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Chief of Army Staff | General Ashfaq Parvez Kayani.

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COAS visits flood affected areas

RAWALPINDI, August 10(APP): Chief of Army Staff (COAS), General Ashfaq Parvez Kayani visited the flood affected areas of Balochistan, Sindh and southern parts of Punjab today.

The Army Chief flew over the affected areas and visited Sukkar, Kandhkot, Kashmore, Sohbatpur, Multan and Kot Addu to witness the current flood situation on ground. He was briefed by the local military commanders about the progress of rescue and relief efforts by the Army.

He greatly appreciated tireless efforts of the field formations and Army Aviation, who are working round the clock and at full capacity to provide relief to the affected countrymen. He directed the commanders to remain proactive, employ all available resources for the rescue and relief, and decentralize maximum effort. He pledged that Army will reach out to all those who have been affected by the floods.
 
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Chief of Army Staff , General Ashfaq Parvez Kayani meeting with troops during his visit to Sukkur on Friday (6-8-2010) – Photo ISPR

Notice the SSG guy in maroon beret.

Is he holding the Nuclear command codes in the briefcase?

Look at his left hand.
 
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Notice the SSG guy in maroon beret.

Is he holding the Nuclear command codes in the briefcase?

Look at his left hand.

You can see him or any other guy with the same briefcase all the time. Many times it is handcuffed to him. What else do you think it is then?
 
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COAS visits areas ravaged by floods

ISLAMABAD: The Chief of the Army Staff (COAS), General Ashfaq Kayani visited the flood-affected areas of Balochistan, Sindh and southern parts of Punjab on Tuesday. The COAS flew over the affected areas and visited Sukkur, Kandhkot, Kashmore, Sohbatpur, Multan and Kot Addu to witness the current flood situation on ground, said an ISPR press release. He was briefed by the local military commanders about the progress of the rescue and relief efforts by the army. The COAS greatly appreciated tireless efforts of the field formations and army aviation, who are working round the clock and at full capacity to provide relief to the affected countrymen. He pledged that the army will reach out to all those who have been affected by the floods. app
 
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Army using all resources for rescue and relief: ISPR

* Four NLC trucks bring relief supplies to Sindh g 222 relief camps set up in KP

Staff Report

ISLAMABAD: The Pakistan Army has engaged all available resources to carry out rescue and relief operations in the flood-affected areas of Sindh, Punjab, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA) and Gilgit-Baltistan, said a statement by the Inter-Services Public Relations on Tuesday.

On Tuesday, four trucks of National Logistics Cell brought relief supplies to flood-hit areas of Pano Aqil, Ghotki and Sukkur in Sindh. The supplies included milk, dry rations, water bottles, water coolers and blankets.

In Multan and Muzaffargarh, rescue and relief operation continued with the help of boats and helicopters. In the last 24 hours more than 2,230 people have been evacuated to safer places. 70,000 people are being provided necessary assistance in 11 relief camps established by the army. Doctors and paramedical staff of the army are providing treatment to patients. 16 workers of Peshawar Electricity Supply Company were rescued from Khud Bazdar near DI Khan on Tuesday.

In flood-battered Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, army helicopters resumed relief operations on Tuesday with 23 helicopters rescuing flood victims in Upper Swat, Kalam, Bahrain, Dir, Chakdara and DI Khan. Hazy weather in Malakand Division, particularly in Swat had suspended helicopter service.

Relief camps: The army has also established 222 relief camps at different locations in the province, where 58,884 flood victims have been accommodated in 18,683 tents. The displaced people are being given ready to eat meals and packets of dry rations.

Two rescue teams are helping locals in Rahatkot and Azad Banda areas of Swat in extricating their belongings from destroyed houses. Registration centres have been set up for assistance and ration distribution in Kalam Bazzar, Bahrain Bazzar, Utror, Balakot, Laikot and Pishaml. 16 temporary shelters have been erected at Sinpura to accommodate flood-affected families. Repair work on six bridges is in progress in Sakhra, Kala Kot, Bagh Dheri, Darolai, Ain and Wainai. Alpura to Bala Baba road has been repaired by Army Engineers while repair work on different segments of the Karakoram Highway is in progress. Army Engineers are working round the clock to repair damaged bridges in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and FATA.

