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ACT News Update
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One of the three ACT members in Indonesia, YAKKUM
Emergency Unit (YEU), operates under the umbrella of the YAKKUM
foundation (Yayasan Kristen untuk Kesehatan Umum - Christian Foundation
for Public Health), which provides many of its services in the area
of the earthquake. YEU has been responding to emergency needs largely
through hospitals in the area that are also under the YAKKUM umbrella.
YAKKUM’s biggest hospital, Bethesda, in Yogyakarta, which has become
the center of relief operations for the quake-hit region, has been overflowing
with patients injured in the quake.
"The hospital is full – far beyond its normal capacity," reports DEA’s Baucks, who was speaking by phone from Yogyakarta this morning. "Nurses and doctors there are overworked. They have been working since Saturday."
Baucks says lack of sterilization is a critical issue right now at the hospital, making surgeries difficult. In general, however, Baucks notes that the medical services the hospital has been providing since Saturday are very effective.
In the city of Yogyakarta, Baucks says he noticed many buildings still standing, but that "many shops, hotels and other businesses are closed – either the water doesn’t function or the electricity is out of order because the building is somehow damaged. The damage in Yogyakarta is probably bigger than at first glance," he says.
In visits outside Yogyakarta in the Bantul area and to the small village of Garjoyo,
which was completely destroyed, the situation is much worse, reports Baucks. "The destruction is quite bad," he says.
"People are staying near their houses under plastic sheeting, which doesn’t really give much protection from the rain," which has been falling at night, says Baucks. People are still in a state of shock, he says. "Putting up plastic sheeting was about all they could do."
On May 29, the General Secretary of the World Council of Churches (WCC), one of ACT’s founding members, Rev. Dr. Samuel Kobia, sent a message of solidarity and support in a letter to the Communion of Churches in Indonesia and WCC member churches in Indonesia. "As you are aware, the WCC member churches also share your grief in this tragedy, and all of us are committed and ready to contribute in any possible manner to overcome the catastrophic impact of this natural disaster and in alleviating the sufferings of the affected victims," wrote Kobia.
Kobia also sent a letter on behalf of the WCC to Indonesia’s president to convey condolences to the people of Indonesia.
Today the Geneva-based ACT Coordinating Office issued an updated preliminary appeal on behalf of the ACT members in Indonesia for US$2.9 million. This replaces the original version sent yesterday.