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Widows, wives flee Waziristan fighting but are denied aid - Pakistan - DAWN.COM




By Reuters
Updated about 10 hours ago

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Internally displaced women beg a soldier to allow them to enter a food distribution centre set up in a sports stadium in Bannu. -Reuters Photo
BANNU: Thousands of women displaced by fighting in Pakistan are struggling to get food and other aid because they lack identity cards and conservative Muslim elders have forbidden them from going to distribution centres.
The women are among nearly a million people who registered for aid after the army began an offensive against the Pakistani Taliban in North Waziristan, a mountainous region on the Afghan border.
The army ordered most civilians to leave before the offensive began in June. Many ended up in Bannu, a small city on the main road out of the semi-autonomous tribal region.
No census has been conducted in North Waziristan for years, so no one knows the true scale of the problem.
Government figures, however, show almost three-quarters of those seeking aid are women and children.
There's plenty of food to go around, with the World Food Programme handing out nearly 5,000 tonnes and many other aid groups active.
But women face two problems: the lack of identity cards and an edict from elders of their Pashtun tribes forbidding them from going out to get aid. Conservative tribal traditions demand women stay at home and men fetch the food.
The same traditions prevent many women from getting identity cards. Some families also find the idea of a woman being photographed or fingerprinted for cards highly intrusive, even though the national identity agency runs women-only centres. Others simply lived in areas too remote to get cards.
For now, women and children without male relatives are largely dependent on handouts from neighbours who are themselves dependent on aid. Even women who have husbands may face problems, since many men have multiple wives depending on them.
“I have no chance”

One woman sobbed behind her veil as she waited outside the main sports stadium in Bannu last week, watching men with wheelbarrows carry out sacks of flour and containers of water.
“They are not letting me in,” the woman said. “I have no chance to enter.” The woman, Basmira, had no identity and no male relative. She stood near a cluster of women in all-covering burqas beseeching stick-wielding police and army guards to let them into the stadium.
Another woman, Maimoona, said her husband was killed by a stray bullet three months ago.
“You see those sticks in their hands? They will beat us if we try to go in,” said 30-year-old Maimoona, who like many in Pakistan uses only one name.
Two other women said they were also widows and one said her son was a drug addict.
A soldier at the gate said women were welcome to go to other distribution sites around the city, but Reuters found that women were also being denied entry at four other centres.
“This lack of ID cards is a major problem for widows, second wives, and many women whose husbands are not here,” said Yasmin Akhtar, regional manager for Khwendo Kor, an aid group helping about 1,000 of the women. Muhammad Abbas Khan, the commissioner for displaced families in Bannu, was exasperated.
“We tried to resist the elders but it was like talking to a brick wall,” he said. “This conservative culture overrides religion, it overrides ethics and it overrides human rights.”
The government says it will set up a women-only distribution point in the next few weeks but until then, women have to rely on handouts from other hungry families.
That generosity is keeping many people fed at Bannu's Government School Number 3, where hundreds of displaced live in concrete classrooms partitioned by cotton sheets.
Shashparizada and her co-wife are at the school with their 12 children and husband, a frail 70-year-old with a long white beard. He lay on a rope bed with a fan nearby, too weak to stand.
“He is so old, it is hard for him to wait in line,” Shashparizada said. “We do not have ID cards and he cannot go, so there is nothing for us.”
 
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^Thats how Afghan refugees were reduced to begging at the end. When some patriotic people used to make fun of Afghan beggers, mostly small kids, i used to remind them that watch out, fear Allah, one day even you might get displaced due to war or some thing. Some people used to comment that Afghans are beghairat for living in tents, some of them then saw life in tents where women were puzzled how to maintain their privacy and deal with toilets. Remember never make fun of poor for their poverty, miserable for their miseries and patient for his disease...thats what i said to @SHAMK9
 
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This is not the proper way to collect funds for the IDPs, if this story is correct:

Narowal teachers ‘forced’ to help IDPs - Pakistan - DAWN.COM

Narowal teachers ‘forced’ to help IDPs
By The Newspaper's Correspondent
Updated about 3 hours ago
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File photo
NAROWAL: The district education authorities are ‘forcibly’ collecting money from teachers to make a contribution to funds for IDPs.

Expressing apprehensions about the move, many teachers say the education department officials have started collecting money from the academics without giving them any receipt.

They are collecting Rs400 from each primary school teacher, Rs600 from each elementary school teacher, Rs800 from each senior school teacher and Rs1,000 from the head of each school.

