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UN flash appeal for aid meets ‘limited success’
UNITED NATIONS—With time running out for aid to reach some of the
battered regions of Pakistan, a worldwide appeal to help earthquake
victims had met with ‘limited success’, a senior UN relief official said
Tuesday. Only $90 million, of some $312 million appealed for, have been
raised so far, UN Deputy Emergency Relief Coordinator Margareta
Wahlstrom told a press conference at UN Headquarters in New York.
But Ms. Wahlstrom said she hoped for additional commitments to emerge
from a meeting scheduled for Wednesday in Geneva, to raise money,
supplies and air transport for the emergency relief operation.
Secretary-General Kofi Annan, Emergency Relief Coordinator Jan Egeland,
and more than 250 participants representing 60 countries were scheduled
to attend that meeting. She said there was only a three-week window to
reach all of the earthquake-ravaged villages before snow made many of
them inaccessible. During that time, the World Food Programme (WFP) was
trying to pre-position enough food to feed 1 million people for the next
six months.
“But food is not yet the largest crisis there,” she said. “We are still
looking at access and shelter”. More than 60,000 tents were being
distributed, and 192,000 were on the way, but that would not be enough
to provide shelter for everyone. Heavy road damage continued to force
the entire operation to depend on helicopters, which were running
constant missions, she said. A major hub had been set up in Muzaffarabad
in recent days, allowing teams to run assessment missions to villages
that had been unreachable until now.
“The impressions my colleagues are giving is complete destruction, 95 to
100 per cent destruction of houses,” she said. “People obviously have no
shelter there, so the numbers of dead will continue to go up”. Official
tallies currently put the number of deaths at nearly 52,000, with 3
million people homeless. On a positive note, she said there had been no
sign of disease outbreak so far, and campaigns to immunize children were
under way.
Asked whether everyone in the damaged villages had been reached, she
replied that it was impossible to be certain, and that more efforts
would be made in that area during the next week. Asked why the worldwide
appeal was yielding such a paltry response, she said one possible issue
was that most of the Governments that typically provided donations had
exhausted their aid budgets for the year. She said she was hopeful that
they would make efforts to provide more assistance.—Agencies |