|
![]() |
|
United Nations High Commissioner for
Refugees in Pakistan
|
|
| Featured Stories: |
MUZZAFARABAD, Pakistan, October 29 (UNHCR) - Its name means
'little' in Urdu, but the Thori Park camp in Muzaffarabad will soon be one
of the largest emergency settlements in Pakistan-administered Kashmir.
The UN refugee agency has provided the Pakistani charitable
group that is constructing the camp with 550 of the 600 tents which are being
placed on the site. Each tent will be able to accommodate one family.
|
The camp is located on the bank of the Jhelum River at the bottom of
a steep valley. A dirt road leads to Muzaffarabad's state assembly building
which has become a hub for incoming United Nations relief supplies. Hanif Hijazi, and eight other volunteers of the Al Mustafa Welfare Society, arrived in Muzaffarabad from their homes in Kotli, 200 kilometres away, on the same day the quake struck. Today the group has more than 400 volunteers working in Muzaffarabad, having arrived here from across Pakistan. At Thori Park a dozen men are working to erect the hundreds of tents they have received. With each UNHCR family tent weighing between 40 and 50 kilogrammes, it's an exhausting job. |
|
"We were so relieved when UNHCR offered to support our
camp," says Hajazi. "Immediately after the quake we were able to
get our hands on a few locally manufactured tents, but they were poor quality.
The tents we're receiving from UNHCR are much stronger and will provide adequate
shelter for the families over the winter."
Al Mustafa is just one of the charities UNHCR is working with
in Pakistan-administered Kashmir, in the effort to deliver shelter supplies
such as tents, blankets, and plastic sheets to survivors of the devastating
October 8 earthquake that left more than 53,000 people dead and more than
75,000 injured.
"We have three main objectives in this area," says
Urooj Saifi, UNHCR's team leader in Muzaffarabad. "We want to improve
the conditions in many of the camps which sprung up in the immediate aftermath
of the quake. With the Pakistani authorities, we're working to identify areas
where more formal camps can be established. And we want to create camps away
from the main centres so that people living in the higher altitudes have a
shorter distance to travel to find shelter."
UNHCR recently delivered 300 tents to Al Mustafa teams working
in the town of Hattian Bala, 35 kilometres from Muzaffarabad. Until earlier
this week, the town had remained cut off by the many landslides that blocked
the roads. Traffic is still frequently stopped as the Pakistani military uses
explosives to clear boulders. Temporary metal spans have been laid over collapsed
bridges.
Asif, an engineer for a local government ministry, joined a
group of men in unloading the tents. The trucks that have brought them from
UNHCR's warehouse in Islamabad are too big to navigate the narrow track that
leads to the camp site and the supplies must be reloaded onto smaller vehicles.
"Until a couple of days ago, we had received nothing here,"
says Asif. "My family's house completely collapsed and we had to sleep
on the open ground. But even after the quake people don't want to leave this
place."
From its regional base in Muzaffarabad, UNHCR has distributed
1,800 tents, 5,000 blankets and thousands of plastic sheets, stoves and other
supplies. Elsewhere in the quake zone UN refugee agency teams are working
with the Pakistani military to set up and support camps for quake survivors.
A NATO/UNHCR airlift of supplies from the agency's warehouse
in Turkey is bringing additional life-saving assistance to Islamabad's Chaklala
air base every day.
As part of the joint UN relief operation, UNHCR is supplying
some 20,000 tents as well as nearly a quarter of a million blankets and other
relief items to assist survivors in weathering the approaching winter.