Islamabad – UN: Pakistan Flood Misery Exceeds Tsunami, Haiti

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    A flood-affected man sits over debris of his house collapsed by flooding in Nowshera, northwest Pakistan, Monday, Aug. 9, 2010. The number of people suffering from the massive floods in Pakistan exceeds 13 million, more than the combined total of the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami, the 2005 Kashmir earthquake and the 2010 Haiti earthquake, the United Nations said Monday. (AP Photo/B.K. Bangash)Islamabad – The number of people suffering from the massive floods in Pakistan exceeds 13 million — more than the combined total of the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami, the 2005 Kashmir earthquake and the 2010 Haiti earthquake, the United Nations said Monday.

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    The death toll in each of those three disasters was much higher than the 1,500 people killed so far in the floods that first hit Pakistan two weeks ago. But the U.N. estimates that 13.8 million people have been affected — over 2 million more than the other disasters combined.

    The comparison helps frame the scale of the crisis, which the prime minister said Monday was the worst in Pakistan’s history. It has overwhelmed the government, generating widespread anger from flood victims who have complained that aid is not reaching them quickly enough or at all.

    “The number of people affected by the floods is greater than the other three disasters combined,” Maurizio Giuliano, spokesman for the U.N. Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, told The Associated Press.

    A person is considered affected by the floods if he or she will need some form of assistance to recover, either short-term humanitarian aid or longer-term reconstruction help, said Giuliano.

    The total number of people affected in the three other disasters was about 11 million — 5 million in the tsunami and 3 million in each of the earthquakes — said Giuliano.

    Pakistani Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani said Monday that the floods were a bigger crisis than the 2005 Kashmir earthquake that killed nearly 80,000 people and the army’s operation against the Taliban in the Swat Valley last spring that drove more than 2 million people from their homes.

    “The magnitude of the tragedy is so immense that it is hard to assess,” said Gilani during a visit to the central Pakistani city of Multan.

    Many of the people affected by the floods, which were caused by extremely heavy monsoon rains, were in Pakistan’s northwestern province of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa.
    People who are displaced by heavy floods live in camp set up in Nowshera in northwest Pakistan on Monday, Aug.9, 2010. Pakistan will need billions of dollars to recover from its worst floods in history, further straining a country already dependent on foreign aid to prop up its economy and back its war against Islamist militants, the U.N. said. (AP Photo/Mohammad Sajjad)
    Rescue workers have been unable to reach up to 600,000 people marooned in the province’s Swat Valley, where many residents were still trying to recover from last year’s fight with the Taliban, said Giuliano. Bad weather has prevented helicopters from flying to the area, which is inaccessible by ground, he said.

    “All these people are in very serious need of assistance, and we are highly concerned about their situation,” said Giuliano.

    Hundreds of thousands of people have also had to flee rising floodwaters in recent days in the central and southern provinces of Punjab and Sindh as heavy rains have continued to pound parts of the country.

    One affected resident, Manzoor Ahmed, said Monday that although he managed to escape floods that submerged villages and destroyed homes in Sindh, the total lack of government help meant dying may have been a better alternative.
    Pakistani villagers chase to relief supplies dropped from an army helicopter in a heavy flood-hit area of Mithan Kot, in central Pakistan. The government has struggled to cope with the scale of the disaster, which has killed at least 1,500 people, prompting the international community to help by donating tens of millions of dollars and providing relief supplies. (AP Photo/Khalid Tanveer)
    “It would have been better if we had died in the floods as our current miserable life is much more painful,” said Ahmed, who fled with his family from the town of Shikarpur and spent the night shivering in the rain that has continued to lash the country.

    “It is very painful to see our people living without food and shelter,” he said.

    Thousands of people in the neighboring districts of Shikarpur and Sukkur camped out on roads, bridges and railway tracks — any dry ground they could find — often with nothing more than the clothes on their backs and perhaps a plastic sheet to keep off the rain.

    “We were able to escape the floodwaters, but hunger may kill us,” said Hora Mai, 40, sitting on a rain-soaked road in Sukkur along with hundreds of other people.

    A senior government official in Sukkur, Inamullah Dhareejo, said authorities were working to set up relief camps in the district and deliver food to flood victims.

