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IOM expedieert noodpakketten vanuit Punjab naar het door overstromingen getroffen Sindh

Press Briefing Note 27-9-11
De pakketten, die elk twee plastic dekzeilen, touwen, twee dekens, een keukenset, een emmer en een jerrycan bevatten, zijn een aanvulling op de 2.000 kits die al opgeslagen zijn in Sindh. Deze zullen worden verdeeld door IOM en partnerorganisaties in door de Sindh Provincial Disaster Management Authority (PDMA) met voorrang aangewezen gebieden.

These include Umerkot (2,000), Tharparkar (1,000), Tando Mohammed Khan (1,000), Tando Allah Yar (1,000), Mirpurkhas (1,000), Sanghar (2,000) Shaheed Benazir Abad (1,000).

IOM has already distributed some 17,000 shelter kits to flood victims in Sindh. 

 “We have local NGO partners willing and able to distribute these kits to flood victims who desperately need our help. Distributing these contingency stocks without guaranteed donor funding to replace them is a high risk strategy, but it is a risk that we have to take,” says IOM Hyderabad Head of Office Arshad Rashid.

On September 18th IOM appealed to international donors for US$14.6 million to procure and distribute emergency shelter and non-food relief items to help over 550,000 vulnerable flood victims over the next three months.

The money will go towards providing shelter and non-food relief items, meeting the needs of displaced people in temporary settlements and relief camps, tracking displacement, building local capacity and coordinating the work of the Emergency Shelter Cluster.

On Friday IOM, working closely with a local NGO FIF, which provided a boat, delivered shelter and NFI kits to families stranded on mud banks in a sea of flood water in Badin district’s Tando Bago sub-district.

The community, located about a mile from the town of Judho, had been cut off from the town for nearly a month. Their submerged mud houses had been completely destroyed and their only surviving possessions were wooden charpoy string beds and a few quilts and rice sacks that they had floated to safety and used to build makeshift shelters.

A village elder told IOM that the only aid they had received had been a delivery of rice by navy personnel in a zodiac inflatable.

Many people were sick from drinking dirty water or were suffering from malaria and all the crops in the area, including cotton, rice, tomatoes, onions and chili had been destroyed by the floods, he added.

“Unless the water recedes by next month, which seems very unlikely, they also won’t be able to plant their wheat crop – which means they will lose another food staple,” says IOM Operations Officer Sher Sultan, who led the distribution.

Based on government and independent assessments, the UN believes that nearly 5.5 million people have been affected by the floods in Sindh. As many as 1.8 million have been displaced and are living in government relief camps, on roadsides or on higher ground near their submerged homes.

For more information on the work of the Emergency Shelter Cluster in the 2011 Pakistan floods please go to:  www.shelterpakistan.org.

For pictures of IOM operations in Badin, please go to www.iom.int.

For other information please contact IOM Islamabad. Saleem Rehmat, Tel. +92.300.856.0341. Email: srehmat@iom.int or Chris Lom, Tel. +92.303.555.2058. Email: clom@iom.int  

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