Simon Schneller
UNITED NATIONS, Jan 17 2006 (IPS) – Nearly 100 days after the devastating earthquake in Pakistan, survivors are facing a bitter winter while uncertainties over the financing of humanitarian aid still loom large.
I must say that given where we started a few months ago, a lot has been achieved and hundreds of U.N. staff and tens of thousands of Pakistani army people have been working now for 100 days and they have accomplished a lot, Margareta Wahlstrom, assistant secretary-general for humanitarian affairs and deputy emergency relief coordinator, said Monday.
The Oct. 8 disaster, whose epicentre was in the Pakistan-administered region of the disputed territory of Kashmir, has claimed more than 74,000 lives, injured almost an equal number and displaced 2.5 million others.
The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) is now struggling to assist nearly 140,000 survivors left homeless by the disaster and living in nearly 140 earthquake relief camps.
UNHCR is intensifying its winterisation drive in relief camps by replacing low-quality tents, distributing heating stoves and relocating people to camps that are better equipped to cope with the bad weather, UNHCR spokesperson Ron Redmond told a news briefing in Geneva last week.
UNHCR has provided 40,000 stoves to the camps and will continue to supply them with kerosene for heating throughout the winter. Wahlstrom also emphasised that because of the U.N. s relief programme, hundreds of thousands of blankets, tents and food had been distributed in the affected regions.
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On Tuesday, the U.N. World Food Programme (WFP) received an 8.1-million-dollar contribution from the European Commission. The EC contribution is helping to ensure that all windows of opportunity will be used to distribute aid in the weeks to come, said WFP Executive Director James Morris.
To date, WFP has delivered 8,600 metric tonnes of food, 1,125 metric tonnes of non-food items, such as tents and tools, and 76 mobile warehouses to the earthquake victims in Pakistan.
No one is going to die because of lack of support through the U.N. development programme, Wahlstrom said in response to a question regarding how many lives could be lost if the United Nations cannot not secure the funds that are needed.
She said that currently the pledges and commitments are getting closer to 60 percent, which doesn t mean that all the money is in the box, but the money is firmly pledged and therefore you can expend against it if you have the resources to do so .
There is yet no reason to declare victory, but we are around 56 percent of the total appeal today, she said, adding We need 100 percent, of course.
In late October, the U.N. increased the level of funds sought to continue its relief operations from 238 million to 550 million dollars.
Leading donors like the World Bank, the Asian Development Bank and the United States had pledged some 5.8 billion dollars to help Pakistan recover from the earthquake.
Approximately 3.5 billion dollars of this amount are needed for rebuilding the local infrastructure in affected areas.
But besides the reconstruction efforts, which, according to Wahlstrom, of course have to start now , the main issue at the moment is to support the people through the winter . Since early January, bad weather, rain and heavy snowfall, with temperatures dropping between six and minus 16 Celsius, have hit northern Pakistan.
We need to be able to sustain the help until the end of the winter so that the reconstruction efforts can then take off after the winter is lifting, Wahlstrom said. I think they have a funding shortfall until the end of January, but after that they really need to have a confirmation of new pledges.
The winter in Pakistan could last until maybe first of April, at least , she added.
The onset of winter has also hampered air relief operations, which rely mainly on helicopters and have played a vital role in reaching people in remote locations. The effort is the largest of its kind in the WFP s history, with a fleet of 14 MI-8, two MI-26 and two KA 30 helicopters.
On Tuesday, former U.S. President George H.W. Bush the father of the current U.S. leader ended a two-day visit to Pakistan as the secretary-general s special envoy for the South Asia earthquake.
Although the harsh winter weather kept him from visiting the affected areas, Bush met with Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf and made plans to visit these areas as soon as possible, a U.N. spokesman said on Tuesday.