Source:
ReutersBy Sue Pleming
US Agency for International Development (USAID) Administrator Rajiv Shah holds a briefing
for foreign media on US flood relief efforts in Pakistan on August 27, 2010 at the
Washington Foreign Press Center in Washington. AFP
WASHINGTON, Aug 27 (Reuters) - The Pentagon said on Friday it would double the number of U.S. helicopters to help with relief efforts in Pakistan after epic floods that have overwhelmed the fragile government there.
An additional 18 helicopters would arrive in mid-September as part of an expanded U.S. contribution to deal with the floods, the Pentagon said. These would be in addition to 15 helicopters and three C-130 aircraft already there.
Rajiv Shah, administrator for the U.S. Agency for International Development, said it was clear after he personally surveyed flood damage this week that significant resources would be needed when the waters receded. "
The scale and scope of this natural disaster is astronomical," he told a news conference in Washington on his return from Pakistan.
The floods have affected more than 20 million people and Shah said about 23 percent of the country's cropland -- or 4.3 million acres -- was under water.
More than 9 million people are in need of immediate support because of the raging waters, which have spread out over a landmass bigger than Italy, he said.
Read more:
http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSN27102880
Pakistan flood crisis extreme, U.N. says - "An already colossal disaster is getting worse" By Alex Rodriguez - Published: Friday, Aug. 27, 2010 11:16 p.m. MDT
SUKKUR, Pakistan — Floodwaters that have reached the Indus River delta displaced at least 1 million southern Pakistan residents in recent days, U.N. officials said Friday,a
significant escalation of what is already the country's worst natural disaster in its history.
"
An already colossal disaster is getting worse, and requiring an even more colossal response," said U.N. spokesman Maurizio Giuliano. "
The magnitude of this crisis is reaching levels that are even beyond our initial fears."
Officials with the world body say
the speed with which the crisis is spreading is outpacing the international community's efforts to reach legions of flood victims who lack access to food, clean drinking water, shelter and health care. U.N. workers are providing drinking water to 2.5 million people but have yet to reach the estimated 3.5 million others still in need.Relief workers are especially concerned about the risk to children, many of whom were already in poor health before the floods.
U.N. officials estimate that at least 70,000 children under the age of 5 and living in flood-affected areas suffered from acute malnutrition before the crisis. Up to 20 percent of children in flooded regions are suffering from diarrhea-related disorders and at high risk of dehydration and malnutrition.Full article:
http://www.deseretnews.com/article/700060926/Pakistan-flood-crisis-extreme-UN-says.html Pakistani villagers affected by the floods camp on higher ground in Baluchistan
on August 27, 2010. An aerial view of a flooded village in Baluchistan province is pictured on August 27, 2010.Pakistani villagers affected by the floods gesture to a helicopter (unseen) in Baluchistan
on August 27, 2010Boxes containing biscuits and other food are dropped from an Afghani helicopter,
in support of the Pakistani army relief operation, to a flooded town in
Baluchistan province on August 27, 2010GHARI KHAIRO, PAKISTAN - AUGUST 27:
Houses and a mosque are surrounded by flood
waters on August 27, 2010 near Garhi Khairo in Sindh province, PakistanCrew members in an Afghani helicopter, supporting the Pakistani army relief operation,
deliver food to people in Baluchistan province on August 27, 2010. SUKKUR, PAKISTAN - AUGUST 27:
A young boy, whose family was displaced from their
home by flooding, holds an empty container as he and others line up for food rations
at a flood relief camp run by the Pakistan Army on August 27, 2010 near Sukkur in
Sindh province, Pakistan.GHARI KHAIRO, PAKISTAN - AUGUST 27:
A young girl, displaced by floods and stranded
on land only accessible by air, cries as she waves flies away from her face on August
27, 2010 in Garhi Khairo near Jacobabad in Sindh province, Pakistan.A Pakistani flood survivor girl looks to her mother outside her tent at a camp in Sukkur,
in southern Pakistan on Saturday, Aug. 28, 2010. More news, photos and videos going back to since this began:
http://journals.democraticunderground.com/Turborama