What's new

Massive floods across Pakistan | Thousands Killed

http://www.worldbulletin.net/news_detail.php?id=62578
Saturday, 14 August 2010 15:04



Turkey sent another 35 tons of humanitarian aid to flood-hit Pakistan.

A Turkish cargo plane carrying the aid materials, including food packages, blankets, tents, cleaning and healthcare products, arrived in Islamabad early on Saturday.

Aid materials have been delivered to Pakistani Red Crescent officials.

Humanitarian aid will be distributed to flood victims in northwest part of Pakistan which was worst hit by monsoon rains.

Turkey which so far, donated $5 million and sent 115 tons of humanitarian aid to Pakistan after the flood, is expected to send more aid in the days to come.
 
Misery for the 'doomed orphans' of the floods

Monday, 16 Aug, 2010

NOWSHEHRA: Six million children are suffering from Pakistan's devastating floods: lost, orphaned or stricken with diarrhoea, they are the most vulnerable victims of the nation's worst-ever natural disaster.

At relief camps in government schools and colleges and in tent villages on the edge of towns and by roadways, children are prostate from the heat, sick from poor drinking water, or simply trying to find work.

“These are the most bitter days of my life,” said Iltaz Begum, 15, suffering from diarrhoea and stretched out in a government tent on the muddy outskirts of the northwestern town of Nowshehra.

“The weather has made our lives miserable. I had to leave my blind mother behind and there's no one to look after her as my father died two years ago.”

The tent village has no electricity. The rains have gone, but only to be replaced by heat and humidity. Flies buzz everywhere and the smell of faeces wafts through the camp.

Girls like Iltaz are just a drop in the ocean for the massive relief effort that the international community is trying to mobilise in one of the biggest ever UN aid operations.

UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon said millions had lost their livelihoods as he visited Pakistan on Sunday and witnessed “heart wrenching” scenes of destruction. Pakistan says 20 million people have been hit by the floods.

“Many have lost families and friends. Many more are afraid their children and loved ones will not survive in these conditions,” said Ban.

Sami Abdul Malik, spokesman for the UN children's fund UNICEF, said six million children were affected by the floods. The fund is distributing high-energy biscuits to stave off malnutrition and other diseases.

“Currently we are in a life-saving phase,” he told AFP. “We are distributing high energy biscuits because malnutrition is a curse. It can lead to several other diseases.

“Children are always vulnerable. They cannot control their thirst, they will drink any type of water and may get watery diarrhoea, cholera, malaria and other diseases.”

On top of all this are the trauma and psychological problems faced by those who have been orphaned or separated from parents.

In the south, people fleeing flooded homes have headed towards tent camps near the city of Sukkur. Abdul Ghani, 14, arrived from the remote village of Karampur, the eldest of seven orphaned siblings.

“Both my parents died in the space of six months last year. Me and a younger brother of mine worked as labourers to support the family,” said Ghani, wearing a worn grey shalwar khamis.

“Life was already so difficult, but now we're doomed.

“My four-year-old sister is hungry and ill but I have no idea what to do, where to go. No one is there to help us,” he said.

Shakeel Ahmed, 15, another orphan, faces a similar problem providing better shelter and food for his three younger siblings.

“We're too young and no one takes our problems seriously. No one listens to us. I tried to explain our problems but they shrugged me away,” he said.:cry:

In a relief camp at a Nowshehra technical college, children are crying, many walk naked without shoes, and a foul stench pervades the air due to people urinating and defecating next to the tents.

Doctors at the camp's field hospital say most of the children are suffering from gastroenteritis, skin diseases and dehydration caused by dirt and infection resulting from the destruction of sewers in the floods.

Twenty-five year-old Bushra Humayun, a labourer's wife, said she had given birth to twins in the camp, adding to her six other children.

She recalled losing her house in the flood and wading up to her neck through water while pregnant to reach the camp, two miles away.

