Pakistan Floods: India Increases aid to $25million

johnee

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Whether it is India, Pakistan or any other SAARC counties; we are on the same page when it comes to disaster management. It reflects the rampant corruption in our system. We do not have experts heading the various disaster management institutions. These institutions are headed by beurocrats who are good for nothing.

Just few weeks before there was flood in Haryana and Punjab. The response of government of these two states were no different.
Generally agreed. But to compare the general situation in India to the present situation in Pakistan is quite unfair on India and the victims of the present flood in Pakistan. This crisis in Pakistan is much much worse. And its handling is downright degraded. I am not saying that India is an ideal country in this aspect, but there is atleast a nominal govt machinery. And more importantly, India is really a vast country with extreme population compared to any other SAARC country, so the situation in India is quite different. I am not trying to defend India or our lethargic babus but to compare them with Pakistanis is quite unfair in my humble opinion.
 

neo29

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Keep your fingers crossed and pray it doesnt happen in India. Already in news that Himchal rivers are overflowing and Alert has been sounded.
 

Pintu

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http://www.google.com/hostednews/ukpress/article/ALeqM5j43miDAoMP0RgyVbFvCPVgZqKOIw

Weather blocks Pakistan aid copters

(UKPA) – 4 hours ago

Stormy weather has grounded helicopters carrying emergency supplies to Pakistan's flood-ravaged north-west as the worst monsoon rains in decades brought more destruction to a nation already reeling from Islamist violence.

US military personnel waiting to fly Chinooks to the upper reaches of the hard-hit Swat Valley were frustrated by the storms, which dumped more rain on a region where many thousands are living in tents or crammed into public buildings.

Over the last week, floods have spread from the north-west down Pakistan, killing around 1,500 people and affecting more than four million. Much of the destruction has come from the mighty Indus River, which in better times irrigates vast swaths of farmland.

Some 30,000 Pakistani soldiers are rebuilding bridges, delivering food and setting up relief camps in the north-west, which is the main battleground in the fight against al Qaida and the Taliban. Foreign countries and the United Nations have donated millions of dollars.

Also helping out are Islamist charities, including at least one with links to a banned militant organisation.

The government has come under criticism for not doing enough, especially since president Asif Ali Zardari chose to go ahead with a trip to Europe at the height of the crisis.

In the Sukkur area of Sindh in southern Pakistan, 70 villages had been flooded over the last 24 hours, the navy said.

Saleh Farooqi, head of the Provincial Disaster Management Authority in Sindh, said authorities had evacuated about 200,000 people from areas where flood waters could hit, but many more were still living in the danger zone.

Amal Masud, a spokeswoman for the National Disaster Management Authority, said all helicopters currently stationed in the north-west were grounded because of poor weather.

About 85 US military service people are taking part in the relief activities. On Thursday, six helicopters flew their first sorties, picked up 800 stranded people and dropping off emergency aid.
 

Neil

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Pakistan issues flooding 'red alert' for Sindh province

Pakistan has issued a red alert as floods that have devastated northern areas swept south into Sindh province.

Authorities have evacuated more than half a million people living near the Indus river as hundreds of villages have been inundated by floodwaters.

The worst floods in the region for 80 years have killed at least 1,600 people and affected about 12 million others.

Meanwhile, President Asif Ali Zardari has rejected criticism that he should return from an extended foreign trip.

In a BBC interview, Mr Zardari said the cabinet was directing relief efforts, and he was being kept up to date about the situation.

"I'm the one who's given all the powers from the presidency to the parliament. The parliament is in session - the Senate is in session. It's the prime minister's responsibility, and he's fulfilling his responsibility."

The president said he had secured promises of assistance from the countries he had visited - the UAE, France and the UK.

Helicopters grounded
Pakistan's meteorological agency has predicted further downpours in the badly-hit north-western province of Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa. It is only half-way through the region's monsoon season.

All the helicopters working in the north-west to deliver aid and rescue stranded survivors have been grounded because of the bad weather, according to Amal Masud of the National Disaster Management Authority.

Appearing on television, Prime Minister Gilani called the flooding the worst in Pakistan's 63-year history and appealed for help.

"I would ask the international community to support and help Pakistan alleviate the sufferings of its flood-affected people," he said.

Officials say 650,000 homes have been destroyed, 1.4m acres (557,000 hectares) of crop land has been flooded and more than 10,000 cows have died.

