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World's response to Floods in Pakistan

I doubt IA will be allowed in Pakistan due to defense reasons but surely our govt can send relief in other ways. Even a small country like Srilanka is making a contribution. India should definitely do something

Leh got hit pretty bad by the floods too! We're not that rich my friend, we need to get our house in order 1st, however instead of pure cash we can surely give relief material. I suggested helis due to close proxity of affected region.

A joint effort by India and Pakistan to help flood affected areas could've done wonders to increase goodwill. Why can't we just get along :cry: :cry:
 
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UN to issue Pakistan aid appeal
Thousands of Pakistanis have been evacuated from flood-hit areas [AFP]

The United Nations is launching an urgent appeal for millions of dollars to aid the 13.8 million Pakistanis impacted by the country's worst flooding in 80 years.

"We will soon issue an ... appeal for several hundred million dollars to respond to immediate needs," Ban Ki-moon, the UN secretary general, announced on Tuesday.

The scale of the destruction has now eclipsed that of the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami, Pakistan's 2005 earthquake and the Haiti quake in January, the UN's Office for the Co-ordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) said, although the number of deaths is much lower.

"Those who need humanitarian assistance here are certainly more than those needing assistance in any of the other three disasters," Maurizio Giuliano, an OCHA spokesman told Al Jazeera.

The disaster has engulfed all five provinces, although its full scope is not yet known as many remote communities have yet to receive aid, and relief operations are only taking place whenever weather permits.

Zardari return

Asif Ali Zardari, Pakistan's president, returned to the country after foreign fundraising trips to a chorus of criticism that he should have stayed at home to manage the crisis.
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A government official said Zardari was expected to visit flood-hit areas within days, although for some Pakistanis, his efforts were too little, too late.

"All that I can say about Zardari is that our houses are collapsing and his government is not even bothered," Daraz Gul, a salesman in a hardware market in the town of Nowshera in northwest Pakistan, told the Reuters news agency.

"A government is supposed to be like a parent. If a parent leaves his children in trouble and goes on jaunts abroad, it is scandalous."

Children are among those most threatened in the aftermath of the flooding, the United Nations said. At least 1,600 people are thought to have already died.

The International Monetary Fund, meanwhile, warned on Monday that Pakistan's fragile economy could suffer "major harm" as millions of acres of crops have been destroyed and extensive damage done to the electrical infrastructure, forcing power plants to shut down across the country.

Kamal Hyder, Al Jazeera's correspondent in Punjab, said that the "crisis in Pakistan is of a magnitude that no one could imagine".

"The United Nations has already said that the devastation caused by this flood is far greater than the [2004 Indian Ocean] tsunami, the Haitian earthquake, as well as other crises that have happened in contemporary times."

"Pakistan needs international help, and if you asked these people, they want their leaders to come here and to come see what difficult and miserable conditions they are living in."

Food shortages

Residents in Swat, in northwestern Pakistan, have complained of worsening food and fuel shortages as the crisis drags on.
FLOOD STATISTICS
1,600 killed
Four million left homeless
13.8 million displaced or affected
558,000 hectares of farmland underwater

Food prices are expected to rise as the waters continue to swamp agricultural areas.

More than 252,000 homes have been damaged or destroyed across Pakistan, according to the government.

The army has about 300,000 troops working on the relief effort, but some human rights activists are concerned that the military is undermining civilian institutions.

"Yes, it is the military's job to take care of the rescue, but the civil administration must be strengthened and properly organised," Hina Jilani, a Pakistani supreme court advocate, told Al Jazeera.

Jilani said that local communities need to play a larger role in the response.
 
Leh got hit pretty bad by the floods too! We're not that rich my friend, we need to get our house in order 1st, however instead of pure cash we can surely give relief material. I suggested helis due to close proxity of affected region.

A joint effort by India and Pakistan to help flood affected areas could've done wonders to increase goodwill. Why can't we just get along :cry: :cry:

I understand your frustration and respect your emotions....However as said we have floods in Leh to worry about where scores of people have died...Secondly as far as helis are concerned then correct me if i am wrong but Pak establishment did not allow Indian pilots in P-O-K during earth-quake..so don't think much can be done in that regard as well...

I hope people get timely help on both sides....I am a bit worried about the relief effort though because when it comes to corruption south Asia is number 1....GOP is getting lot of assistance to help victims however will this amount going to reach whom it is intended for???....I hope it do ...
 
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