. Earth Science News .
UN Ready To Feed Pakistani Quake Survivors Through Winter

Pakistani earthquake survivor unload relief supplies after crossing the Juhlem River in Ghari Dupatta, some 15 km south of Muzaffarabad, the capital of Pakistan-administered Kashmir, 07 December 2005. Seven Pakistani earthquake survivors including four children died from severe burns after their tent was set ablaze by a candle in northern Pakistan, police said. The October 8 earthquake, the worst in Pakistan's history, killed nearly 74,000 people and rendered more than three million homeless in Pakistani Kashmir and parts of the country's North West Frontier Province. AFP photo by Banaras Khan.

Islamabad (AFP) Dec 07, 2005
The United Nations said Wednesday it was ready to feed 1.3 million Pakistani earthquake survivors through the winter, but called for more money to maintain helicopter airlifts needed to reach remote areas.

The UN's World Food Programme (WFP) is leading efforts to provide emergency food to 400,000 people who can only be reached by air, double the previous target figure of 200,000, the UN said in a statement.

In addition to those only reachable by air, the WFP has also accepted responsibility for 600,000 people who can be reached by land -- including 250,000 living in camps -- as well as 150,000 children in tented schools.

Another 150,000 children under five and nursing and pregnant mothers who will receive WFP food aid..

The UN said that airlifting food supplies to the survivors in mountain villages in Pakistani-administered Kashmir was the "most challenging logistical operations the agency has ever faced."

"With better information and more surveys, we now believe that up to 400,000 people can be reached only by air in high villages where access roads are blocked by landslides," WFP Executive Director James Morris said.

"To help the people in areas only accessible by air, we will have to fly in 6,000 tons of food a month. Our helicopters will be more vital than ever and sustained donor support will be absolutely essential," he added.

"Roads have already begun to become impassable because of slick conditions and rock or mudslides. The worse the conditions become on the ground, the more heavily we will rely on our helicopters."

The WFP is still seeking 115 million of the 182 million dollars required for its emergency operations in quake-devastated Pakistan, where more than 73,000 people were killed in the massive October 8 temblor.

In addition to the 1.3 million people aided by WFP, the Pakistani government will provide assistance to three million people and the International Committee of the Red Cross will help 150,000 others, the UN said.

The UN launched a flash appeal for 550 million dollars of emergency aid but says it has only received 41 percent of the funding after two months.

Source: Agence France-Presse

Related Links
SpaceDaily
Search SpaceDaily
Subscribe To SpaceDaily Express

UNHCR Braces For Exodus Of Mountain-Dwellers Who Survived SAsia Quake
Geneva, Switzerland (AFP) Dec 06, 2005
The United Nations refugee agency on Tuesday said it was standing by for an exodus of mountain-dwellers who survived the South Asian earthquake but are facing increasingly bitter winter weather.







  • UN Ready To Feed Pakistani Quake Survivors Through Winter
  • UNHCR Braces For Exodus Of Mountain-Dwellers Who Survived SAsia Quake
  • Health Impact Of Hurricane Katrina Lingers Three Months Later
  • New Orleans Opens Final Devastated Neighborhood To Residents

  • UN Climate Summit Marked By Warnings, US Under Fire
  • Temperate Forests Could Worsen Global Warming
  • Modeling Of Fossil Fuel Consumption Shows 14 Degree Hike In Temperature
  • Warming Could Free Far More Carbon From High Arctic Soil

  • Unprecedented View Of Upper Atmosphere Created By NASA Scientists
  • Space Radar Advances And Application
  • Aerosonde Successfully Completes Weatherscout GUAM Trials
  • Landsat 5 Back-Up Solar Array Drive Having Technical Problems

  • Harnessing The Heating And Cooling Powers Of The Sun
  • Is The Flow Of Oil Assured
  • Fuel Cells Could Save Air Force Thousands
  • Poison + Water = Hydrogen. New Microbial Genome Shows How

  • Possible Human Transmission Of Bird Flu Investigated
  • Indonesia's Health System Fumbles As Bird Flu Spectre Looms
  • US Prepares For Bird Flu
  • Needle Free Immunizations

  • Lions And Tigers Are Unfair Game On Spanish Safaris
  • New Bacterial Genome Sequenced From Ancient Salterns
  • How A Cellular Spacecraft Opens Its Airlock
  • New Study Examines Evolutionary Explanations For Biological Immortality

  • Tehran Shut Down Amid Unprecedented Smog Alert
  • Dike To Defend Russian City From Chinese Toxic Slick Nearly Built
  • China Forms Team To Investigate Cause Of Lethal Toxic Spill
  • Health Alert As Iranian Capital Chokes In Smog

  • New Maps Reveal True Extent Of Human Footprint On Earth
  • Distinct Brain Regions Specialized For Faces And Bodies
  • NSF Funds Probe Of The Quintessence Of Surprise
  • Imaging Technique Visualizes Effects Of Stress On Human Brain

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2006 - SpaceDaily.AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA PortalReports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additionalcopyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement