When disaster strikes, animals are often the forgotten victims, caught in the
path of a bushfire or a snowstorm, a flood or a fire. Working with local
communities, IFAW steps in to alleviate suffering, save lives and educate for
the future.
After Hurricane Katrina and Rita hit the US Gulf Coast in the late summer of
2005, IFAW was there. IFAW conducted door-to-door search and animal rescue
operations in areas devastated by Hurricane Katrina where evacuees were forced
to leave their pets behind, helping to rescue and relocate thousands of animals
as well as reunite hundreds with their missing pets.
IFAW’s
hurricane relief efforts also included helping to coordinate the massive request
for pet supplies and shelter assistance, as well as delivering multiple
financial grants to help local animal organizations such as the LSPCA and LSU
Vet School with the hurricane pet rescue.
Soon after deadly tornadoes blasted through four Georgia counties in the
southeastern US, IFAW worked with the American Humane Association, Albany
Georgia Humane Society, Thomasville Animal Control, Kentucky Humane Society, and
local volunteers to provide shelter for injured and displaced animals, including
dogs, cats, horses, cows, goats, birds and wildlife.
In Russia, IFAW
provided emergency funding to enable rangers to protect from poachers tens of
thousands of migratory birds, including geese and swans, that had been forced to
land en masse in the Archangel region, following heavy snow storms.
When
heavy rainfall caused major flooding in impoverished settlements along the
Jukskei and Klip rivers in South Africa, IFAW's Emergency Relief Team worked
with other organizations to provide immediate relief.
We helped feed and
treat about 350 dogs and 95 cats in little more than seven hours. In three
severely affected communities, IFAW distributed 2,500 cans of moist food and 300
kilograms of dry dog and cat food, gave rabies and distemper vaccinations, and
treated animals for kennel cough, billary, ticks, fleas and worms.














