UNHCR providing urgent assistance
for quake victims
Geneva, Monday 10 October 2005
GENEVA – The UN refugee agency on Monday announced it is making available tonnes
of urgently needed family tents, blankets, stoves and other basic relief items
for tens of thousands of Afghan refugees and Pakistanis made homeless by
Saturday's south Asian earthquake.
Initially, the agency said, it will provide basic relief supplies for up to
100,000 people using its existing stockpiles throughout the region. Some
supplies from UNHCR's Peshawar warehouse, such as tents, kitchen sets and soap,
are already being trucked to the badly affected Mansehra district in the North
West Frontier Province.
"UNHCR has emergency stockpiles in Pakistan, in neighbouring Afghanistan and
elsewhere in the world that can be provided quickly to the victims, but we need
the help of helicopters or other transport to get these supplies to people in
the most affected areas," UN High Commissioner for Refugees António Guterres
said in Geneva. "We are extremely concerned about those who have been left with
no shelter, no heat and none of the basic essentials required for daily
subsistence. They include, in addition to the many Pakistani victims, possibly
thousands of Afghan refugees in many camps that are now inaccessible and without
communications."
North West Frontier Province (NWFP), one of the areas affected by the
earthquake, hosts 887,000 Afghan refugees in several camps. UNHCR staff in
Peshawar have been trying to determine conditions for some 100,000 Afghan
refugees in three camps in the Haripur district of NWFP – Panian, Padhana and
Ghazi. UNHCR provides regular assistance to the camps, including water,
sanitation, health care and primary education. The agency is also particularly
concerned about nearly 45,000 Afghan refugees in four camps in the Mansehra
district, where whole villages have reportedly been flattened. The camps are
Ichiran, Sheikhabad, Barary and Khaki.
Overall, NWFP hosts 887,466 Afghan refugees in camps.
Guterres said UNHCR can immediately provide relief items from its Peshawar
warehouse, including family-sized winter tents for up to 14,000 people, hospital
tents, plastic sheets, kitchen sets, and other items like mattresses and soap.
The agency's Quetta warehouse, further to the south along Pakistan's border with
Afghanistan, also has thousands of tents, plastic sheeting, blankets, kerosene
stoves, cooking kits, sleeping bags and other items. UNHCR staff in Afghanistan
were also checking on possible supplies there which could be provided for the
disaster victims. But transport is needed to get all of these items to the
quake-affected areas.
In Geneva, Guterres asked UNHCR's emergency and logistics staff to look into the
possibility of providing other supplies from the agency's global relief
stockpiles further afield, including in Dubai, Jordan, Copenhagen and elsewhere.
All of these supplies would need to be replenished quickly, however, so UNHCR
can meet any other emergency demands and contingencies. This would mean
additional funds would be needed from donors.
UNHCR has 11 offices and more than 420 staff throughout Pakistan and is one of
the main operational humanitarian agencies in the region. It has worked in
Pakistan for some 25 years and is currently involved in the repatriation of more
than 3.5 million Afghan refugees.