IsraAID sets up field hospital in quake-torn Ecuador

The field hospital was set up in the coastal village of Canoa, where 98 per cent of the buildings were destroyed in the initial April 16 earthquake that hit Ecuador’s Pacific coast

The Israeli humanitarian aid charity IsraAID set up a field hospital in a village in Ecuador in the wake of a 7.8 magnitude earthquake that killed 654 and injured thousands.

The field hospital was set up in the coastal village of Canoa, where 98 per cent of the buildings were destroyed in the initial April 16 earthquake that hit Ecuador’s Pacific coast. A 6.2 magnitude earthquake struck four days later, on Wednesday.

The American Jewish Committee is collaborating with IsraAID to provide the emergency assistance.

READ: FOLLOWING EARTHQUAKES, ISRAAID SENDS RELIEF TEAMS TO JAPAN, ECUADOR

The mission includes veteran aid workers, a medical workers, and a psycho-social team, IsraAID said. The team will provide food and relief supplies; emergency medical assistance; and child friendly spaces and psycho-social support to the survivors of the temblor, with an emphasis on women and children. The field hospital began operating on Saturday evening, according to the Times of Israel.

More than 25,000 people currently are living in shelters and there have been more than 700 aftershocks in the affected areas. The country reportedly has suffered up to $3 billion (US) in damage and reconstruction could take years.

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