An official at the UN Office for the Co-ordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), Manuel Bessler, told the BBC that with crops swept away by floodwaters, some Pakistanis might be forced to rely on food aid to get through the winter.

He said the immediate priorities for survivors were clean drinking water and medical assistance.

Some of those affected by the flooding have been critical of the government's response.

BBC's Adam Mynott: 'It's a catastrophe... and that's no overstatement'

"Floods killed our people, they have ruined our homes and even washed away the graves of our loved ones," Mai Sahat told the Associated Press near Sukkur in Sindh. "Yet we are here without help from the government."

Correspondents say that with flood victims bitterly accusing the authorities of failing to come to their aid, the disaster has piled yet more pressure on an administration struggling to contain Taliban violence and an economic crisis.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-south-asia-10900947
 

Pintu

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Regards
 
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ganesh177

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Is there any source that pakistan removed "made in india" tags in 2005 earth quake. Coz i cant find one.
 

ajtr

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Pakistan in crisis: left to help themselves

As their president continues his controversial visit to Britain, the people of Pakistan face a crippling combination of floods, unrest and terrorism. Neil Tweedie in Islamabad listens to a recurring story of bitterness and betrayal .

Drive along the newish motorway from Islamabad to Peshawar and for a time things seem normal. Until you approach the bridge straddling the Jindi River.
There, on the reservation dividing the two carriageways, is a village created overnight by families who fled there to escape the floodwaters that engulfed them in the night. For eight days they have lived like this, in tatty tents without groundsheets, only a few hours' drive from their country's manicured capital, yet bereft of help from a government seemingly indifferent to their fate.Saif Ullah is 25 but looks older, aged by a life of near-subsistence farming. Still, the crops of sugar cane, wheat and maize grown on his two hectares of land kept his wife and two young children fed. Then, last week, the Jindi, swollen by torrential rains not witnessed in Pakistan for 80 years, broke its banks, inundating the surrounding villages and farmland.
"I woke up at 3am and got out of bed. I was standing in two feet of water," said Mr Ullah. "People started crying, screaming. We had to swim to the motorway to save ourselves. Our animals drowned."
Mr Ullah can see his ruined house from the road. The few possessions he could call his own lie there under stinking mud and stagnant brown water. A stench of rotting everything – dead animals, contaminated vegetation – fills the nostrils.
The 13 families who inhabited the village of Chatri Tapu slept in the open for a week, with nothing but stones for a bed, until members of the Kuwaiti Red Crescent arrived with tents. A bowser provides occasional drinking water, but no food – that comes from motorists who show their pity by throwing packages from their lorries and cars. Drive a little further and the tented village on the motorway, built on a raised embankment, the only high ground around, becomes a town. Scores more tents line the reservation, while animals stand tethered to the crash barrier.
Chaos and Pakistan go together. This country of 170 million souls has plenty to go round. Take the floods, which have killed at least 1,500 people and displaced or affected some 12 million, and add an outbreak of bloody political violence in the port city of Karachi. Then add the ongoing and much bloodier insurgency waged by the Pakistani Taliban in the tribal areas bordering Afghanistan, and you have a potent brew.
Jihadist groups, who this week claimed the life of a senior police officer in Peshawar, blown up by a teenage suicide bomber as he sat in his car, spy an opportunity in the chaos. Islamic charities, most of them relatively moderate but some more extreme, have shown themselves, with Western charities and NGOs, to be the only effective means of relief during the flood crisis, which shows no sign of abating. While the government, hobbled by bureaucracy, remains invisible, the charities, funded by private donations and injections of cash from the Middle East, are only too visible, proclaiming their presence on banners and at roadside help points.
The seeming insensitivity of the Pakistani ruling class is nowhere better illustrated than by the decision of President Asif Ali Zardari to carry on with a visit to Britain, despite the progressive immersion of his country. Standing alongside David Cameron following bilateral discussions at Chequers, President Zardari, widowed husband of Benazir Bhutto and one-time jailbird, brushed aside the controversy sparked by the Prime Minister's description of Pakistan – during a visit to India of all places – as a duplicitous exporter of terrorism.
"This is a friendship that will never break, no matter what happens," Mr Zardari assured the press. "Storms will come and storms will go, and Pakistan and Britain will stand together and face all the difficulties with dignity."