Meanwhile, a fresh spell of rains started in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa on Tuesday. The provincial meteorological department warned that the rains would continue across the province for the next 24 hours.

The army established a flood control centre in Abbottabad to provide rescue and relief to flood victims in Azad Kashmir, on the Karakoram Highway and in Gilgit-Baltistan. Relief camps have been set up at various places in Skardu district. Thagus Bridge in Ghanche district of Gilgit-Baltistan is being repaired.
 
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Farzana Shaikh: The man who really matters in Pakistan

The president's reputation is being further damaged by the floods while the head of the army's authority is thriving on them


Sunday, 8 August 2010.

General Ashfaq Parvez Kayani wields the real power in Pakistan, and his leader's absence serves him well

Whatever David Cameron may say, looking both ways is by no means peculiar to Pakistan. For while Pakistan's President Asif Ali Zardari has looked the other way as his country drowns in the worst floods in living memory, the world has looked to him for decisive leadership. Yet, it has chosen to ignore that the real wielder of power – General Ashfaq Kayani – may be quietly tightening his grip and burnishing the credentials of his ever-ambitious army.


Even before the onset of the catastrophic floods, which prompted Kayani to head to the worst affected areas of the north-west ahead of any other political leader, it was clear that the military was gearing up to expose the government as unfit to look after Pakistan's interests.

Within days of Cameron's ill-judged statement in India last month accusing Pakistan of "exporting terror", Kayani had swung into action. In a widely publicised move he ordered the head of Pakistan's Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI), General Shuja Pasha, to cancel his participation at a security summit with his British counterparts.

Although Prime Minister Yousaf Raza Gillani has since maintained that no such summit involving Pasha was ever scheduled, the announcement of Pasha's withdrawal had been carefully orchestrated to ensure maximum impact. It coincided with angry street protests against the government, led by religious parties.

They not only denounced Cameron's statement but, more significantly, strongly condemned Pakistan's elected government for its supine response and its failure to defend the country against its enemies. The powerful subtext of these demonstrations was that the army alone was capable of rising to the challenge.

This perception that the army is the best judge of the country's interests is not, of course, new to Pakistan. But having suffered a blow to its image during the Musharraf years, the military under Kayani has worked hard to rehabilitate itself. After taking over as army chief in 2007, Kayani made sure he cultivated the impression that he and his army were set to turn the page and renounce politics for good. Hailed by his peers at home and abroad, notably in the United States, as the "soldier's soldier", many pointed to his professionalism. It was later singled out as the key to explain the army's gains against militants in Swat and in vast swathes of Pakistan's Federally Administered Tribal Agencies (Fata).

Kayani's good offices in ensuring "free and fair" elections in 2008 and in making possible the restoration last year of Chief Justice Iftikhar Chaudhry (sacked by Musharraf) further enhanced his standing.

Even the ISI, long reviled at home as a sinister political force that favoured military dic tators, appears on course for rehabilitation under Kayani's stewardship. It has emerged relatively unscathed by the recent WikiLeaks revelation and been embraced by a once hostile Pakistani media as "our ISI".

But it is also clear that, if needed, Kayani would not hesitate to play a hard political card and assert his power vis-à-vis the elected government. This was sharply demonstrated in 2008 when, following the Mumbai attacks, he overturned the government's decision to send the head of the ISI to help Indian authorities with a joint investigation.

No less telling was the rejection by Kayani's team of corps commanders in 2009 of the government's plans to accede to the US Kerry-Lugar bill (approving aid to Pakistan's civilian sector worth $7.5 bn over five years) that required the military to be made accountable to the country's elected leaders.

These signals notwithstanding, there was a broad consensus that Kayani harboured no political ambitions. Indeed, many believed that he would prove his point by refusing an extension of his tenure due to expire in November 2010 on the grounds that not to do so would run contrary to the very professionalism on which Kayani had built his reputation.

Their expectations were shattered when Kayani accepted an unprecedented three-year extension – the first such extension granted by an elected prime minister in line with his constitutional prerogatives. (All others have been the prerogative of Pakistan's military leaders.)

But the timing of Kayani's extension, following hard on the heels of a visit by US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and the manner in which it was confirmed (a dramatic, nationally televised statement by Prime Minister Gillani instead of a routine press statement), have now fuelled doubts about Kayani's real intentions.

