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800,000 quake survivors still without shelter
Bureau Report
MUZAFFARABAD—The United Nations warned that 800,000 people remain
without shelter more than two weeks after South Asia’s colossal quake,
and repeated its urgent appeal for more aid. As powerful aftershocks
continued to rattle the region, a top US Commander said the United
States would step up its relief efforts. More help arrived in quake-hit
Pakistan as the United Nations warned that time is running out for
survivors of the worst catastrophe in the country’s history. EU
Humanitarian Aid Commissioner Louis Michel said a “second humanitarian
disaster looms” for millions of destitute survivors and more than 70,000
injured unless help arrives before winter.
“We are facing an enormous humanitarian catastrophe,” he said after the
European Commission proposed an aid package worth 80 million euros (95
million dollars), 13.6 million euros more than it has already released.
“With winter just around the corner, a second humanitarian disaster
looms for the four million people without a roof over their heads and
the 70,000 injured people needing medical attention”. Three heavy-lift
helicopters from Britain and five tonnes of medicine from Afghanistan
reached the capital Islamabad but experts said much more was needed
before winter snows hit the mountainous disaster zone in three weeks.
The UN’s humanitarian office (OCHA) said relief efforts were likely to
be disrupted by bad weather in the next few days, grounding helicopters
which are the only life-line to remote villages in the rugged Kashmiri
mountains.
“There is a three-week window of opportunity to deliver assistance to
mountainous areas before the first snowfall,” OCHA said in a report.
“According to reports from the authorities, severe weather, with heavy
rain, is forecast to hit the area in the next three to four days”.
UNICEF relief spokesman Michael Bociurkiw said children were likely to
suffer most if help did not arrive before winter. “It’s going to be very
difficult for them to survive,” he told reporters. Officials say between
10 and 20 percent of affected areas have not received any aid despite up
to 100 relief flights daily since the 7.6-magnitude earthquake struck on
October 8, killing more than 53,000 people.
“The people in my village have been without any food or medical care
since the earthquake struck, so we decided to walk and find some help,”
said Ghulam Hussain, who walked 45 kilometres (27 miles) to Gandool,
northeast of Balakot. Pakistan army and aid workers reached Gandool, one
of many villages which had been cut off by landslides and broken roads,
for the first time on Monday. In Muzaffarabad, Pak army began to clear
the destroyed Medina market where bodies remained trapped more than two
weeks after the quake. “There are still people buried there... We will
get to them today,” said Major Farooq Nasir, an army spokesman. Relief
efforts have also been complicated by the rivalry between Pakistan and
India, which have fought two wars over Kashmir. Pakistan, for its part,
has proposed five locations on the LoC where Kashmiris can cross in
either direction to assist relatives hit by the quake. Talks between
Indian and Pakistani officials on this idea are due to take place in
Islamabad on Friday, Pakistan’s Foreign Ministry said. “It is our hope
that we will be able to implement this proposal this month,” foreign
ministry spokeswoman Tasnim Aslam said.
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