It is learnt that Markaz officers of the department sent the collected money to the EDO through cross cheques in favour of CM fund for IDPs but the EDO refused to receive them and demanded that cash be submitted.

Meanwhile, teachers have expressed their reservations about the government move in view of the fact that the Punjab government has not issued any such direction.

EDO (Education) Muhammad Ghias Abid said the Punjab government would deduct money for IDPs from the salaries of the teachers while the cash amount collected by Narowal’s education department would be sent to the IDPs separately.

The district government, he said, was issuing receipts for all the donations received for the IDPs. He said he had sent a cheque of Rs1.9 million for the IDPs.

Published in Dawn, August 2nd, 2014
 
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IKF is up there..



so does punjab cm shebaz modi and balochistan's malik

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What is more preposterous than the idea of IDPs to b moved to any area other than kpk??? Do the proponents realise security implications let alone the administrative n the financial??? And PTI is not doing any favour to anyone by housing IDPs except to itself btw.voiceBut to make PTIers happy: nation"s heartfelt gratitude to Imran- ul-qadri for doing what he had no other option out of.

IKF is up there..



so does punjab cm shebaz modi and balochistan's malik
 
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Well being the immediate neighbour and the one likely to be most affected by the influx,they should be doing more.finally a rare opportunity for the little visible kpk govt to put up a good show,won't PTIers b endlessly thankful for the Operation.!
 
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Despite lot of differences with PTI & IK - I must admit that KP govt. looks doing more for IDPs than other provinces.[/quote]
@LoveIcon As if they can risk doing any less.Call it tyranny of geography but in face of the influx KPK govt has no choice but to act up..
 
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IDPs asked to vacate schools by Aug 10
By Mohammad Ashfaq
PESHAWAR: The elementary and secondary education department has asked the internally displaced persons, taking shelter in the buildings of the government schools, to vacate the schools till August 10 as academic activities would resume from September 1, according to sources.The students would start coming to their schools from September 1 at the end of three-month summer vacations, said an official in the district education office Bannu. However, he said that the deadline set for the IDPs to vacate the schools was August 20.

The IDPs claimed that they were asked to vacate the school buildings till August 10. Besides other incentives, the federal government would provide the IDPs with Rs12,000 per month for food and rent charges.

The news about vacation of schools has worried the IDPs as they are not sure to get proper shelter after leaving the school buildings because the host cities including Bannu, Lakki Marwat and Karak have not enough houses for rent to accommodate them, according to officials and IDPs.

Mohammad Khalil, a displaced tribesman, told Dawn that IDPs were panicked when they were told to leave the school buildings. Many displaced families would likely to shift to other big cities of the country to take houses on rent, he said.

Announcement of deadline panics displaced families
Mr Khalil, whose family is residing in a school in Bannu, said that he had been searching for a house to rent it for the last few days but couldn’t find any empty house for his family.

The IDPs have taken shelter in the buildings of 1,400 government schools after displacement from their native towns in North Waziristan Agency with the launching of military operation Zarb-i-Azb.

Of the 1400 schools, around 90 were in Bannu and rest of them in Karak and Lakki Marwat, officials in the education department said.

Quoting a recently conducted survey, they said that of the total families taken refuge in the schools, 600 wanted to reside with their relatives in Bannu and other cities, 520 in rented houses and 425 families wanted to shift to the camps established by the government for them.

However, officials said that students of the 189 under-enrolment primary schools, particularly girl schools, had to be shifted to other adjacent schools to accommodate IDPs in the building of their schools.

Similarly, IDPs would also be asked to shift to the buildings of 50 more schools, which were closed since long owing to absence of teachers.

The officials said that 30 more schools, which were in the final stage of construction, would also house the IDPs.

After vacating the schools, the communication and works department would launch a survey to assess the damage caused to the schools during the stay of IDPs. Definitely, the children of IDPs and their cattle might have caused minor damage to the school buildings, officials said.

They said that after completion of the assessment, the government would provide the required funds for the repair of the school buildings.

Published in Dawn, August 6th, 2014
 
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Pakistan should take responsibility for the people effected by the population exodus , and have ample support in place for the welfare.

I am suprised in a resourceful country like Pakistan we have not managed to come up with a design for a quick shed like homes instead of tents


Disgusting really when you see stuff like this ...
 
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News update: The cheque amounting to 400K presented by the Pakistani cricket team and management has bounced.
 
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Wow truely a testing time for the families the men and children , and the number of people 3 Lack is huge almost big as a metro city .... tremendous amount of people and so many children what a great testing time for Pakistani Forces taking part in relief efforts and local cities helping out the effected
 
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