• 2 days ago
Nurses and psychologists continue to treat ill children in the informal settlement of Cavani Sud in eastern Mayotte after the devastation of Cyclone Chido. Emergency shelters have been closing to allow for the return to school, which Mamoudzou's mayor wants to happen as normal on 20 January.
Transcript
00:00🎵
00:03🎵
00:05🎵
00:10I don't know what to do, I don't know what to do, I don't know what to do.
00:13I don't know what to do, I don't know what to do.
00:30Daddy!
00:31How are you? Are you in your cabin?
00:33Yes, I'm in my cabin.
00:35Are you in your cabin?
00:36Yes.
00:38I'm sorry.
00:39It's not the brain.
00:42What did they give you?
00:43Fish.
00:44Fish?
00:45Yes.
00:46So the main complaints I see since Shido
00:50are the classic complaints of parthole or nail surgery
00:55that require a bandage, but also a vaccine check.
01:02Of course, people are well aware of their vaccines.
01:06So we can't give them the vaccines,
01:11but we take them to the hospital whenever they need them.
01:26Unfortunately, we had children who, following the traumatic shock,
01:30went through a period of sideration and denial
01:33and then came back very quickly, after a week, ten days,
01:37in very serious behavioral disorders.
01:40With us, our inability to manage this type of situation
01:44because we were on vital emergencies.
01:46Can you put your head like that?
01:58We're going to stop.
02:00We're leaving.
02:01Yes, after that.
02:02I'll take care of it.

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