Pakistani president Musharraf was there when Bush needed him,
but now that Musharraf's nation is in desperte need, all Bush
has done is send the equivalent of a couple of bucks and a "Gee,
that sucks."
No doubt the only way Pakistan can get aid from the US is for
Musharraf to announce that Bin Laden is lurking in the
earthquake zone. While the Bush administration has pledged just
$50 million to aid over two million homeless, starving
Pakistanis who face winter without shelter or adequate food, it
poured $148 MILLION into Pakistan in military aid for 2005 - up
from about $73 million.
Yet Bush continues to claim he is a "good Christian?" What a
sick joke!
from the Pakistan news service "Dawn"
MUZAFFARABAD, Oct 28: Earthquake relief efforts will have to be
scaled back putting tens of thousands of lives at risk unless
donors give another $250 million immediately, the United Nations
said on Friday.
The world body says that with the severe Himalayan winter weeks
away and many survivors of the quake without food or shelter,
only about $111 million of $550 million needed for emergency
relief has been provided.
A fresh appeal on Thursday generated only $16 million.
“We need at least $200-250 million now,” UN emergency
coordinator Jan Vandemoortele told a news conference. “If we
don’t have that we will fail,” he said.
“Frankly, I don’t know how to say this any more clearly in plain
English: ‘It’s now or never; we will not have a second chance’.”
Mr Vandemoortele said the money was needed “yesterday” and
expressed bafflement at the failure of donors to deliver.
“At the very latest we need it today — tomorrow will be too late
for thousands and thousands of victims, especially babies and
small children vulnerable to pneumonia, diarrhoea, malnutrition,
et cetera.”
Interior Minister Aftab Ahmed Khan Sherpao told reporters the
death toll had risen to 55,000, with 78,000 hurt, and the number
of dead was likely to rise. Another 1,300 died in occupied
Kashmir.
Aid workers fear the failure to deliver funds means a similar
number could die of hunger and exposure as in the quake, which
left more than three million homeless or needing shelters in AJK
and the NWFP.
The World Food Programme’s Michael Jones told the news
conference it currently had food for 500,000 people over the
winter but 2.3 million needed to be fed.
“That means many will go without food,” he said. “You don’t see
the visible signs of malnutrition and nutrition-related disease
right now, but what you will find in one month or two month’s
time is severe and widespread malnutrition,” he said.
Without more money the UN would only be able to keep its vital
helicopter fleet running another week, he said.
With many roads blocked by landslides, helicopters are the best
means of getting food and shelter to villages and patients to
hospital, but they cost around $11,000 an hour to fly.
WFP logistics chief Matthew Hollingworth said $50 million was
needed right away to keep the helicopters flying, while Chris
Lom of the International Organization for Migration said there
was still a shortage of 200,000 tents.
A spokeswoman for the World Health Organization said 24 people
had died of tetanus due to delays in treating dirty wounds and a
large number of people were at the risk of illnesses brought on
by cold weather.
Rachel Lavy said deaths from infected wounds were bound to rise
as only about 22,000 injured had made it to hospital.
“If the helicopters are grounded it would have a huge impact,
not just in terms of getting people to hospital but in terms of
getting shelter and food out to the villages,” she said.
Three weeks after the earthquake, aid has still to reach many
places and many families have been living in the open or under
basic cover, like cotton and plastic sheets.
Both Pakistan and India have been criticized for politicizing
the disaster and analysts say Saturday’s talks between the two
countries on opening routes across the LoC to facilitate relief
efforts were likely to result in only limited crossings for
stranded villagers.—Reuters
http://dawn.com/2005/10/29/top6.htm
For an overview of the staggering amount of cash the US gives to
PROMOTE rather than ease, human suffering around the world, see:
U.S. WEAPONS AT WAR 2005:
PROMOTING FREEDOM OR FUELING CONFLICT?
U.S. Military Aid and Arms Transfers Since September 11
A World Policy Institute Special Report
by Frida Berrigan and William D. Hartung, with Leslie Heffel
June 2005
http://www.worldpolicy.org/projects/arms/reports/wawjune2005.html