They stem from reports of Kayani's increasingly close ties to senior members of the US military and from fears that, as in the past, the US could undermine the position of Pakistan's already fragile civilian authorities.

It is no secret that the powerful chairman of the US joint chiefs of staff committee, Admiral Mike Mullen, was a key backer in favour of extending Kayani's tenure because the war in Afghanistan was too delicately poised to allow a change mid-stream.

Indeed, US support has been crucial to Kayani – a rather curious fact when one considers that Kayani was head of the ISI during precisely the period (2004-2007) when the ISI is said to have played its double game in Afghanistan most assiduously.

But what is indisputable is that, at the moment Kayani's stock and that of his army could not be higher (and yesterday, remarkably, he was praised to the skies in the liberal newspaper Express Tribune), President Zardari's and his government could not be any lower. That difference is likely to widen in the days to come as Kayani basks in the glow of a grateful public impressed by his army's decision to donate one day of its members' salary to flood victims and repulsed by Zardari's expensive foreign tour when the country was in mourning .

Be that as it may, it behoves the international community to ensure that it does not look the other way should the military in Pakistan use this national calamity to further its political fortunes. To do so would be not only to renege on international pledges to strengthen Pakistan's fragile political institutions. It would also gravely compromise the many sacrifices made by ordinary Pakistanis who, more than 60 years after the creation of their state, have yet to have a say in how they are governed.

Farzana Shaikh is an associate fellow of Chatham House and the author of 'Making Sense of Pakistan'
 
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Continuity in a Time of Flux: Pakistan Army Chief’s Term Extended

By Reza Jan

August 9, 2010


Key Points:
The extension of Pakistani Chief of Army Staff General Ashfaq Parvez Kayani’s term by three years is the first by a democratic government in decades and amounts to a full second term for Gen. Kayani. Gen. Kayani will now retire in November 2013 and will outlast the terms of both Prime Minister Gilani and President Asif Ali Zardari.

Gen. Kayani has won high praise in Pakistan and the United States for his professionalism, ability to keep the army from interfering in politics, and for salvaging the army’s public image and morale from dangerous lows.

Gen. Kayani has overseen key transformations in the Pakistani military and has spearheaded new and widely lauded offensives against the Pakistani Taliban, including operations to retake the Swat valley in April 2009 and to clear South Waziristan of insurgents in October 2009.

Supporters of the extension for Kayani argue that the move maintains continuity of command in the Pakistani military during crucial phases in Pakistan’s operations against the Pakistani Taliban and during its military development and sustains lines of trust built up over the years between key actors in Pakistan, Afghanistan and the United States.

Critics retort that the extension disrupts regular promotion schedules, strengthens personality politics in the army (jeopardizing democratic revival), and maintains Pakistani military and intelligence aid to Afghan Taliban groups.




Pakistan’s Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani announced on July 22 that, after consultation with President Asif Ali Zardari, he had decided to grant Pakistan’s Chief of Army Staff, Ashfaq Parvez Kayani, a three-year extension of his tenure. The announcement confirmed rumors that had been circulating since last year that Gilani would extend Gen. Kayani’s term.[1]



Unique situation
The extension means that Gen. Kayani will now retire in November 2013. This will make the army chief one of the longest serving principals in the country, as both the prime minister and the president are slated to complete their terms before his retirement (although they are eligible for re-election). This means Gen. Kayani will likely still be the army chief during the 2013 general election.[2]

Even though there was little doubt that Kayani’s term would be extended, the reappointment is unique for two reasons. First, it is the first time that a serving chief of the army has received a full term extension from a democratically elected civilian government (previous extensions have either been short-term arrangements, or given by military rulers to themselves).[3] General Abdul Waheed Kakar, the army chief during the late Benzair Bhutto’s second stint as prime minister, was also offered an extension, but declined to accept it.[4] Second, this is the first time that a democratically-elected civilian government in Pakistan has chosen to forego selecting an army chief of its own. The government is standing by the choice of the previous military government (Gen. Kayani was former president Gen. Pervez Musharraf’s choice of replacement).[5]



