EN Morocco earthquake response
The strongest earthquake to hit the region in a century
On the evening of Friday 8 September, a 6.8 magnitude earthquake struck Morocco. The epicentre was in the High Atlas Mountains, approximately 70 kilometres south of Marrakesh. A 4.9 magnitude aftershock followed just 20 minutes later. Morocco’s National Institute of Geophysics stated that this level of seismic activity is the first recorded in a century in the country.
The total number of people affected is in the hundreds of thousands. Many of the worst affected areas are in hard to reach remote and mountainous terrain, so these numbers are likely to rise rapidly in the coming days as the full impact of the disaster becomes clearer.
This is a live and ongoing crisis. This page will be updated regularly with more information and resources.
Our short animation series give bitesize overviews of various humanitarian, technical and cross-cutting topics
The most critical important entry-level resources for new humanitarians deploying to responses
Our ability to effectively and efficiently respond to crises and enhance the trust in the overall humanitarian response should be based on needs assessment
Operational skills and knowledge cover all the support functions needed in a response.
Taking charge of health in emergencies and enabling country and regional staff to design and deliver high quality water, sanitation and hygiene interventions
Shelter should provide a secure and healthy living environment with privacy and dignity to persons of concern (PoCs) and protect them from a range of risks, including eviction, exploitation.
Taking charge of health in emergencies and enabling country and regional staff to design and deliver high quality water, sanitation and hygiene interventions
This section covers individual safety and security and programmatic safety and security resources.
The programme aims to embed education as a fundamental component of a humanitarian response
Essential training resources and materials aimed at all levels of experience and responsibility
Resources connected to the four humanitarian principles: humanity, neutrality, impartiality and independence.
Learning resources that will support you and your organisation in working with cash and voucher assistance programmes that provides choice, dignity and flexibility to people in need.
Child protection in emergencies is about preventing and responding to violence, abuse, exploitation and neglect of children during time of emergency caused by natural and man-made disasters, conflict or other crises.
Emergencies put significant psychological and social stress on individuals, families and communities.
The programme aims to develop the pool of local and national staff who can prepare for and take charge of in-country operational programmes in chronic, protracted and sudden onset humanitarian settings.
The involvement of humanitarian workers in acts of sexual exploitation and abuse is a grave violation of our responsibility to do no harm and to protect people affected by crises.