The storms aren't going anywhere, for the moment. The heavy monsoon rains returned to Pakistan yesterday, grounding rescue helicopters – including a small detachment of US Army Chinooks flown in from Afghanistan – and threatening yet more destruction. Since the first floods in the mountainous north, the progress of the disaster has been simple to predict. The Indus, the mighty waterway that forms Pakistan's backbone, is breaking its banks further and further south as the flood waters roar downstream.
In Sindh, the great southern province, 70 villages were flooded within the space of 24 hours yesterday as the flood tide made its way to the Indian Ocean. Around 200,000 people fled their homes, leaving half a million oblivious to the fate approaching them, according to the Pakistani government. The army, the real powerbroker in Pakistan, has deployed some 30,000 troops to help in rescue and relief operations, but outside Peshawar yesterday the only military convoy in sight was a regiment of artillery making its way north.
Nearby, in the town of Pabbi, 800 refugees crowded into a decaying high school converted into an aid post by the Al Khidmat Foundation, a charity affiliated to the Islamic Jamaat-i-Islami Party. Shahid Wali Khattak, the charity's tall, bearded, imposing general secretary, was scathing about the government's performance.
"Maybe these rains are a test from Allah, a test of those who claim to help the people. Zardari – where is he? In Britannia. The government is not here; it has done nothing for these people. We must help ourselves."
More extreme is the Falah-e-Insaniat Foundation, which is carrying out relief work in the province of Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa, known until recently as North-West Frontier Province. Falah is an offshoot of the Jamaat-ud-Dawa charity, which in turn is accused of being a reincarnation of the Lashkar-e-Taiba group responsible for the 2008 terrorist attacks in Mumbai.
The poor farmers made destitute by the floods are in no mood to worry about the credentials of those helping them. More than 252,000 homes are thought to have been damaged or destroyed across Pakistan, and 558,000 hectares of agricultural land flooded.
Mohammad Bakhsh is one of the faceless millions. "Our cattle died and the cotton crop was destroyed," he said. "I've got calls on my mobile saying 20 to 25 children from our family are stranded in the village and are holding on to tree branches. Two of my children have drowned and we don't know where they are."
Outside Peshawar, Afghan refugees driven from their country by the fighting of the 1980s have been left to fend for themselves, colonising the raised railway line to escape the flood waters. Stinking mud-soaked blankets lay on the sodden ground yesterday, their only rescued possessions.
Shah Wali, 28, was in despair: "We have never been helped and we are again alone." Yet adults managed to laugh as boys chased parcels tossed from cars. Others scrambled out of the way as the Peshawar to Rawalpindi express chugged into view.
With masterly understatement, army Major-General Athar Abbas summarised the situation. "We do not have the kind of resources to cope with a situation like this, and I think the international community should come to our help."Yet they have the resources to send an artillery regiment north?And have a nuclear arsenal and disproportionately-sized armed forces ?
Zardari, the frontman for the army, is on trial. Waiting in the wings is General Ashfaq Parvez Kayani, chief of the general staff and the man the Americans listen to. He has just been granted an unprecedented second three-year term in office. The army is said to be the only institution that really works in Pakistan – a debatable proposition, given its own performance during the floods.
Zardari is this weekend meant to be anointing his son, Bilawal Bhutto Zardari, who turns 22 next month, as the next inheritor of the Bhutto political legacy at a rally in Birmingham. In order to minimise the domestic fallout from his father's foreign sojourn, Bilawal will instead be attending a fundraising event in London in aid of the flood victims.
But there is no doubt that Zardari's reputation at home is tarnished. The News newspaper put it thus: "When millions are drowning in flash floods and when Karachi is burning in a bloodbath and when terrorists are roaming around with abandon, he has decided to insult the nation by his abrasiveness and arrogance."
Zardari, with his wealth, is at one end of the spectrum; Gulab Rahim is at the other. Surveying the ruin of his home, he said: "Our whole life passed in difficulties and we have never seen prosperity. May Allah give us happiness in the life hereafter."
 
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ajtr

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Pakistanis desperate to escape flood areas

Pakistan (Reuters) - Pakistanis desperate to get out of flooded villages threw themselves at helicopters on Saturday as more heavy rain was expected to intensify both suffering and anger with the government.

President Asif Ali Zardari may have made the biggest political mistake of his career by leaving for visits to Paris and London during the worst floods in 80 years.

