Malawi's president is appealing for
international help, saying the country needs about $700 million to rebuild
after a storm killed more than 1,000 people in March.
President Lazarus Chakwera said this week Malawi has lost $500
million to Tropical Cyclone Freddy. The cyclone, which also affected Mozambique
and Madagascar, hit 15 districts in southern Malawi, rendering nearly 700,000
people homeless.
"After this emergency period has passed, our experts also
estimate that the work of recovery and reconstruction will cost an additional
700 billion Kwacha, funds we do not have, and which are outside our recently
passed budget," he said.
Chakwera said Malawi would respond to the problem like a nation
under attack, not a nation under threat.
He appealed for international help with rebuilding
infrastructure lost to Freddy.
"This is why the state of national disaster that I declared
on March 13 to call for international support remains in force, and why I will
use few upcoming international gatherings of world leaders to directly engage
them with specific proposals on how they can support us with the daunting task
we have going forward," Chakwera said.
Chakwera left the country Wednesday for the United Kingdom,
where he expected to meet world leaders during the coronation of King Charles
III of Britain.
Chakwera's appeal comes two weeks after the U.N. renewed a flash
appeal to humanitarian partners made in April for $70.6 million to support
cyclone victims in Malawi. The U.N. says less than 11 percent was donated.
The U.N. Resident Coordinator's Office in Malawi could not
respond to a questionnaire from VOA on Monday on its contribution toward
cyclone recovery efforts in Malawi.
However, despite funding shortfalls facing the government and
its partners toward recovery efforts, a group of well-wishers in Malawi is
contributing funds and building low-cost houses for poor cyclone survivors.
More than 12 houses have been built in
various districts hit by the cyclone under the low-cost housing initiative,
which started in April.
Entrepreneur Kondwani Ngwira leads the group. He told VOA the
initiative started after realizing that there are many poor people who lost
their homes and could not afford to find land to rebuild their lives.
"Secondly, we discovered that
children have stopped going to school. Like the [children for whom] we are
building this house — they are no longer going to school," Ngwira said.
"Now, as soon as we finish, they will be able to go to school because one
cannot operate from a camp going to school. Psychologically, the person is
already affected."
Ngwira said if funds permit, the group plans to construct
upwards of 400 low-cost houses for those displaced by Tropical Cyclone Freddy.
VOA
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