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Pakistan
floods: mega disaster needs mega response says
Oxfam
10th August 2010
The
floods that have engulfed Pakistan over the last
week are a mega disaster and the world needs to
mount a mega response to ensure the millions affected
get the help they need, international aid agency
Oxfam said today as it called for a gear
shift in the response to the crisis. Almost
14 million people are now affected by the floods
in Pakistan according to latest figures, and that
number is likely to increase with water now surging
south into Sindh Province. The UN now describes
the floods as the worlds worst
current disaster but compared with other recent
crises the speed of the response to Pakistans
flooding has been sluggish. As of 9 August 2010,
according to the UNs financial tracking
system, less than $45m has been committed, plus
$91m pledged, which breaks down to $3.20 committed
per flood affected person.
This pales in comparison
with the amounts committed to other crises.
- Within the first 10 days
of the 2005 Pakistan earthquake, which left
some 3.5m people homeless, the international
community had committed $247m and pledged $45m.
This works out to $70 committed per person,
10 days into the crisis.
- In the first 10 days
after Cyclone Nargis, which affected 2.4m when
it struck off the coast of Myanmar, almost $110m
was committed (and $109m pledged) in the first
10 days. This works out at $46 committed per
person.
- Likewise some $742m was
committed to Haiti 10 days after the quake and
$920 million pledged. Some 1.5m were directly
affected by the quake, which works out at $495
per person, in funds committed, in the first
10 days.
Neva Khan, Oxfam country
director in Pakistan said: The rains are
continuing and each hour that passes the flooding
is multiplying misery across the entire country.
Swathes of Pakistan are still under-water and
people have seen homes, shops, schools and crops
flattened. The world must not leave these people
stranded. This is a mega disaster and it needs
a mega response.
To date only five donors
USA, Australia, UK, Italy and Kuwait
have committed or pledged more than $5m in new
funding in response to the crisis.
Khan continued: We
have all been shocked by the ferocity and magnitude
of this disaster. Everyone donors, the
UN, aid agencies, the government all of
us need to shift gear on this crisis. The people
here are living in desperate conditions. This
is the biggest disaster in the world right now
and we all need to get behind it.
The UN is setting up a humanitarian
coordination centre in Islamabad, and will launch
a comprehensive plan for the disaster in the coming
days. The Pakistan government has announced that
it will send delegations to other countries to
seek financial support for flood-affected people.
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