The disaster has killed more than 1,600 people and disrupted the lives of 12 million. Pakistan's agriculture-based economy, heavily dependent on foreign aid, has suffered a major blow.

Heavy rains are expected to lash the country again raising the prospect that more houses and crops will be swept away.

In the town of Muzaffargarh, near where rivers bloated with rain from as far away as Afghanistan and India merge with the Indus to flow south to the sea, army helicopters dropped packets of rice to people who had moved to higher ground to a cemetery.

Some latched on to helicopter skids as the aircraft took off. An elderly man fought his way inside one. He looked down and wept.

"Things are getting worse. It's raining again. That's hampering our relief work," said U.N. World Food Programme spokesman Amjad Jamal.

Some Pakistanis said leaving home would only bring more uncertainty.

"Where should I go? Who will take care of me and my family? I'm fine in my village," said Dur Mohammad, 70, sitting beside his rice field, inundated with rain, in Sindh province.

Districts in southern Sindh were on high alert as the water surged down the Indus river basin.

After a dike burst in one Sindh village, authorities ordered people to leave and soldiers started evacuations, said a district official. Authorities said up to a million people in the province have been evacuated.

Floods have roared down from the north to the agricultural heartland of Punjab to Sindh along a trail more than 1,000 km (620 miles) long.

Sindh is home to Pakistan's biggest city and commercial hub, Karachi, but the floods are expected to hit rural areas.

U.N. officials said more than half a million people had been evacuated in Sindh.

Flooding was also taking a toll over the border in the Indian state of Jammu and Kashmir, where rain was hampering rescue and relief efforts. Flash floods have killed at least 132 people in the Himalayan region of Ladakh.

NO ARMY TAKEOVER EXPECTED

Responding to criticism of his absence, Zardari, said the prime minister was capable of dealing with the crisis.

"There is a chief executive at home ... The parliament is in session, the Senate is in session, it's the prime minister's responsibility and he's fulfilling his responsibility," Zardari told the BBC.

U.S. officials, aware of the impact hurricane Katrina had on the fortunes of former President George W. Bush, have privately expressed frustration with Zardari's refusal to return.

In Britain, more than 100 Pakistanis protested outside a convention center where Zardari was due to speak. One banner read "Zardari, part-time president!," echoing sentiment among flood victims back home still waiting for help.

"Our president is out visiting foreign countries while we drown here. The government is doing nothing," said villager Anar Gul in northwestern Pakistan.

"Just look at our condition. We have no drinking water, nothing to eat, nothing. We are sitting in the rain. We have no tents. We are not getting anything from anywhere."

Pakistan's government was already under pressure to tackle a range of problems. Militants still pose a security threat despite offensives, poverty is widespread and corruption is rampant.

Although Zardari this year handed most of his powers to Prime Minister Yusuf Raza Gilani, he still wields influence, and his departure to Europe as parts of Pakistan were submerged further eroded faith in the civilian government.

The military, with which Zardari has had differences, has ruled Pakistan for more than half of its history. It has spearheaded relief efforts, reinforcing the view that civilian governments cannot handle major crises.

But analysts do not expect the army to make a grab for power.

It remains too preoccupied with Taliban insurgents to try and orchestrate a takeover. The military would rather play a behind the scenes role and let the government take the heat.

"Our houses have been fully submerged. I kept putting my kid's toys in higher places ... but I lost everything, said Rana Abdul Razzak, an engineer taking refuge at a power station.

"I cannot tell you how bad it was to see those toys floating in the water."

(Additional reporting by Kamran Haider and Faisal Aziz; Writing by Michael Georgy; Editing by Robert Birsel)
 

ajtr

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Policy matter on Duny TV Nasim Zehra Auntie ji covering Ground situation of floods in Malakand, punjab and sindh...

Watch around 3:50 - Pak Army is not allowing media to cover ground situation. They snatched camera from Naseem Zehra Auntie's crew:happy_2: .Seems that things are much worse and holly Pak Army doesnt want to project its inability to deal with this.



 
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Pintu

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http://www.google.com/hostednews/ukpress/article/ALeqM5hlqz-H3bLQoAvSe9orvhrsqdFu2A

£5m raised for Pakistan flood aid

(UKPA) – 2 hours ago

The amount raised by the British public to help flood victims in Pakistan has topped the £5 million mark, UK charities have said.