“I'm not getting enough food to feed my two infants and they're getting weak as they remain underfed,” Humayun told AFP, sweat dripping down her face.

Her 12-year-old son Haroon had stomach pain and mosquito bites all over his arms and face. Life in the camp is their only prospect for the foreseeable future. – AFP

DAWN.COM | Pakistan | Misery for the 'doomed orphans' of the floods
 
Pakistan’s ‘image deficit’ hurting aid funds flow: UN

GENEVA: Relief agencies are having trouble obtaining funds to help millions of flood victims as Pakistan suffers from an “image deficit”, a UN spokeswoman said on Monday. “We note often an image deficit with regards to Pakistan among Western public opinion,” said Elizabeth Byrs, spokeswoman of the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. “As a result, Pakistan is among countries that are poorly financed, like Yemen,” she added. The UN has been struggling to obtain $460 million to provide emergency aid to six million victims of the country ravaged by heavy flooding. afp

Daily Times - Leading News Resource of Pakistan
 
160171493.jpg
 
World Bank to provide 900 million dollar loan to Pakistan​

worldbank-608.jpg

The government of Pakistan has requested around 900 million dollars of financial support from the World Bank, which we have committed to provide,” a statement from the Washington-based bank said. — File Photo

Monday, 16 Aug, 2010

WASHINGTON: The World Bank said on Monday it has agreed to provide a 900 million dollar loan to flood-hit Pakistan, saying the economic impact of the disaster on the economy was expected to be huge.

The government of Pakistan has requested around 900 million dollars of financial support from the World Bank, which we have committed to provide,” a statement from the Washington-based bank said.

DAWN.COM | Business | World Bank to provide 900 million dollar loan to Pakistan
 
Desperate Times
Desperate times sometimes result in desperate measures, and starving people who have been badly let down by the state can turn unruly if little or no relief is forthcoming. Flood victims are deprived of food and water and although various organisations and camps are providing aid around the clock, millions still remain hungry.

hungry_001.jpg


hungry_002.jpg


hungry_003.jpg


hungry_006.jpg


hungry_007.jpg


hungry_008.jpg

:cry::cry:
 
Flood-hit Pakistan signals massive reconstruction needs

GENEVA: Pakistan's UN envoy in Geneva said on Tuesday that reconstruction in northern areas alone could cost 2.5 billion dollars, after floods stretching to the south ravaged an area “the size of England”.

Zamir Akram, Pakistan's ambassador to the United Nations in Geneva, said the country had received more immediate multilateral relief aid through the UN and direct bilateral aid totalling about 301 million dollars.

UN agencies have warned that funding for their 460 million dollar multilateral appeal for emergency relief aid launched last week is not coming in fast enough.

Just 35 per cent — 160 million — has been paid in so far, although the pace has accelerated in recent days.

Pakistan hoped for “a greater international commitment” during a special session of the UN General Assembly in New York on Thursday, Akram said, dismissing concerns that aid money could be diverted by corruption or Taliban influence as exaggerated.

“The affected area is about the size of England,” Akram told journalists, also pointing to huge longer term needs to rebuild homes, roads and farming and secure river beds over five years.

“Initial indicators are that just for the northern part of Pakistan, the requirement would be somewhere to the tune of about 2.5 billion dollars, so it's going to be massive effort for reconstruction and rehabilitation,” he added.

A full damage assessment is likely to take another week to 10 days to complete, said Akram.

More immediate relief needs include food, shelter, clean water and medicines for waterborne diseases.

“So far there has not been an outbreak of cholera or any other disease as yet,” Akram said.

“Having said that, the danger of these kind of diseases remains and that's why there's a need for speedy efforts to get control of this.”

Some 14 million people have been directly affected by the floods, according to Pakistani authorities.
 
Donkeys come to the rescue in floods

donkey_flood_608.jpg


KOZA SIRAI: Millions of dollars may have been donated for Pakistan's flood victims, but on the ground authorities are having to use donkeys to slowly transport supplies to cut off mountain villages.

