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UN Says It Can Keep Pakistan Quake Survivors Alive In Bitter Winter

Pakistani children attend school in a relief camp in Muzaffarabad, 08 November 2005. The 08 October earthquake has killed more than 73,000 people, injured 69,260 and left 3.3 million people homeless in the mountains of northern Pakistan and Kashmir. The United Nations announced 07 November that it needed at least 42.4 million dollars immediately to continue its humanitarian aid operations in the region through the month of November. AFP photo by Banaras Khan.
Islamabad (AFP) Nov 08, 2005
The United Nations said Tuesday that one month after the devastating South Asian earthquake it was ready for the "colossal job" of keeping survivors alive during the Himalayan winter.

"The job is colossal but there is a feeling that this is a doable job," UN Emergency Coordinator Jan Vandemoortele said.

"It is not mission impossible. The job can be done and to get it done we need two things, cash and coordination," Vandemoortele told a news conference.

Just two weeks after the massive October 8 earthquake that killed more than 73,000 people in Pakistan, aid officials were in a desperate situation in trying to reach survivors but things had improved in the past fortnight, he said.

"Perhaps for the first time since the 8th of October there is a sense of cautious optimism in the humanitarian community," he added.

Though cash-strapped, the UN was racing against time to save survivors from the bitter cold in the mountains of Kashmir and Pakistan's North West Frontier Province.

"We see that the pipeline is gradually becoming a reality in terms of money and in terms of deliverables -- the tents the blankets, the slates for the latrines," Vandemoortele said.

"It is moving. And if we can keep the momentum, and there is no reason that we should not able to keep momentum on our side, we will be ready for the winter," he said.

"We are confident that we will be able to continue our operation because resources are coming on a daily basis. We are also drawing from the UN revolving fund and we have clearly looked on our logistics needs because it was a big ticket item on our flash appeal.

"And the news that we just heard about the roads being opened has a major impact on the requirements in terms of dollars to keep these operations going."

On the cash side a total of 1.4 billion dollars has been pledged to Pakistan and 380 million dollars of that has been handed over so far, he said. Some 85 million dollars has come through the UN.

"Our objective is to keep people alive," he said.

Vandemoortele said at least an additional 42.6 million dollars would be required in November, the critical month before the harsh winter sets in. Shelter was one of the top five prorities, followed by camp management, heating, sanitation, food and seed distribution, he said.

All rights reserved. � 2005 Agence France-Presse. Sections of the information displayed on this page (dispatches, photographs, logos) are protected by intellectual property rights owned by Agence France-Presse. As a consequence, you may not copy, reproduce, modify, transmit, publish, display or in any way commercially exploit any of the content of this section without the prior written consent of Agence France-Presse.

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Pakistani Police Shoot In Air, Fire Tear Gas At Angry Kashmiris
Kashmir, Line Of Control (AFP) Nov 07, 2005
Pakistani police shot in the air and fired tear gas Monday to disperse hundreds of angry Kashmiris who surged towards the Indian side of the Line of Control.



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