Pakistanis at risk over world inaction on floods
Leaving 3m people in urgent need of food handouts:
Pakistan: The United Nations warned on Monday that the international
community had failed to respond to the latest flooding crisis in
Pakistan, leaving three million people in urgent need of food handouts.
The nuclear-armed Muslim state has suffered two consecutive years of
floods but has been at increasing risk of international isolation since
US troops found and killed Osama bin Laden near the capital in May.
“Somehow the present flooding and the humanitarian impact of the
present flooding has not yet picked the interest, the focus of the
world,” said Ramiro Lopes da Silva, deputy executive director of the
World Food Programme (WFP).
“If we have no resources, we have no response,” he told a news
conference in Islamabad after visiting the flood-hit southern province
of Sindh.
On September 18, the United Nations led an appeal for $357 million in
emergency funding to shore up rescue and relief efforts for millions of
people suffering after floods swept away homes and farm land in southern
Pakistan.
“The funding is not coming as swiftly and as fast at the levels it
came to the response of the floods of last year,” said Lopes da Silva.
“Donors are being challenged by the level of resources required to
address similar needs of humanitarian situations across the world,” he
added.
Last month, the United Nations said only the Japanese government had
pledged $10 million in response to the appeal.
The Pakistani government says more than 350 people have been killed
and over eight million people affected this year by floods, following
the 21 million hit last year in the nation’s worst ever disaster.
Islamabad, Tuesday, AFP
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