Logistical nightmares, shortages of helicopters to access remote areas and more rains that triggered landslides have forced authorities and aid agencies to take desperate measures.

Reaching remote villages tucked between mountains is one of the most daunting challenges. In scenic Shahpur valley, where Koza Sirai is located, some 150,000 people are in urgent need of food and medical supplies, officials say.

With an area roughly the size of Italy affected by floods, government and foreign aid has been slow in coming and the United Nations has warned of a second wave of deaths among the sick and hungry if help does not arrive.

As urgent appeals for international aid are made, policemen guide 30 donkeys strapped with flour, rice, cooking oil and sugar along narrow, muddy tracks and mountain terrain to villages.

Pakistan's powerful military, which has raised its profile with rescue and relief efforts in the flood catastrophe, is overseeing such operations, which take four hours each way.

Local officials are managing the donkey missions. That may not have inspired confidence in the government, which has drawn heavy criticism for its perceived slow respone to the crisis.

“If you're a relative of someone who is influential, you will get more food no matter how big or small your family is,” said teacher Mohammad Niaz at a food distribution centre.

Swollen by torrential monsoon rains, major rivers have flooded Pakistan's mountain valleys and fertile plains, killing up to 1,600 people and leaving two million homeless.

The villages, part of the greater Swat valley, were cut off for four days after the floods washed away houses, markets and crops.

Officials say the donkeys have hauled over 20 tonnes of supplies along the route to Shahpur since Aug. 3.

Before the floods, the government promised to pour hundreds of millions of dollars into Swat to rebuild infrastructure, schools and hospitals damaged in the war against Taliban insurgents there, in order to win over the public.

Now the economic damages of the flood disaster may force the government to hold back or cut into that strategic spending.

Prime Minister Yusuf Raza Gilani has urged the international community to provide Pakistan with helicopters, boats and hovercrafts to help relief efforts.

Only a quarter of the $459 million aid needed for initial relief has arrived, according to the United Nations.

Getting food distributed by donkeys is in some ways a luxury because the programme is so small. Hundreds of thousands of villagers make the journey on their own. The sick and wounded are carried on people's shoulders on a charpoy, a frame strung with light ropes.

Military officials say many villages are still inaccessible.

Even beasts of burden struggle to get through one of the biggest disasters in Pakistan's history. They move along the edge of sheer mud cliffs created by landslides in blistering heat.

“Two of my donkeys got injured as they fell on a narrow track,” said donkey owner Munawarullah Khan, beating his animal with a stick to force it to move. In a nearby river bed, several mules turned over and rubbed their backs on wet sand.

“They are exhausted,” he said. – Reuters
 
Tonight i saw at the news some Emirates CH-47 Chinock Helicopters Flying from the base of Multan in central Pakistan to deliver aids and i saw Qatari C-17 Transport aircraft and som other arab IL-76 Transport aircrafts from Syria, Oman, Egypt and Libya . . I hope my brothers who have pictures or videos For these aircrafts to download it

UAE steps up relief efforts in Pakistan

A fleet of Chinook helicopters had been deployed to evacuate people to shelters built by the Pakistani government

1604194956.jpg


Islamabad: The UAE Armed Forces will step up relief operations in Pakistan's flood-affected regions as per the directives of President His Highness Shaikh Khalifa Bin Zayed Al Nahyan.

The UAE Armed Forces is operating an air bridge between the flood-hit areas to deliver relief to the affected population.

The commander of the UAE Armed Force's Relief Team in Pakistan said a fleet of Chinook helicopters had been deployed to evacuate people to shelters built by the Pakistani government.

"The UAE Armed Forces team is assisting the Pakistani army to evacuate the distressed population to safe areas and airlift relief supplies to flood engulfed areas which could not be reached by land," he added.

UAE aircraft are also carrying relief assistance offered by friendly countries from main airports to locations of internally displaced persons (IDPs).

