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WFP urges for funding to boost relief operations
UNITED NATIONS—The World Food Programme (WFP) may be forced to ground
its relief helicopters, the sole lifeline for hundreds of thousands of
the earthquake survivors cut off by landslides, within the next two
weeks due to lack of funds to fly them, the UN agency warned today.
“It is extremely worrying that the international community — which was
so generous after the Indian Ocean tsunami has so far failed to come up
with an adequate response to this crisis”, WFP Regional Director for the
Middle East, Central Asia and Eastern Europe, Amir Abdulla, said.
WFP has so far received less than 10 per cent of the $100 million needed
to deploy 30 transport helicopters to move food aid and other
humanitarian supplies to villages and communities scattered in the
ruggedmountains of northeast Pakistan and Pakistan-administered Kashmir
area devastated by the 8 October quake.
With an extremely harsh winter forecast and already approaching, snow
will soon cut off more areas ravaged by the disaster, which has already
killed more than 50,000 people, injured some 74,000 others and left over
3 million more homeless. Helicopters are becoming more and more
essential as landslides continue to block many access roads.
“It is tragic that when we have the expertise and technical capacity to
ensure that most of the survivors get their basic food needs through
winter, we cannot reach them because of a lack of funding”, Mr. Abdulla
said.
WFP, which is in charge of organizing joint logistics for most of the
humanitarian agencies operating in the 28,000-square-kilometre quake
area, needs nearly $17 million a month to mobilize and operate aircraft,
but so far has received only $9.8 million.
The cost of a giant Russian-made MI-26, the largest helicopter in the
world with a capacity to ferry 16 tons of supplies per flight at these
high altitudes, is about $11,000 per hour, excluding fuel and support
costs. WFP needs to operate five of these in addition to 22 smaller
MI-8, which each carry three tons of supplies.
But due to limited funding, the agency has only deployed eight MI-8s and
one MI-26, and has confirmed only an additional four MI-8’s and one
MI-26.
“As things stand, this operation could very well shut down in less than
two weeks”, WFP’s Chief of Logistics Service Amer Daoudi said, appealing
for cash but also urging oil-producing countries to donate free fuel as
an in-kind contribution to this vital operation. “With rising oil
prices, the aviation fuel cost for a full operation for one month
amounts to $2.5 million. Oil producing countries and particularly those
close to Pakistan could do the quake victims a great favour by providing
us with fuel”, he said.—APP |