Money continues to pour in in a bid to alleviate the plight of an estimated 13 million people affected by heavy monsoon rains.

But the ongoing deluge has hampered the relief operation, grounding helicopters intending to rescue those threatened by expanding rivers over the weekend.

It is estimated that around 1,500 people have so far died as a result of heavy rains in the badly hit north-west region of Pakistan. Millions in the affected area have been left homeless or are living in cramped and squalid conditions while awaiting assistance.

The Disasters Emergency Committee (DEC) said some 300,000 people have already been provided with emergency care, clean water, food or shelter as a result of British aid.

DEC chief executive Brendan Gormley said: "Money has continued to pour in over the weekend as more families in the UK realise the extent to the damage done to the lives of ordinary people in Pakistan. We need the money to keep coming because the flood waters are still spreading and the DEC is helping to fund an ever increasing aid effort."

The Department for International Development said that it had called in the Royal Air Force to help distribute aid including tents for thousands of refugees.

The Pakistani government's response has come in for criticism, not least due to President Asif Ali Zardari's decision to press ahead with a trip to France and the UK. Over the weekend, Mr Zardari revealed he was donating five million rupees (£36,500) to the victims.

In his absence, prime minister Raza Gilani has appealed for national unity. It comes amid reports that hard-line Islamist groups were filling the gaps in the government's own relief effort.

Mr Gilani said: "I request that all the the political parties be united and work together to help the flood victims."
 

Rage

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US Army flies flood relief missions in Pakistan

By SHERIN ZADA, Associated Press Writer Sherin Zada, Associated Press Writer – Thu Aug 5, 2:56 pm ET


AP – Pakistani army soldiers in a helicopter
rescue families stranded by flood water in
Sanawan near Multan "¦


KALAM, Pakistan – U.S. Army choppers flew their first relief missions in Pakistan's flood-ravaged northwest Thursday, airlifting hundreds of stranded people to safety from a devastated tourist town and distributing emergency aid.

In the country's south, authorities began evacuating half-a-million people as the worst monsoon rains in decades threatened new destruction.

The floods have already killed an estimated 1,500 people over the past week, most in the northwest, the center of Pakistan's fight against al-Qaida and the Taliban. An estimated 4.2 million Pakistanis have been affected, including many in eastern Punjab province, which has seen numerous villages swallowed by rising water in recent days.

The flooding is one of several crises that has hit Pakistan since mid-July, including a suicide bombing in the northwest city of Peshawar, a plane crash that killed 152 people in the capital, and a spurt of politically motivated killings that have left dozens dead in the southern city of Karachi.

Foreign governments and aid agencies have stepped into help the beleaguered government. It has been toughest in the northwest, which has not seen such flooding since 1929, and where many bridges and roads are washed out.

Four U.S. Chinook helicopters landed in the resort town of Kalam in the Swat Valley, which has been cut off for more than a week, according to an Associated Press reporter there. They flew hundreds of people — many of them vacationing there — to safer areas lower down, he said. The northwest valley is a former Pakistani Taliban stronghold.

A U.S. Embassy spokesman said 800 people were evacuated and relief goods distributed.

The United States is unpopular in Pakistan, and Washington will be hoping the relief missions will help improve its image, however marginally. But the mission could draw criticism from nationalist politicians and others in Pakistan who are hostile to the idea of American boots on the ground, even if they are helping after a disaster.

Islamist groups have staged their own relief efforts in the northwest. One, Falah-e-Insaniat, is a charity with alleged ties to Lashkar-e-Taiba, the militant group accused in the 2008 attacks in Mumbai, India that killed 166 people.

The U.S. military carried out larger operations in the aftermath of the 2005 Kashmir earthquake, as it did in predominantly Muslim Indonesia after the 2004 tsunami. Those missions went smoothly and were credited with boosting Washington's reputation there.

The Pakistani government response to the floods has been criticized, especially because President Asif Ali Zardari left for a visit to Europe soon after the crisis began.

As fresh rains fell Thursday, bloated rivers gushed toward southern Sindh province, where hundreds of thousands of the most impoverished Pakistanis live along the water because of fertile soil.

Authorities are using 30 boats to help the evacuation of some 500,000 people living along the river banks and have set up 400 relief camps, said Sauleh Farooqi, a top disaster-response official in the province.

