I have spent last 16 days in Bajaur Agency, tribal areas situated on Pak-Afghan border. Actually I have moved to Bajaur Agency 16 days ago with the hope that I shall spend some days with my wife and my children. When I reached Bajaur Agency the fighting has broken out in and around Bajaur Agency. I have seen women and children running for their lives. I have been hearing the cries of women and children. My wife Fatima and my children have also spent the days in crying as there are great pain the whole areas. Fatima remained in great trouble. She is still in pain. I am just sharing the pain of Fatima and other women with you with the hope you will raise your voice for the peace. I am just sharing a story published in local newspaper about the refugees from Bajaur Agency and other parts of the province.
Describing the situation in Pakistan as being ‘volatile’ and ‘confusing’ the top United Nations top humanitarian relief official said that so far almost 2.2 million people have been displaced as a consequence of the recent upheaval in the country.

Undersecretary General for Humanitarian affairs, John Holmes, told reporters that UN plans to increase the amount of flash aid appeal for Pakistan in view of the humanitarian crisis developing there.

So far the UN has received one-third of the $150 million it had sought earlier, but that amount won’t be sufficient with the number of uprooted civilians growing.

He said the money from some countries was still coming in, but the UN agencies are evaluating the needs for the increasing number of affected people and a new consolidated appeal would be issued next week.

Most of the people who have escaped the violence are staying with relatives or friends, or rented accommodation placing tremendous strain on the country, while over 250,000 others are seeking refuge in 24 UNHCR-supported camps, Holmes said.

The 1.4 million recently displaced from the Swat region join a further 550,000 Pakistanis uprooted by fighting since last August, boosting the total number to 2.1 million.

Obviously, Holmes said the task was huge and the UN agencies were scaling up their efforts to help Pakistan in its efforts to care for the displaced people. So far the UN agencies had provided for 780,000 as they expand their relief operations.

Holmes said the government of Pakistan was fully cooperating with the United Nations agencies in the relief effort.

He appealed for urgent international assistance for people displaced by clashes between Government forces and militants – whose numbers topped 1 million over the weekend – in the South Asian nation’s north-west.

UN High Commissioner for Refugees António Guterres characterized the displacement crisis as one of the most dramatic in recent times, noting that aid workers are struggling to reach out to the growing number of displaced people.

‘It’s like trying to catch something that’s moving ahead of us because the number of people on the move every day is so big and the response is never enough,’ he told reporters before ending his three-day visit to the region.

‘Leaving this population without the support they need – with such massive numbers – could constitute an enormous destabilizing factor,’ Guterres cautioned.

Most of the 1.17 million people who have escaped the violence are staying with relatives or friends, placing tremendous strain on the country, while over 130,000 others are seeking refuge in UNHCR-supported camps.

The over 1 million recently displaced join a further 555,000 Pakistanis uprooted by fighting since last August.

During his visit to Pakistan, Guterres was told by internally displaced persons (IDPs) living in camps that they are anxious to return to their homes.

‘Each person has suffered a lot, having to abandon their community, sometimes their families, houses and properties, coming with nothing, and sometimes having to witness family or friends die,’ he said. ‘The amount of suffering needs to be recognized by the international community.’

Both the UN and the Pakistani Government will issue appeals for funding, the High Commissioner said, estimating the funds needed to be in the hundreds of millions of dollars.

Calling for a massive response from donor nations, he stressed that ‘it’s not only a matter of generosity; it’s a matter of enlightened self-interest.’

Last week, UNHCR airlifted 120 tons of relief supplies – including mosquito nets, plastic sheets and portable warehouses – to the area.
http://www.dawn.com/wps/wcm/connect/dawn-content-library/dawn/news/...

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