Accolades
Gen. Kayani has won high praise within Pakistan and from United States for transforming the fortunes of the army in a short amount of time. When Gen. Kayani inherited the position from President Pervez Musharraf in 2007, the popularity of the army as an institution had sunk to new lows, in large part because of its association with the increasingly unpopular rule of Gen. Musharraf.[6] The Red Mosque controversy, the disastrous peace deals, defeats at the hands of the Taliban in the Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA) and the Swat valley, a new wave of suicide attacks across the country, and anger at the army’s political meddling all contributed to a swelling public resentment and a slide in troop morale. Gen. Kayani managed to salvage the army’s tarnished image and few in Pakistan would argue against his success. Public concern about extremism dropped in Pakistan between 2009 and 2010, the period in which the Pakistani military experienced success in its operations against the Taliban. In 2009, seventy-three percent expressed concern about extremism; only fifty-four percent did in 2010.[7]

Gen. Kayani is also hailed at home as a hero for turning around the war against the Pakistani Taliban.[8] Under Gen. Kayani’s stewardship, the Pakistani military launched decisive operations in the Swat valley and in South Waziristan, retaking territory that had served as safe havens for the Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan since 2007 and for related groups long before in the case of South Waziristan. Those operations, along with numerous other offensives across the FATA, have earned Gen. Kayani plaudits at home and abroad.[9]

Gen. Kayani launched programs to help salvage flagging troop morale even prior to turning around Pakistan’s war against its own militants. The army chief designated 2008 “The Year of the Soldier,” issuing a number of directives to try and better the conditions of the common soldiery, including vast pay increases for soldiers and frequent personal visits to soldiers serving in the field.[10] He designated 2009 “The Year of Training” during which the military launched a back-to-basics approach to increasing military professionalism. The army increased its training programs from the battalion level on up, culminating in the staging of the Azm-e-Nau III wargames in April 2010, the largest in Pakistan’s history.[11] The major military operations launched in 2009, no doubt benefitting from these army-wide programs, saw success that has further boosted troop morale.[12]

Perhaps among Gen. Kayani’s biggest accolades is the success he has had at keeping the army out of politics, at least overtly. He managed to keep the army from interfering in the 2008 general elections and, in January 2008, ordered all army officers to break and eschew contact with politicians.[13] Gen. Kayani also extricated hundreds of military officers from positions in government and civil service normally filled by civilians.[14] While Gen. Kayani has on occasion stepped in to referee major political disputes, it has usually been done discreetly, in keeping with his desire to maintain a low public profile.[15]



Impact
Many defense analysts and commentators in Pakistan, and diplomats and military officials in the United States, have commented favorably on Gen. Kayani’s extension.[16] They cite his professionalism, success against the Pakistani Taliban, excellent relations with his American counterparts, and the need for continuity of command during a critical time in Pakistan’s operations against the Taliban as the reasons for supporting Prime Minister Gilani’s announcement.

There has been, nonetheless, reasoned dissent among others. One of the primary concerns has been the disruption to promotion schedules that Gen. Kayani’s extension will cause. By granting Gen. Kayani a three-year extension, Gilani has conferred upon the army chief a full second term in the position, essentially denying the next generation of three-star officers a chance at filling the top slot. In practice, this affects only one general in particular. Lt. Gen. Khalid Shamim Wyne, the current Chief of General Staff, would have been the most senior officer at the time of Kayani’s retirement; Gen. Wyne will now retire before he would have the chance to serve as COAS.[17] There has been some talk of creating the position of Vice Chief of Army Staff for Gen. Wyne, but such a move has historically been viewed with skepticism within the army.[18] While there is the risk that such an extension could create misgivings among other senior generals, it is unlikely that such an offer was made or accepted without the broader agreement of the army’s Corps Commanders.[19]

Another issue of concern is what the extension represents for the progress of democracy in Pakistan. While it is a positive development that the extension was granted (at least superficially) by a civilian government, it does not speak well for the country’s democratic development if it continues to rely on strong personalities within the army. A six-year term army chief following so closely on the heels of Gen. Musharraf’s own nine years in power conjures up ghosts of an uncomfortable past. Gen. Kayani’s unique relationship with the United States is presented as an argument necessitating his continued presence and senior officials in U.S. military and policy circles have for some time championed granting Kayani an extension.[20] Critics argue, however, that this reinforces old U.S. policies of dealing with strong military personalities to the detriment of the ruling civilian government.

