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1.
South Asia Earthquake
Fury Continues
Save Lives
2. The Death Toll Rises. It is still Rising More than 73,000 dead
More than 70,000 seriously injured
Fear: in the coming 2 to 3 weeks twice as many people could die of hunger and exposure during the winter if strong, timely interventions are not made
3. Worst Disaster in South Asia
4. Damage assessment Area affected 30,000 km2
Houses: 500,000 (56%)
Medical facilities: 365 (65%)
Telecommunications: Exchanges (86- 34%); Lines ( 33,225 - 13%)
Schools/colleges destroyed: 6083 (50%)
5. Educational institutions Teachers died: 853
Students died: 6210
AJK university:
4 teachers and 200 students died
No school in the affected area is functional
6. Enemies Weather: Snow, falling temperatures, soon reaching below freezing
Terrain: mountainous, treacherous
Aftershocks: More than 900 so far. Last aftershock yesterday 6.0 tremblor, unleashing landslides in the Kaghan Valley
Landslides
Inaccessible highland valleys
Disease
7. Race against Time The UN calls it Winter Race
“…Much of life is timing… speedy humanitarian response is critical for saving lives.” – Jan Egeland, Wall Street Journal
“Cold, hunger and injury, might kill more people than the quake itself” – UN Officials
All we have is 2 to 3 weeks. We have to move fast.
8. Harsher conditions than Tsunami - President Musharraf
9. F-16 purchase postponed President Musharraf announced Pakistan will postpone the purchase of F-16 aircraft from the US in the face of large scale relief and reconstruction tasks in the earthquake hit areas.
The President joined the earthquake stricken people in Azad Kashmir and NWFP to express nation’s resolve to rebuild lives and reconstruct the shattered region.
10. Crisis response
11. Crisis response
12. Crisis response 199 health facilities made functional
Patients received in civil and armed forces hospital 30,000; still admitted 6125; operations performed: 17,680
Public health teams (63); medical surgical teams (52); mental health teams (14); EPI teams( 341); spray teams (66) mobilized.
Cumulative disease surveillance for diarrhea, malaria, ARI, measles, jaundice, tetanus, pneumonia, hypothermia
14. National Plan of Action on Relief Presented in Islamabad on November 1 to all humanitarian agencies – national and international
Objectives: intense rescue, relief operations; restoration of communications infrastructure; life support means and civic order
Long term objectives: revival of civil administration structure and civil services
Early recovery and interim rehabilitation
Trauma management
Federal Relief Commission and ERA are the focal points. They will liaise with Pakistan’s armed forces, Pak government departments, UN international organizations and NGOs, philanthropists, International Financial Institutions and bilateral channels.
Relief operations to be synergized, coordinated and integrated.
Presented in Islamabad on November 1 to all humanitarian agencies – national and international
Objectives: intense rescue, relief operations; restoration of communications infrastructure; life support means and civic order
Long term objectives: revival of civil administration structure and civil services
Early recovery and interim rehabilitation
Trauma management
Federal Relief Commission and ERA are the focal points. They will liaise with Pakistan’s armed forces, Pak government departments, UN international organizations and NGOs, philanthropists, International Financial Institutions and bilateral channels.
Relief operations to be synergized, coordinated and integrated.
15. Priorities Rescue, evacuation, and medical support
Shelter
Food and water
Clothing and bedding
Restoration of essential services and communication infrastructure
16. HARMONISATION OF MULTIFUNCTIONAL RESPONSE
Joint Press Briefing
Joint Coord Conf after 48 hrs
HARMONISATION OF MULTIFUNCTIONAL RESPONSE
Joint Press Briefing
Joint Coord Conf after 48 hrs
17. Urgently Required Tents: 241,000
Blankets: 3.8 million ( 2 per head)
Action Plan
Identification of suitable sites
Composite package of tents, blankets, mattresses, heaters
Provide 1 tent per family
1 room transitional shelter
Prefab hutments
18. Urgently Required Food supplies: 7.2 million tons of foods to be distributed in next 120 days
Food to be supplied by November 30 before area closed
Prosthetic centres
Total amount needed for disease surveillance and prevention as well as medical equipment/drugs:
US$ 537 million for 180 days
19. Urgent Medical Requirements Two air ambulances for speedy evacuation of casualties
Four mobile operation theaters/hospitals on wheels
Electromedical equipment and 30 flying squad ambulances
Donor countries requested to keep field hospitals deployed till March 31, 2006.
Foreign medical teams/field hospitals leaving the country being requested to donate their equipment for the use of the local community/medical teams
Two medical rehabilitation/prosthetic centers required urgently – one each for AJK and NWFP
20. Water Sanitation Buckets and jerry cans 200,000
60 ml tablets /sachets of purification of water
480,000 hygiene kits
160,000 simple pit latrines
Alternative excreta disposal
22,000 sex designated washing areas
Soap
Other hygiene materials
21. Education Opening of tent schools
Incentives for students to go back to schools
22. Road clearance 124 km long roads cleared
66 km mule tracks laid
At least US$ 120.80 million required for full restoration and maintenance of road infrastructure, electricity, water supply and debris removal
23. Transportation requirements Available helicopters 119 (including pledged)
More helicopters and trucks needed for emergency supplies and to transport tents (241,000), blankets (3.3 million).
24. Money Needed to save lives A conservative estimate: $ 2 billion
Tents (300,000): $ 90 million
Food: $ 600 million
Health: $ 200 million
Water and Sanitation: $ 150 million
Education: $ 200 million
Air bridge: $ 450 million
25. UN Flash Appeal
“In emergency, reliable funding is essential. Imagine if your local fire department is to petition to the Mayor for money to turn on the water every time the fire broke out” – Jan Egeland, Wall Street Journal
The UN has done a marvelous job
The UN rose to the occasion, synergized and galvanized relief effort
The Flash Appeal of $ 550 million represents bare minimum for life saving emergency interventions
There’s still a shortfall of 75%
Come forward and help fill up that the vacuum
The UN has issued a Priority Humanitarian Actions for November 2005. Please respond to it to save lives, to stem further catastrophe.
26. We are a Proud People We will rebuild our country
Each man, woman and child has vowed to face this calamity with courage
We will be resilient in our resolve and effort
Our entire national machinery is harnessed to save lives, to reconstruct.
People of Pakistan have deposited Rupees 5.2 billion in the President of Pakistan’s Relief Fund
We appreciate international community’s solidarity, support and help.
27. Rehabilitation and Reconstruction Massive, multi-year commitment and effort required
Instant damages more than $ 5 billion
Priority is emergency rescue and relief
Early recovery and reconstruction are critical
An international conference in Islamabad on November 19, 2005 has been convened. UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan will attend.
President Musharraf will present a Rehabilitation and Reconstruction Plan
Absolute priorities for reconstruction: rapid employment of 1.1 million people; regeneration of 2.4 million livelihoods; houses; industry; agriculture; educational and health infrastructure; roads and communications.
29. Thanks United Nations
OCHA
WHO
UNHCR
WFP
UNICEF
IOM
Pictures for PPT:
WHO, AP, Reuters, AFP