In Punjab, the army used boats and helicopters to move stranded villagers to higher ground. Many of the survivors carried what possessions they could, from clothing to pots and pans.

"We are migrants in our home," said Ahmad Bakhsh, 56, who fled flooded Sanawan town. "Oh God, why have you done this?"

An aerial view from a military helicopter showed a vast area between Multan and Muzaffargarh cities looked like a large lake, with the occasional dead cow floating by.

Maj. Gen. Nadir Zeb, the region's army commander, said many people had ignored flood warnings and only realized the danger of the situation when water entered their cities, towns and villages.

"They risked their lives, but we are reaching them," he said.

Manuel Bessler, the U.N.'s humanitarian chief in Pakistan, said at least 4.2 million people were affected, and that the potential for waterborne diseases was worrisome.

"We are facing a disaster of major proportions," Bessler told reporters in Geneva by telephone. "Even a week after the disaster we don't have all the details. Roads are washed away. Bridges are destroyed. Whole areas are completely isolated and only accessible by air."

The U.S. and Germany announced increases in their aid commitments Thursday.

The U.S. State Department is providing $25 million more, on top of $10 million announced earlier. Germany is doubling its pledge to $2.6 million (euro2 million) total, the foreign ministry in Berlin said in a statement.

Mark Ward, acting director of U.S. Agency for International Development's office of foreign disaster assistance, said the U.S. money would help non-governmental organizations in Pakistan and support getting food to flood victims.

Many flood victims have complained that aid is not reaching them fast enough or at all.

President Zardari — ever fearful of militant threats — rarely makes public appearances even when he is in Pakistan.

A few months ago, he agreed to constitutional reforms that transferred many of his presidential powers to the prime minister, leaving him more of a figurehead.

Still, victims and rival politicians have pounded Zardari for his trip overseas.

"In the face of such calamity, the people need to feel that their leaders are standing by them," said an editorial in the News, a newspaper that makes no secret of its dislike of the president.

Zardari aide Farahnaz Ispahani said the president was thinking of Pakistan's long-term future in tackling the diplomatic front. Zardari's schedule includes a meeting with British Prime Minister David Cameron, who recently caused a fury in Pakistan by accusing it of exporting terror.

"The government must continue its business so that the nation moves forward," Ispahani said. "This may not play to the galleries, but everything cannot come to a standstill when there is a disaster, especially in a parliamentary democracy with a prime minister and Cabinet in place."

___


Associated Press writers Khaalid Tanveer in Kot Adduu, Zarar Khan in Islamabad, Ashraf Khan in Karachi and Bradley S. Klapper in Geneva contributed to this report.


http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20100805/ap_on_re_as/as_pakistan_floods
 

NewMember

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new member whats the situation in kabul river in afghanistan?
kabul itself is fine, but some provinces on the east and north east of the capital is hit by floods, but it is not too bad.
 

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To add to the misery, aid is not forthcoming as the world doesn't have confidence in Pakistan.

The international response to the worst flooding in Pakistan's history has highlighted world community's lack of confidence in the government's ability to carry out speedy and effective relief and rehabilitation work.

As of Saturday, the contributions and commitments made by different countries totalled $29.7 million, of which only $2.5 million was in bilateral assistance. Most of the donors prefer to provide aid through UN agencies and humanitarian organisations, indicating a lack of trust in the government.

Talking to Dawn, an official coordinating the international assistance conceded that donors had reservations over the capacity and efficiency of the government's disaster management system.

Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani recently appealed to the international community for assistance but it was made almost a fortnight after the crisis had started unfolding. The aid pledges also have been slow in coming.

A western diplomat said President Asif Ali Zardari's trip to Europe at a time of such a crisis at home did not go down well with the donor community.

Meanwhile, aid workers believe that the assistance being offered by the world is not commensurate with the scale of disaster.

"It is insufficient and agencies are reluctant to give money because of their past experiences with government agencies. The donors have concerns over transparency in the utilisation of funds," Shahbaz Malick, an aid worker, said.

He added that the funds earmarked by the UN agencies and other donors for relief activity were difficult to access because of the cumbersome documentation required.

