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DCWC is supporting numbers of Household to build their houses by providing them Building Raw Materials.
Nepal was already one of the poorest counties in the world when, in 2015, a 7.8 magnitude earthquake devastated the country. The earthquake left 9,000 dead and left almost an entire nation with homes damaged beyond repair. It came and took away what little the country had and reduced it to rubble. Around 80% of Nepalese live in rural areas. Most have little or no access to primary health care, education, clean drinking water and sanitation services. Life is a constant struggle for survival. Some poor families in Nepal are often obliged to send their children to work rather than to school. It is estimated that about one quarter of children in Nepal between four and five years old are engaged in some kind of family or wage labor. Less than half of the population has access to safe drinking water and around half young children are underweight. The average life expectancy in Nepal is about 54 years. This is mainly due to the lack of clean water, poverty and unavailability of basic health care. Most of these homes in the villages still stand. The earthquake didn’t demolish them. They just left them broken beyond repair. We aim to help those who have suffered to rebuild their lives and their homes. We are working on many different rebuilding, health and educational projects to help them recover from the earthquake and give them the tools and opportunities to go forward. Help us to bring back some dignity to those left with nothing. Together we can get the beautiful people of Nepal back on their feet and give them the tools and the fund they needed desperately. Over three years have passed since the catastrophic earthquake of April 2015. Many houses remain standing still and from a distance they look fine, but from closer view they are damaged and cracked badly. Since then Government of Nepal introduced earthquake resistant building practice and given specific guidelines.
The government has offered up grants to help rebuild but the amounts are woefully inadequate due to spiraling costs in building materials. The villagers cannot make up the shortfall as result they could not build house. Our plan is to help rebuild the area in and around the village of Rajabash.