World offers cash, aid to stricken southern US
WASHINGTON Monday (AFP) The United States officially asked for
emergency aid from the European Union and accepted assistance from the
United Nations, as countries around the world pledged help for the
hundreds of thousands left homeless by Hurricane Katrina.
While US President George W. Bush initially politely refused offers
of aid, the White House reversed course as the magnitude of the
destruction wreaked across an area of the US Gulf Coast the size of
Great Britain became clear.
From London to Kuwait City to Manila, governments around the world
pledged help in the form of money, food, emergency workers and oil
supplies.
Some countries suffering major problems of their own, among them
Indonesia and Afghanistan, were among those lining up to offer help to
the nation that is the world's largest donor of aid.
Washington has asked the 25-member EU for aid in the form of
blankets, medicines, water and half a million food rations, the European
Commission said in a statement.
French Foreign Minister Philippe Douste-Blazy said France would send
its entire stock of emergency supplies, including tents, blankets,
cooking equipment and camp-beds, prepositioned on the French Caribbean
island of Martinique for just such an eventuality. Douste-Blazy said one
shipment would leave from Fort-de-France within 24 hours and another
within 48 hours.Britain was to send 500,000 military ration packs to the
devastated regions, the ministry of defence said Sunday.
The armed forces meal boxes - which include a 24-hour food supply -
will be flown to the US early Monday to help feed the homeless.
Germany shipped 25 tonnes of food aid to the flood-stricken regions
over the weekend, the defence ministry said Sunday.
An Italian military plane was expected to leave Sunday for the United
States with first aid kits for 15,000 people, as well as infant food,
blankets, pumps, water-purifying devices and inflatable rafts. The
United States also accepted an offer of UN assistance and consultations
were underway on how to best complement US aid efforts, a UN spokesman
said Sunday.
"The United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian
Affairs, the World Food Program, the World Health Organization, UNICEF
and the High Commissioner for Refugees are ready to provide emergency
staff and a wide variety of relief supplies as and when necessary," the
spokesman said a statement. Kuwait is offering 500 million dollars (400
million euros) in oil products "needed by the afflicted states in these
conditions and other humanitarian assistance," Energy Minister Sheikh
Ahmad Fahd al-Sabah told the official KUNA news agency on Sunday.
Qatar had pledged 100 million dollars on Sunday.
Canada said Sunday it was sending thousands of camp-beds, blankets
and medical supplies after a request from Washington for help.
"This is the beginning of an integrated effort. This is just a
starting point of what we can give to our American friends," said Howard
Njoo, Associate Director General Public Health Agency of Canada.
Thirty-five Canadian military divers have begun to arrive in the
region to help with repair efforts.
War-torn and desperately poor Afghanistan has offered 100,000 dollars
in disaster relief aid, the US embassy in Kabul announced Sunday.
The Indonesian government, still coping with the aftermath of the
December 26 tsunami, has offered to send 40 medical doctors to the
United States, state media said Sunday, quoting a senior minister.
South Korea on Sunday offered to donate 30 million dollars in cash as
part of its planned humanitarian aid, officials said.
Over the weekend Norway offered the United States 10 million kroner
(1.6 million dollars, 1.3 million euros) to help relief efforts.
Sri Lanka - also still recovering from the December 26 tsunami which
devastated the island's coastlines and killed 31,000 people - said it
had donated 25,000 dollars and asked doctors to help.
China said it would offer five million dollars, while Japan said it
had proposed sending an emergency rescue team. India said it will
provide five million dollars and essential medicines, and has offered
water purification systems for use in households and small communities
in the stricken areas, where potable water is a key concern.
The Philippines announced the dispatch of a 25-member team of aid
workers with the first 10 members of the team, consisting of doctors,
nurses and sanitary engineers, scheduled to leave this week. Cuba and
Venezuela, two Latin American countries often singled out for criticism
by administration of US President George W. Bush, were among the first
to offer humanitarian assistance. |