyclone Batsirai continue to rise
Needs assessments across cyclone-affected regions of Madagascar reveal extensive damage. Humanity & Inclusion plans supply distributions to families who have lost everything.
Read moreMadagascar | ‘I will have to rebuild everything’
More than 70,000 people were affected by Cyclone Batsirai in Madagascar. Josephine shared her experience with Humanity & Inclusion’s teams, which are conducting assessments in impacted communities.
Send emergency aid to Madagascar
Read moreMadagascar | Damage reported as Cyclone Batsirai advances
Humanity & Inclusion teams are visiting some of the most affected areas less than 24 hours after Cyclone Batsirai first made landfall on Madagascar. The storm has not finished its devastating path across Madagascar.
The cyclone’s damage is significant so far. At least 5 people have died and 52,000 people have lost their homes. It is likely those numbers will rise as initial assessments are conducted.
Read moreMadagascar | As Cyclone Batsirai arrives, teams take shelter
Humanity & Inclusion teams are now in lockdown to protect themselves from the Category 4 cyclone, about to hit the coast of Madagascar with winds of over 108 mph. Contingency stocks have been replenished to enable distributions to families affected by the storm as soon as the alert is lifted.
Read moreMadagascar | Batsirai Cyclone: Helping communities stay safe
Cyclone Batsirai is expected to make landfall in Madagascar within hours, threatening the safety of hundreds of thousands of people. As part of their work on the island, Humanity & Inclusion’s teams implement disaster preparedness projects to protect the population of one of the world’s poorest countries.
Read moreMadagascar | ‘We’re preparing for the worst before the cyclone hits’
Humanity & Inclusion’s teams in Madagascar are preparing for the arrival of Cyclone Batsirai, which is expected to make landfall on Friday night. Its intensity poses a grave danger to people on the island.
Vincent Dalonneau, Humanity & Inclusion's country director for Madagascar, shares how the team is getting ready to respond.
Read moreMadagascar | Facing famine, teams distribute food to 1,000 families
Over 1 million people are facing severe food insecurity in southern Madagascar following the country’s worst drought in 40 years. Humanity & Inclusion is supporting at-risk families and malnourished children.
Within a population of 2.8 million people, over half of Madagascar’s population is in need of humanitarian assistance. Women, children and people with disabilities are particularly at risk, as they are among the most affected in times of crisis. Families must strictly ration their meals and many report eating insects, cactus leaves or even leather to overcome extreme hunger. As the “lean season” approaches, and a recent locust outbreak has depleted many of the few remaining crops, the number of people at risk is expected to double if aid is not provided urgently.
Food distribution
Active in Madagascar since 1986, Humanity & Inclusion’s team is responding to the crisis, and has already reached more than 1,000 households. Staff is facilitating access to food, specifically targeting individuals with disabilities or those facing other circumstances that limit mobility or ability to work. In times of crisis, people with disabilities are among those most affected.
Since August, 1,086 households have received assistance including cash transfers, vouchers and food baskets of staple items such as rice, peas, oil and salt. These efforts will continue through September and October, with a second wave of distributions to an estimated 640 additional households from December to February.
“Food aid is necessary, and people with disabilities are among those most vulnerable to the crisis,” says Harison Rainifara, Humanity & Inclusion’s area manager for the project. “The districts where we’re working are already classified as food security emergency zones. With the arrival of the lean season, we are just trying to prepare people to make it through.”
Preventing consequences of malnutrition
The increasingly high levels of malnutrition and undernutrition in children under the age of 5 put them at heightened risk of delaying their growth and development. In Madagascar, severe acute malnutrition (SAM) affects one in four children. That number is expected to rise as the crisis worsens. SAM can lead to difficulties in developing motor skills such crawling, sitting and grasping, or to Hypotonia, a disorder that affects nerve control by the brain. If not properly managed, these developmental delays consolidate over time and become lifelong disabilities.
Humanity & Inclusion teams in the region have identified over 800 children in need of nutrition support and physical therapy to facilitate normal growth and development to prevent disability. As part of the response, local actors will be trained in early childhood stimulation therapy to enable children with SAM to maintain normal weight gain, growth patterns and cognitive development.