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World failed to grasp scale of quake disaster
Bureau Report
MUZAFFARABAD—The international community failed to grasp the scale of
October 8 earthquake and more than two weeks after the disaster, the
response is still not enough, a UN relief official said.
Rashid Khalikov, the UN humanitarian aid area coordinator in
Muzaffarabad, said international relief agencies were “still coming to
grips” with the disaster, which killed more than 50,000 people and left
more than three million homeless in difficult mountain territory.
“Two weeks after the earthquake that devastated this region countless
thousands (of people) need to be reached in high-altitude terrain,” he
told reporters on Sunday. “In the first few days after the earthquake
the world clearly did not comprehend the magnitude and complexity of the
disaster.
“Even now we are still coming to grips with the extent of the people’s
needs as new information comes in from previously inaccessible areas”.
He said UN agencies, working alongside the Pak Army and independent
non-governmental groups, had distributed 60,000 tents — nowhere near
enough to protect the millions of destitute from the increasingly cold
nights.
Another 190,000 tents were in the UN pipeline but more would be needed
if the world body is to prevent what Secretary General Kofi Annan called
a possible “second wave” of deaths as winter bites in these mountanious
regions.
“From a logistical point of view this is possibly the most challenging
emergency relief operation that the international humanitarian community
has ever faced,” Khalikov said.
In AJK alone, “some 800,000 people, or 150,000 families, are believed to
be without shelter,” he said. “The scale of this calamity is beyond the
capacity of any one country. The support of the international community
is vital and it is essential that donors contribute the necessary funds
as soon as possible”.
He said only some 90 million dollars of international aid pledges had
been received in response to the UN’s flash appeal for 312 million
dollars for immediate relief operations. The flash appeal for last
December’s Asian tsunami disaster was more than 80 percent funded within
10 days of the event.
Khalikov said the UN only had seven helicopters to help distribute its
aid throughout the region. This would rise to 12 in the coming days but
even then the world body would not have enough aircraft to do the job,
he said.
As for tents, the aid coordinator said the world was being scoured for
more. “All the tents available in the world are being eyed for this
relief operation,” he said.
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