Relief operations will continue in an attempt to improve the living condition of the flood victims.

The commander added that his team had been among the first aid providers in Pakistan and intensified its humanitarian and relief works in various regions like Punjab.

Officials of Pakistan's National Disaster Management Authority paid tribute to the UAE for standing and supporting the Pakistani people in this ordeal.

thanks brother for sharing . .
 
even the most hard hearted person can't help but choke and feel lump in their throat when they see some of these images...to see that some of those kids are still smiling makes it even more difficult yet reassuring at the same time; they are so innocent, but they know they are in a dismal situation and must remain strong

many thanks to the kind donours --especially from the brotherly countries --who are understanding the urgency of the situation. Many lives are being affected by this natural disaster. I think it still hasnt been ascertained how much of an effect this will have on our already strained economy.





















p.s. in the long run, we really need to have a better government mechanism to deal with disasters like these; we also need heavy transport helicopters, like those Chinooks; we should lease at the very least 4-5 of them I think.
 
Angelina Jolie Urges Aid for Flood-hit Pakistan​
LONDON: Angelina Jolie says it's vital that people help Pakistan's flood victims and not surrender to compassion fatigue.

The floods have displaced 20 million people, but donations are below those for catastrophes like the Haitian earthquake or the Asian tsunami.

Jolie said she understood that ''it is getting hard for people, they see Haiti, they see these other events ... and they get exhausted by the time another big one rolls around.''

But she said Pakistanis face ''mass death, mass displacement, and this situation is going to get worse.''

Jolie has visited Haiti, Iraq and other countries as a UN goodwill ambassador. The star says she might visit Pakistan once ''the cameras go away.''

Jolie spoke Monday at the London premiere of her spy thriller ''Salt.'' -AP



DAWN.COM | Culture | Angelina Jolie urges aid for flood-hit Pakistan




she won the hearts and minds of many during the 2005 earthquake, and she played a pro-active role to promote relief to the affected

hopefully her visit to Pakistan will bring further attention to the plight of many of the people --who have lost EVERYTHING
 
Desperate Times
Desperate times sometimes result in desperate measures, and starving people who have been badly let down by the state can turn unruly if little or no relief is forthcoming. Flood victims are deprived of food and water and although various organisations and camps are providing aid around the clock, millions still remain hungry.


hungry_002.jpg


hungry_003.jpg


hungry_006.jpg


hungry_007.jpg


hungry_008.jpg

:cry::cry:

Oh man. Worst than I thought......:cry:
 
World Bank to provide 900 million dollar loan to Pakistan​

worldbank-608.jpg

The government of Pakistan has requested around 900 million dollars of financial support from the World Bank, which we have committed to provide,” a statement from the Washington-based bank said. — File Photo

Monday, 16 Aug, 2010

WASHINGTON: The World Bank said on Monday it has agreed to provide a 900 million dollar loan to flood-hit Pakistan, saying the economic impact of the disaster on the economy was expected to be huge.

The government of Pakistan has requested around 900 million dollars of financial support from the World Bank, which we have committed to provide,” a statement from the Washington-based bank said.

DAWN.COM | Business | World Bank to provide 900 million dollar loan to Pakistan

Now this is big news.

How is Pakistan ever going to be able to pay back the above loan, which is loaned not only on interest, but on a ridiculous amount of interest and Allah swt know what else is attached to it?

Seventy per cent of the money given by the World Bank to be spent on flood prevention has been embezzled or spent badly, according to Syed Adil Gilani at Transparency International Pakistan, the non-governmental organisation.

Source: A dying man trusted you to save his baby ? don?t let him down | The Sunday Times

If I was the President, I would put every male and female citizen to work into rebuilding their country - Pakistan, and help in the rescue efforts.
 
Guys I work for an US based Fortune 500 MNC and my company has started a campaign to raise $100,000 for Pakistan Flood Relief.
 
Last edited:
Back
Top Bottom