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WASHINGTON: The United States said on Monday that the worlds response to the worst ever flood in Pakistan was not adequate and urged the international community to do more. I am concerned that people do not see it as yet another catastrophe that often beset Pakistan, US special representative Richard Holbrooke told a briefing in Washington. It is a huge catastrophe.
Also on Monday, the US decided to send more helicopters to Pakistan for relief and rescue operations.
The United States also contacted a number of allied nations, urging them to step forward to help Pakistan deal with this catastrophe.
It is not just a talk. We are calling some of our allies and asking them to help, Mr Holbrooke said, noting that the international communitys response to the flood was not adequate.
Six US Army helicopters began humanitarian assistance operations on Aug. 5, but were grounded on Aug. 6 -8 due to weather conditions. On their first day of operations, they evacuated more than 800 people from Kalam to Khwazakhela and transported 66,000 pounds of relief supplies.
The helicopters resumed operations on Monday. They rescued approximately 565 people and delivered 56,000 pounds of relief supplies.
The decision to send more helicopters was taken at a high-level meeting on Monday, Mr Holbrooke said.
In a separate statement that accompanied the briefing, the State Department announced that to date, the US had supplied food sufficient to feed about 158,500 people through its partnership with the World Food Programme and is currently reaching about 35,000 to 49,000 people per day.
To coordinate the US humanitarian aid, USAIDs Disaster Assistance Response Team began work in Pakistan on Aug. 8. The DART is composed of humanitarian relief experts, many of whom worked in Pakistan in the aftermath of the 2005 earthquake, to monitor assistance and quickly fill identified gaps by acquiring relief supplies, locally if possible.
US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and Mr Holbrooke briefed the media on the death of eight aid workers in Afghanistan but the special envoy also addressed the flood situation in Pakistan.
This is not yet another disaster. It is a very serious stuff, he warned. The rains have continued. The water is rising and a dam in Sindh may collapse.
If the dam collapsed, it could destroy a large area, he added.
Mr Holbrooke endorsed a UN observation that this was a bigger disaster than the 2005 earthquake, noting that although the death toll was much less, the destruction was far greater.
The death toll is only one way of looking at a disaster. If all factors are counted in, this is a larger catastrophe, he said.
DAWN.COM | Front Page | World should do more to help Pakistan, says US
Also on Monday, the US decided to send more helicopters to Pakistan for relief and rescue operations.
The United States also contacted a number of allied nations, urging them to step forward to help Pakistan deal with this catastrophe.
It is not just a talk. We are calling some of our allies and asking them to help, Mr Holbrooke said, noting that the international communitys response to the flood was not adequate.
Six US Army helicopters began humanitarian assistance operations on Aug. 5, but were grounded on Aug. 6 -8 due to weather conditions. On their first day of operations, they evacuated more than 800 people from Kalam to Khwazakhela and transported 66,000 pounds of relief supplies.
The helicopters resumed operations on Monday. They rescued approximately 565 people and delivered 56,000 pounds of relief supplies.
The decision to send more helicopters was taken at a high-level meeting on Monday, Mr Holbrooke said.
In a separate statement that accompanied the briefing, the State Department announced that to date, the US had supplied food sufficient to feed about 158,500 people through its partnership with the World Food Programme and is currently reaching about 35,000 to 49,000 people per day.
To coordinate the US humanitarian aid, USAIDs Disaster Assistance Response Team began work in Pakistan on Aug. 8. The DART is composed of humanitarian relief experts, many of whom worked in Pakistan in the aftermath of the 2005 earthquake, to monitor assistance and quickly fill identified gaps by acquiring relief supplies, locally if possible.
US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and Mr Holbrooke briefed the media on the death of eight aid workers in Afghanistan but the special envoy also addressed the flood situation in Pakistan.
This is not yet another disaster. It is a very serious stuff, he warned. The rains have continued. The water is rising and a dam in Sindh may collapse.
If the dam collapsed, it could destroy a large area, he added.
Mr Holbrooke endorsed a UN observation that this was a bigger disaster than the 2005 earthquake, noting that although the death toll was much less, the destruction was far greater.
The death toll is only one way of looking at a disaster. If all factors are counted in, this is a larger catastrophe, he said.
DAWN.COM | Front Page | World should do more to help Pakistan, says US