In Laos, a South Korean team is setting up a clinic to help treat people affected by the recent collapse of a dam that was built in part by Korean companies.
The dam's collapse flooded more than a dozen villages and killed an as-yet unknown number of people.
South Korea has also sent more than million dollars in aid, with more likely to come.
Our Cha Sang-mi has this report.
The 20-member South Korean medical team dispatched to Laos will set up a clinic at the local health center in Sanamxay, in the southern province of Attapeu where the dam collapsed last week.
They arrived on Sunday at the airport in Pakse.
Over the next ten days, 15 doctors and five support staff will treat displaced residents of Attapeu Province and help prevent the spread of contagious diseases.
The medical have different specializations, including internal medicine, pediatrics and emergency medicine.
After setting up their clinic, they'll be joined by doctors from the Attapeu state hospital.
Their services are likely to be in high demand... from the roughly 35-hundred displaced residents being housed in temporary shelters.
The team is lead by Roh Dong-hwan from Korea's National Medical Center who said they will work to (quote) "cure the wounded hearts of the Laotian people" and do their best to start giving treatment as soon as possible.
Doctor Roh, who has ample experience in disaster areas abroad, said he organized the team based on the information the advance party had sent.
South Korea's foreign ministry is considering the dispatch of an additional emergency team or relief supplies in case the current team in Laos or the Laotian government ask for more help.
The ministry has already sent out a million dollars' worth of relief goods including cash and more than a thousand blankets and sanitation kits.
More than a hundred-and-30 people are still missing after last week's dam collapse, which has so far claimed nearly 30 lives.
The reason the dam broke has still not been discovered.
It was built by a joint venture that included two Korean companies, SK Engineering & Construction Company and Korea Western Power Company.
Cha Sang-mi, Arirang News.
The dam's collapse flooded more than a dozen villages and killed an as-yet unknown number of people.
South Korea has also sent more than million dollars in aid, with more likely to come.
Our Cha Sang-mi has this report.
The 20-member South Korean medical team dispatched to Laos will set up a clinic at the local health center in Sanamxay, in the southern province of Attapeu where the dam collapsed last week.
They arrived on Sunday at the airport in Pakse.
Over the next ten days, 15 doctors and five support staff will treat displaced residents of Attapeu Province and help prevent the spread of contagious diseases.
The medical have different specializations, including internal medicine, pediatrics and emergency medicine.
After setting up their clinic, they'll be joined by doctors from the Attapeu state hospital.
Their services are likely to be in high demand... from the roughly 35-hundred displaced residents being housed in temporary shelters.
The team is lead by Roh Dong-hwan from Korea's National Medical Center who said they will work to (quote) "cure the wounded hearts of the Laotian people" and do their best to start giving treatment as soon as possible.
Doctor Roh, who has ample experience in disaster areas abroad, said he organized the team based on the information the advance party had sent.
South Korea's foreign ministry is considering the dispatch of an additional emergency team or relief supplies in case the current team in Laos or the Laotian government ask for more help.
The ministry has already sent out a million dollars' worth of relief goods including cash and more than a thousand blankets and sanitation kits.
More than a hundred-and-30 people are still missing after last week's dam collapse, which has so far claimed nearly 30 lives.
The reason the dam broke has still not been discovered.
It was built by a joint venture that included two Korean companies, SK Engineering & Construction Company and Korea Western Power Company.
Cha Sang-mi, Arirang News.
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