Perilous Times and Climate Change
Scale of flood devastation in Pakistan unimaginable
17 Aug 2010 21:55:02 GMT
Source: UNICEF
PESHAWAR, Pakistan, 17 August 2010 – UNICEF Regional Director for South
Asia Daniel Toole visited Pakistan's Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa province this
week to survey the devastation caused by the country's severe flooding.
Mr. Toole also reviewed the organization's support for hundreds of
thousands of women and children in one of the worst-hit provinces of
Pakistan.
'Massive' crisis
"The emergency here in Pakistan is massive, and the scale and scope
have not been understood by the international community," said Mr.
Toole during his visit. "We need rapid, huge support. There are
millions of people displaced … people need support to go back to their
homes, they need support for good health."
He added that, in collaboration with UN agencies, the provincial
government has made an enormous effort to provide a lifeline for those
most vulnerable – including children. But he also emphasized the need
to reach out to those who have been isolated with the utmost speed.
UNICEF is one of several organizations that have been delivering
much-needed relief in Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa since the onset of the floods
in late July. The crisis has killed at least 1,600 people and affected
nearly 20 million people across Pakistan, according to government
estimates.
Urgent appeal
UNICEF teams have been delivering safe drinking water, critical medical
supplies, supplementary food and family hygiene kits to more than a
million people a day. In addition, UNICEF is supporting mobile medical
teams, vaccination campaigns and sanitation efforts across the affected
zone.
But these efforts remain dwarfed by the scale of the tragedy.
"UNICEF needs the support of others," said Mr. Toole, calling for the
organization's donors to contribute to relief efforts. The organization
has released $7 million from its own internal funds to provide water to
those living in displacement camps, he said, but more funds are
urgently needed.
"We have an emergency with maybe 20 million people affected," said Mr.
Toole. "That's a scale we have not dealt with in a very long time. We
need massive resources to be able to respond, to provide health care
and nutrition."
UNICEFhas appealed for $47 million for urgent and immediate needs over
the next three months, but so far the organization has only a received
a fraction of this number in pledges.