UN rushes envoy to mounting Pakistan flood crisis

The UN rushed a top envoy to Pakistan to address the urgent plight of 3.2 million people hit by the floods.

ISLAMABAD:
The United Nations rushed a top envoy to Pakistan on Thursday to address the urgent plight of 3.2 million people hit by the worst floods in generations as officials warned the crisis was spreading.

As the humanitarian disaster pushed into a second week, fears are growing of a food crisis among survivors who saw their villages and farmland washed away, killing more than 1,500 people in northwest and central Pakistan.

Victims have increasingly lashed out against Pakistan's government for being unable to provide better relief, piling pressure on a cash-strapped administration straining to contain Taliban violence and economic crisis.

UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon dispatched special envoy Jean-Maurice Ripert to help mobilise international support and address victims' "urgent, immediate needs," a spokesman said.

Facing protests from desperate survivors clamouring for help, Prime Minister Yousaf Raza Gilani on Wednesday ordered government officials to speed up relief work and said ministers would each donate one month's salary. Ripert, former French ambassador to the UN, arrived in Pakistan Thursday and will visit affected areas in the northwest and meet government officials.

The record rains triggered floods and landslides last week that devastated villages and farmland in some of the country's poorest and most volatile regions in northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and central Punjab provinces. "We see urgent need of food assistance to people affected by floods to prevent a starvation-like situation," warned Amjad Jamal, spokesman for the UN World Food Programme. "Eighty percent of food reserves have been destroyed by the floods, which also caused massive damage to livestock, markets, roads and overall infrastructure."

Pakistan's meterological department has issued new flood warnings, raising fears that the destruction is not over. Flood waters continued spreading into Punjab, the country's most populous province. "The flood water is increasing at different points and we are expecting more rain in next 24 hours," Hazrat Mir, chief metreologist for Punjab, told AFP. "This is an alarming situation. Conditions are miserable in those areas, particularly at Tounsa and Gaddu barrages. There are extremely high floods at Kot Addu and other parts."


The number of affected districts in Punjab rose to seven and alert warnings were issued in five districts of Sindh to the south, the United Nations said. Survivors complain they have been abandoned by the government, organising protests in the northwestern city of Peshawar and on Wednesday blocking the motorway to Islamabad for one and a half hours.

Particular scorn has been reserved for President Asif Ali Zardari, who is deeply unpopular, for pressing ahead with visits to Paris and London at the height of the disaster, saying in a five-star hotel while his people suffer. Although Gilani has said about 100,000 people have been rescued and "relief items in sufficient quantity" provided to provinces, many people say they have received no assistance from the government, only from local families. "I am totally helpless now. I built a small house with a lot of effort. It is destroyed. How will I repair it? Will there be any government help? These questions keep haunting my mind," said Falak Naz near Charsadda.

The United Nations said clean drinking water and sanitation were urgently needed to stop disease spreading among survivors.

World countries extend help

An international relief campaign has included a promise of a 10 million dollar aid package from the United States, while the United Nations will disburse up to the same amount from an emergency response fund.

"We've sent over boats to help with search and rescue, water purification units to provide clean water for thousands of people and temporary bridges to replace bridges damaged by the floods," US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said. "This represents just the start of our efforts. We will continue to help Pakistan in the days and weeks ahead."

The British government pledged eight million dollars in aid, while Australia pledged 4.4 million dollars and China 1.5 million.  British charities are also launching a radio and TV campaign to raise funds for victims of the devastating floods in north-western Pakistan.

The Disasters Emergency Committee, an umbrella organisation of 13 UK humanitarian aid agencies, will broadcast the appeals later. People can also donate by post, text message, at the post office and banks.


The aid organisation, Doctors of the World, has been working in Pakistan for nearly 15 years, and is based on the outskirts of the worst-affected area.


Other countries including Indonesia, South Korea and Canada have also promised help.

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