Lastly, there remains concern regarding the Pakistani military’s attitude towards the war in Afghanistan. Gen. Kayani has been lauded by his American allies for ramping up the Pakistani counterinsurgency campaign against the Pakistani Taliban and for purging officers with ties to militants, but the U.S. has privately expressed its disappointment that the Pakistani military has refused to distance itself from the Afghan Taliban, in particular the Haqqani network.[21] This concern is even more potent following the leak of classified U.S. military documents by WikiLeaks.org. Many of the leaked documents, prepared by lower-level U.S. military officers between 2004 and 2009, claim that the ISI provided high level strategic and tactical support to Afghan Taliban groups. In fact, according to the documents, much of the support was provided and expanded during Gen. Kayani’s time at the helm of the ISI from 2004-2007.[22]

Pakistan’s security policies, which would include historical support for militant groups, or lack thereof, are rarely the machinations of one man and usually are the result of a consensus among the senior-most members of the Pakistani officer corps. It is unlikely that Pakistan would undergo any dramatic shift in its external security policies even if Gen. Kayani were to retire on-time. The Pakistanis vehemently deny assisting the Afghan Taliban and claim that, if there is any support being rendered to the Taliban, it is by retired members of the ISI acting of their own devices and out of the control of the nation’s security apparatus (the U.S. has, on occasion, endorsed this claim).[23] If this is indeed the case, then support for the Afghan Taliban remains a factor insulated from whether Gen. Kayani stays or goes.



Conclusion
While concerns remain over the long-term negative impact of Gen. Kayani’s extension, there is much that might mitigate or override those fears. There is truth in the prime minister’s assertion that military operations in Pakistan are at a crucial stage. Gen. Kayani is overseeing not just major kinetic action against militants in Pakistan’s northwest and the stabilization of previous operations, but a larger transformation of the Pakistan Army in general. The army is in the midst of accounting for doctrinal changes by India’s military as well as sharpening its ability to fight guerrilla warfare against militants in the mountains. Furthermore, the relationship between Afghanistan and Pakistan is currently in a state of flux. Switching key actors during a period of stabilizing relations risks losing relationships that have been shaped over the course of years.

The same remains true of Gen. Kayani’s relationship with top commanders in Afghanistan. Gen. Kayani is respected, well-liked and has a good working relationship with both General David Petraeus and Admiral Mike Mullen.[24] Pakistani and U.S. military cooperation has increased dramatically under Gen. Kayani’s supervision and it is exactly that increased cooperation and trust building which could help shift Pakistani policy away from supporting enemy actors.[25] Cyril Almeida, an editor for Pakistan’s Dawn newspaper, aptly summed-up the situation by saying “Kayani is supposed to preside over the finest institution in the country and if he regards himself as indispensable, it cannot be read in a positive way….Having said that, clearly something is about to change in Afghanistan, and the army here feels need for continuity. He has understood the regional developments and has familiarity and dexterity of issues that might not exist in another officer right now.[26]”

While it is unfortunate that personalities are once again a seminal concern in U.S.-Pakistan relations, for better or for worse, the fact remains that Pakistan’s security policy is firmly within the domain of its army. Relying on such personalities to maintain a level of stability through this body at a key juncture in the wars in Afghanistan and Pakistan is, perhaps, a necessary evil. While it may be too early to augur the effects of Gen. Kayani’s extension, there is little doubt that if an extension is seen as necessary, none could presently fill the role better than Gen. Kayani himself.
 
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Chief of Army Staff, General Ashfaq Parvez Kayani during his visit to flood affected areas on Tuesday. (10-8-2010) - Photo ISPR
 
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Chief of Army Staff, General Ashfaq Parvez Kayani during his visit to flood affected areas on Tuesday. (10-8-2010) - Photo ISPR

couple of those chaps need a crash course in dieting - good thing Ramadhan is here!
 
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Chief of Army Staff, General Ashfaq Parvez Kayani during his visit to flood affected areas on Tuesday. (10-8-2010) - Photo ISPR

Sir Waynne has gained weight and sir Athar is perhaps already on dieting, since i last met them, and that one chap (with his ever green unconcerned look) would be required to send me a cake (the rishwat for emailing his pic) once i would tell him that he's all over the internet :D
 
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COAS Cancels August 14, Sept 6 Celebrations​
Chief of Army Staff General Ashfaq Parvez Kayani on Thursday cancelled the military celebrations of August 14 and September 6 this year and said the savings will be utilised for flood relief activities.