    But an Associated Press reporter who traveled widely through the worst-hit areas in Sindh over the past three days saw no sign of relief camps or government assistance.
    akistani villagers chase to relief supplies dropped from an army helicopter in a heavy flood-hit area of Mithan Kot, in central Pakistan, Monday, Aug. 9, 2010. The government has struggled to cope with the scale of the disaster, which has killed at least 1,500 people, prompting the international community to help by donating tens of millions of dollars and providing relief supplies. (AP Photo/Khalid Tanveer)
    The floods hit the country at a time when the government is already struggling with a faltering economy and a brutal war against Taliban militants that has killed thousands of people.

    The U.S. and other international partners have donated tens of millions of dollars and provided relief supplies and assistance.

    In a statement, Obama’s national security adviser, James Jones, said that the U.S. is sending a wide range of assistance to Pakistan. That includes $35 million in financial aid, added on to the $7.5 million already designated to help people in affected areas, as well as food, shelter, medical supplies and other items.

    In addition, the U.S. has delivered 436,000 meals, 12 prefabricated bridges, 14 rescue boats, six large-scale water filtration units and a generator. U.S. helicopters are supporting rescue efforts and, along with other U.S. military aircraft, will continue to evacuate stranded citizens and transport supplies.

    “The United States stands with the Pakistani authorities as they face the difficult challenges this natural disaster poses and will continue to work with the international community to increase assistance,” Jones said.

    A faltering relief effort could open the door to hard-line Islamist groups, which have already been delivering aid in the northwest.


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    13 Comments
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    Jack
    Jack
    13 years ago

    I’m sure Turkey, Iran, Lebanon, and Italy will all send aid flotilla’s to Pakistan. After all its about helping the needy people, not a political statement.

    mj00056
    mj00056
    13 years ago

    Israel should assist immediately!
    I am sure that the Goodwill gesture will turn the taliban into peace loving, Jew loving docile pups.

    jerrygold
    jerrygold
    13 years ago

    the only way to stop the floods,and other troubles, is to punish the terrorists for killing such holy neshomes in the Chabad india. all that and more is not enough for what they did. by releasing the terror heads from prison shows that they are all beyond them in pakistan.

    favish
    favish
    13 years ago

    when the challanger exploded killing the 7 astronuts, 9/11 etc etcthey jumped for joy and yelled ‘all ..akbar ‘ ‘its a punishment for the infidels blah blah’ ..so what happened, it backfired?

    Butterfly
    Butterfly
    13 years ago

    They will not allow Israeli aid in!! They would rather die!!

    Liepa
    Liepa
    13 years ago

    To #5 , Then, so be it.

    bush
    bush
    13 years ago

    Maybe Bin-Laden is 1 of the dead..
    Let’s pull him out of there “dead or alive”..

    HaNavon
    HaNavon
    13 years ago

    Oy! Hashem Yirachem aleihem!
    This is so terrible and heartbreaking.

    For all of those people like posters #3 and 6 you should be ashamed of yourselves!
    The government of Pakistan doesn’t represent these poor villagers who are just trying to feed their families, and your views don’t represent the Torah of Hashem.
    The Abrahamic ideals of love and acceptance have been lost within most of our people, and that is even more sad than this tragedy.

    There is a poem written by a Persian Sufi mystic, poet and philosopher of the 13th century which summarizes the Abrahamic ideal in a succinct and beautiful way, and the fact that it was written by a Muslim shows how ashamed you should feel that you’ve lost touch with the main theme of our religion…
    “Come, come, whomever you are.
    Wanderer, idolater, worshiper of fire.
    Come even though you have broken your vows a thousand times.
    Come, and come yet again.
    Ours is not a caravan of despair” – Jalal ad-Din Muhammed Rumi

    favish
    favish
    13 years ago

    #8 you sholuld learn more torah and dont come with your own westernized version of rachmanis&#8 230;.rachmunis in the torah isnt blindly inclusive&#8 230;you should be ahsamed of yourself young lady by showing your ignorance

    favish
    favish
    13 years ago

    #8 the &#8 216;abramic&#8 217; ideals are summerized in the oral and written torah , summerized in the rambam and codified in shulchen urech not by some goy urel tameh&#8 230;and there you&#8 217;ll see rachmonis is not what you think!

    HaNavon
    HaNavon
    13 years ago

    #9 &10;,
    Favish, you have a lot to learn…

    favish
    favish
    13 years ago

    #11 and definately not from people like you…

    favish
    favish
    13 years ago

    # 8 what nerve ,coming on a ehrliche torah site to teach us ‘dasst orah’ from a goy urel tame ‘persian sufi mystic’…no wonder. let me repeat again, what constitues rachmanis ….learn the torah (which inclused see #10 )