From the Worldwide Faith News archives www.wfn.org


CWS EXPANDED TENT VILLAGE WILL SHELTER 2,500 PAKISTAN QUAKE SURVIVORS


From "Lesley Crosson" <lcrosson@churchworldservice.org>
Date Thu, 27 Oct 2005 09:24:40 -0500

NEWS UPDATE

CHURCH WORLD SERVICE EXPANDED TENT VILLAGE WILL SHELTER
2,500 PAKISTAN QUAKE SURVIVORS

Army Helps CWS Teams Drop Aid to Inaccessible Allai-Battagram

NEW YORK/ISLAMABAD - Thurs Oct 27- Following the United Nations' meeting
with donor nations yesterday to press for more and immediate funds for
relief in earthquake-shattered northern Pakistan, humanitarian agency
Church World Service today reports that it is expanding the capacity of a
new tent village it has established in Bisyan for the most vulnerable
quake survivors.

The tent village will now be able to provide shelter and medical services
for 2,450 of the devastating October 8 quake's most vulnerable survivors.
The Church of Pakistan will provide medical services within the camp.

40 families have already moved into the tents, in a shelter village that
will have the capacity to set up 350 tents to accommodate almost 2,500
individuals. CWS's plan for the village includes field training for camp
security staff.

Church World Service (CWS), other aid agencies and government military
support are accelerating efforts to rescue the injured and bring relief
and temporary shelter to those in remote areas of the Himalayas who have
yet to be reached.

Yesterday, the U.S. military began setting up a mobile army surgical
hospital (MASH) on the outskirts of Muzaffarabad, the quake-devastated
capital of Pakistani Kashmir, and treated its first patients.

But despite the significant ratcheting up of response by world bodies in
the past few days, tens of thousands of survivors and wounded have still
not been reached or served in some northern Kashmir villages.

In three weeks or less, winter's bitter snow falls and freezing temperatures will cut off roads that are already impassable from the earthquake. More
than one million people are still homeless from the quake.

Meeting these challenges, Church World Service Pakistan/Afghanistan
Regional Director Marvin Parvez says CWS and its partners have been able
to mobilize and distribute shelter kits and food packages in the North
West Frontier Province of Pakistan-controlled Kashmir.

"With help from the Pakistan Army, we have been airlifting relief goods to
survivors in Allai-Battagram, one of the areas still not reachable by
road," says Parvez.

Church World Service and its partner agencies who are members of Action by
Churches Together (ACT) have been the largest donor of shelter and food
packages in the area, says Pakistan Army Lt. Col. Ahmed Zakeer.

"With each tent provided," Zakeer said, "a family is being saved."

Global CWS, whose Pakistan/Afghanistan office has served in the region for
fifty years, is assisting more than 20,000 of the worst affected families
with shelter kits and family food kits and is providing medical assistance
to 100,000.

To date, the agency and partners have distributed 3,185 shelter kits to
serve 22,295 individuals and 2,563 food packages to serve 17,941 individuals in the affected areas of Shangla and Balakot.

Scrambling for tents

Church World Service is calling for national governments to release tents
from warehouses throughout South Asia.

Pakistan's Col. Zakeer echoed the plea for tents, saying "Temperatures
will drop in the next fifteen days, making survival next to impossible for
those people living out in the open." Responders say more than 450,000
tents are needed

"Even though we have very little food and the water is dirty, we do
manage. What we need are tents. Without tents and blankets, we will freeze
to death," Fazi Akbar, from North West Frontier Province told Church World
Service aid teams. Akbar is headmaster of a small school completely
destroyed in the earthquake.

A NATO-UNHCR airlift from Turkey has so far flown 22 sorties and dropped
approximately 250 metric tons of aid to Pakistan and is getting further
support from a chartered Boeing 747 cargo jet that will join the operation.
The Indian army has said it can airlift supplies to the Line of Control
that divides the long disputed region, and on Saturday India agreed to
open relief camps for earthquake survivors from the Pakistani side of
Kashmir, at three points along the Line of Control. Pakistan is examining
the proposal.

Today the U.S. and NATO agreed to provide more helicopters to accelerate
rescue sorties and air drops of supplies,

'Everywhere, the children's eyes are breaking our hearts'

CWS's Parvez says, "Everywhere, the children's eyes are breaking our
hearts. Most have lost at least a father or a mother," he says. "There is
no clear figure as to how many children are displaced.

"We are receiving reports," he said, "that the limbs of quake-affected
children are being amputated at the Pakistan Institute of Medical
Sciences, Polyclinic and other hospitals because of lack of plastic
surgery experts."

"According to experts," he said, "many quake-affected children in
Pakistan are suffering from mental disorders and physical disabilities
owing to lack of psychiatrists and plastic surgery experts in the
country."

In addition to emergency relief, CWS is already beginning to put pieces in
place to provide psychosocial services for quake survivors, especially the
children, and the agency's long-term response will include shelter
construction materials.

As chair of the Pak-Humanitarian Forum (PHF), Church World Service reports
that in an emergency meeting yesterday, forum member NGOs discussed action
plans to handle such priorities as: improving capacity at the airport in
Islamabad to process aid shipments; the need to bring women physicians
into the region- who would be guaranteed safety and security- particularly
to care for pregnant women affected by the quake; and special attention to
the needs of women and unaccompanied children

Church World Service's regional offices throughout Pakistan, whose staff
members are Muslim and Christian, were on the ground and able to respond
immediately after the quake struck and have been working in collaboration
with the Pakistan government and other international relief organizations.
Sparked by Pakistan's immediate needs, Director of the Microsoft Humanitarian Disaster Management David Roberts visited the country this week to
offer technological assistance in helping set up a data management system
deemed crucial for future community-level disaster planning and preparedness. Data gleaned from the current earthquake disaster will be stored as
baseline information in the system, which Microsoft sees as part of a
long-term partnership with Pakistan.

Sources: United Nations, regional authorities

EDITORS, PLEASE NOTE: Please include in your listings of responding
agencies:

Contributions to support earthquake survivors may be sent to:
Church World Service
Southern Asia Earthquake--#6979
P.O. Box 968
Elkhart, IN 46515
Contributions may also be made online, or by calling 800.297.1516, ext.
222.

Media Contacts: Lesley Crosson, CWS/New York, (212) 870-2676, lcrosson@churchworldservice.org
Jan Dragin - 24/7- (781) 925 1526; jdragin@gis.net

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