Source:
Reuters* Top U.S. aid official tours camp run by Islamist charity
* Hopes for IMF assistance
* Militant threat creeps into crisis
The United States will divert $50 million from a development package for Pakistan towards relief funds, the top U.S. aid official said on Wednesday after touring a flood victims camp run by a charity with suspected links to a militant group on the U.S. terrorist list.
Officials in Pakistan and its ally Washington are worried that militants could exploit the disorder caused by the floods, and the government's slow response, to gain recruits. The United States, eager to see stability in ally Pakistan, a frontline state in its war against militancy, has so far been the most generous donor. It has provided 25 percent of aid commitments and contributions, the U.N. said.
"Let me be clear: This disaster represents a major logistics challenge. We are committed to supporting this significant relief effort as much as possible," U.S. Agency for International Development head Rajiv Shah told reporters.
After touring a camp for flood victims set up in a school, Shah told a news conference that $50 million would be diverted from a five-year, $7.5 billion development package for Pakistan to help the flood relief effort.
Read more:
http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/SGE67O08A.htm
(there's more to the article than at 1st glance, you have to scroll past some text - which appears to be dead links - to get to the rest of the story)
Related article:
http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=view_all&address=102x4515345">US reviews priorities of ($7.5Billion) Kerry-Lugar-Berman Bill (for Pakistan's reconstruction)