Some banned militant groups are trying to fill the space created by the tardy international response to the crisis, according to an aid worker.
http://www.dawn.com/wps/wcm/connect...l/foreign-aid-mostly-given-to-un-agencies-980
 

nitesh

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seems like there friends are not giving them the money so after blaming us for the misery now they want us to give the money, shameless people

http://www.dawn.com/wps/wcm/connect...on-when-charity-is-doing-a-good-job-980-sk-01


Considering that India donated all of five million dollars to the United States to bail out the super-rich superpower when Hurricane Katrina struck that country in 2005, could it not at least make the gesture of an offer to Pakistan? Both were more helpful to each other on previous occasions. Perhaps India and Pakistan need to learn from their respective fanatics on how to help their neighbours when the chips are down. The liberals not to mention the left are notorious for watching very meaningfully from the sidelines.
 

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Foreign aid mostly given to UN agencies

The international response to the worst flooding in Pakistan's history has highlighted world community's lack of confidence in the government's ability to carry out speedy and effective relief and rehabilitation work.

As of Saturday, the contributions and commitments made by different countries totalled $29.7 million, of which only $2.5 million was in bilateral assistance. Most of the donors prefer to provide aid through UN agencies and humanitarian organisations, indicating a lack of trust in the government.

Another $59.6 million is also planned to be channelled through such organisations.

Talking to Dawn, an official coordinating the international assistance conceded that donors had reservations over the capacity and efficiency of the government's disaster management system.

Besides, he said, the donors had their own preferences regarding fund disbursement.

"The donor community and humanitarian agencies need to channel their efforts in a more coordinated manner through the government's newly established network of disaster management organisations," said an expert and former UN official, Zafar Iqbal.

Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani recently appealed to the international community for assistance but it was made almost a fortnight after the crisis had started unfolding. The aid pledges also have been slow in coming.

A western diplomat said President Asif Ali Zardari's trip to Europe at a time of such a crisis at home did not go down well with the donor community.

Meanwhile, aid workers believe that the assistance being offered by the world is not commensurate with the scale of disaster.

"It is insufficient and agencies are reluctant to give money because of their past experiences with government agencies. The donors have concerns over transparency in the utilisation of funds," Shahbaz Malick, an aid worker, said.

He added that the funds earmarked by the UN agencies and other donors for relief activity were difficult to access because of the cumbersome documentation required.

Some banned militant groups are trying to fill the space created by the tardy international response to the crisis, according to an aid worker. One such group, Falah-i-Insaniat, is said to be associated with Jamatud Dawa. .

http://www.dawn.com/wps/wcm/connect...l/foreign-aid-mostly-given-to-un-agencies-980
 

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http://www.dawn.com/wps/wcm/connect/dawn-content-library/dawn/the-newspaper/front-page/19-only-$102m-aid-pledged-so-far-080-hh-02


Only $102m aid pledged so far for Pakistan flood

ISLAMABAD: The international community has so far pledged relief assistance of about $102 million for people affected by the worst floods in Pakistan's history and only $10-20 million of the amount has been delivered through official channels.

Informed sources told Dawn on Monday that China had so far delivered to the government about $10 million worth of goods, including water filtration equipment, medicines, tents and electric generators while the department for international development (DFID) of UK has agreed to provide bridges worth $10 million.

The Islamic Development Bank (IDB) has offered a soft loan of $10 million for flood relief but the response for the flood victims from most of the Muslim countries has so far been lacklustre. The sources said that Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Iran and Indonesia had hinted at providing relief goods but economic affairs division (EAD) was yet to receive any confirmation. Saudi Arabia is reported to have sent some relief goods through non-government channels.

Most of the commitments for relief assistance have come from the World Bank, United Nations agencies, the United States, and European countries.

In view of the slow pace of donations coming from the international community, Finance Minister Dr Abdul Hafeez Shaikh decided on Monday to streamline procedures to channelise and expedite foreign aid flows to the Prime Minister's Flood Relief Fund.

Presiding over a meeting on flood donations, Mr Shaikh asked officials of his ministry to play their role in motivating national and international donors to contribute handsomely for the cause. The meeting decided to constitute a coordination committee to contact prominent international NGOs and 500 top taxpayers in the country for donations.

The meeting asked the State Bank of Pakistan to ensure that branches of all banks were properly notified to collect donations for the Prime Minister's Flood Relief Fund 2010 and to facilitate donors for the purpose.

The finance ministry notified that all donations to the Prime Minister's Flood Relief Fund 2010 would be exempt from tax. The meeting decided to simplify and streamline the donation mechanism so that there was a systematic flow of aid from donors to the needy people.
 
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