A special Corps Commanders’ Conference was held at General Headquarters to review flood situation in the country and ongoing relief and rescue activities by the Army.

According to ISPR, participants took comprehensive overview of the flood situation and ongoing relief and rescue operations by the Army.

The COAS directed the formations to continue reaching out to the marooned people and emphasised that the dearth of resources must be overcome through

COAS cancels August 14, Sept 6 celebrations | Pakistan | News | Newspaper | Daily | English | Online
 
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COAS cancels Independence Day celebrations


ISLAMABAD: Chief of Army Staff General Ashfaq Parvez Kayani on Thursday cancelled the military celebrations of August 14 and September 6 this year and said the savings will be utilised for flood relief activities.

A special Corps Commanders’ Conference was held at General Headquarters to review flood situation in the Country and ongoing relief and rescue activities by the Army.

According to ISPR, Participants took comprehensive overview of the flood situation and ongoing relief and rescue operations by the Army.

The COAS directed the formations to continue reaching out to the marooned people and emphasised that the dearth of resources must be overcome through personal sacrifices and smart management.

He appreciated the efforts of all field formations and Army Aviation in-particular. He stated that Army will continue to work round the clock and at full capacity to assist the civil administration and National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA) in providing relief to the affected countrymen.

US helicopters arrive for flood relief

Meanwhile, two US Marine Corps CH-53E Super Stallion helicopters arrived in Pakistan on Thursday as part of the continued US humanitarian assistance.

The two aircraft were the first of 19 helicopters urgently ordered to Pakistan yesterday by US Secretary of Defense Robert Gates. The incoming aircrafts flew into Pakistan Thursday from aboard the USS Peleliu, which is positioned in international waters in the Arabian Sea.

The remaining aircraft will arrive over the next few days. The US helicopters will operate in partnership with the Pakistan military throughout the country’s flood-affected areas.

“As we did during the tragedy of the 2005 earthquake, we continue to stand by the Pakistani people during this crisis,” said US Central Command Commander Gen James N Mattis. “Pakistan is our friend and ally, and in their time of need, we are committed to partnering with their government and military to support their efforts to bring relief to the millions of Pakistanis impacted by these floods.”

More aid needed

International Organisation for Migration (IOM) delivered a consignment of 17,000 blankets and 1,153 rolls of plastic sheet to the flood affected areas of Punjab and Sindh.

Shelter quality plastic sheet, which is in short supply in Pakistan, is desperately needed by an estimated 300,000 families whose homes have been damaged or destroyed by the floods.

The Multan hub will take deliveries of shelter and other relief goods shipped in by road and air and dispatch them to the worst flood-affected areas and it will join existing hubs in Islamabad and Peshawar.

An additional shelter hub will open in Sukkur in Sindh later this week.

IOM Islamabad also took delivery of 9,000 shelter kits comprising plastic sheet, poles and ropes donated by the UK Department of International Development (DFID). ]

IOM expects to take delivery and distribution of another 1,000 tents, 24,000 buckets and 48,600 blankets donated by DFID in the course of this week.

China may increase aid

China said it may increase its 10 million yuan ($1.5 million) flood relief assistance to Pakistan as the United Nations called for global donations of $460 million.

“China is willing to actively consider increasing assistance based on Pakistan’s needs,” Foreign Ministry Spokesman Jiang Yu said in a statement.

Last week, China flew in aid on military transports, including generators, medicine and water-purification equipment. The Chinese Red Cross has also given $50,000 in cash. The amount pledged so far by China is less than the $4.4 million it gave for Haiti’s earthquake relief earlier this year, reported Bloomberg.

“In general, China tends not to be particularly generous with economic assistance,” said Teresita Schaffer, director of the South Asia program at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington and a former top US diplomat for the region.

“Their involvement in Pakistan has been long on political support and visible assistance to a handful of very high profile projects carried out with Chinese labour, so the Pakistanis didn’t even get any employment benefits out of it,” Schaffer said.


COAS cancels Independence Day celebrations – The Express Tribune
 
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