UN raises winter funds alarm in flood-hit areas

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ISLAMABAD: The United Nations on Wednesday expressed increasing alarm over sluggish funds for the country 21 million flood victims, appealing to donors to act swiftly to stave off a new winter emergency.
“We are getting more concerned that the funding is slowing down,” UN spokeswoman Stacey Winston told a press conference in Islamabad.
Only 39 percent of a record appeal for nearly $2 billion – about $760 million – has been received and almost another $8 million pledged, UN statistics show.
The World Bank and Asian Development Bank estimate the damage at $9.7 billion and the Red Cross warned this week that millions of Pakistanis affected by the calamity will need humanitarian assistance for the next two years.
Winston said large tracts of land were still under water in Sindh province in southern Pakistan and warned the emergency was far from over. “We are very grateful for everybody’s generosity but it is simply not enough,” she said. Winston said latest imagery from certain areas of Sindh showed 20-kilometre stretches of land still under water.
She said the displaced were unable to return to homes inundated by waters three or even six feet deep that could linger for at least three months.
“It is still a serious emergency and that is what we have to convey to the world – that Pakistan cannot be forgotten, that people are still very much suffering.
“We need the funds and the support and resources to reach people in need so that they can go home and they can rebuild their lives.” Winston said the onset of winter threatened a new crisis.
“We are looking at another emergency in the north with winter coming. We do not want the people to be left out in the cold. We want to provide them with the housing and with the materials they need to rebuild their homes.”
Fresh data from the government showed that the number of damaged houses had risen to more than 1.7 million in Sindh and Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa, she said.