SOUTH ASIA EARTHQUAKE RELIEF
Church World Service providing medical assistance to 100,000 quake survivors
in Pakistan
Written by J. Bennett Guess
Wednesday, 12 October 2005
In Pakistan, UCC-supported Church World Service reports that its emergency aid teams and other rescue groups are continuing to make inroads where more than 42,000 people died and nearly five million are homeless following the South Asia earthquake on Oct. 8. The UCC sent an initial $20,000 from the One Great Hour of Sharing special mission offering to support relief efforts.
"This is going to be remembered as the earthquake that killed the children," Church World Service Pakistan/Afghanistan Director Marvin Parvez said today from
Parvez is on the scene helping coordinate the Church World Service response to the calamitous earthquake. Parvez said one report today from
"We received beautiful news of four children being rescued from a school," said Parvez, but with occasional good news about rescued survivors, reports from the scene have otherwise been extremely bleak.
"There are recovered bodies of children being set outside of schools, ready for burial," Parvez reported. "As a parent, this is very difficult to see."
"It's a horror story that doesn't end. You find yet another village that has been flattened by this earthquake," he said. Efforts to rescue survivors or retrieve bodies are being hampered by the inaccessibility of remote rural villages.
Parvez said there is "tremendous need right now for shelter for the earthquake survivors. People have lost their homes and need shelter. People are very scared and they can't afford to lose any more loved ones."
"Our teams have been on the ground since day one," says Parvez. The agency has had operations in
CWS will provide medical assistance to 100,000 people impacted by the quake--half in Azad Kashmir and half in the
A collaboration of international humanitarian and emergency response agencies in
"Despite the fact that we are all responding as fast as we can, and that international aid is now coming in, survivors are in dire need. People are asking for clean drinking water, food, tents and medicines," Parvez said. "Those now homeless or who are afraid to return to their houses are living in the open air and freezing temperatures."
Church World Service's office and health clinic in Mansehra were damaged by the quake but the clinic is now cleared, open and serving survivors needing medical care.
CWS Pakistan-Afghanistan offices in
open-sky.
Parvez said people are still being given first aid at open places and in the streets. Helicopters have been shifting injured people to hospitals in Murree, Abbottabad and other hospitals.
As international aid began to pour in today, aircraft loaded with supplies came from the
The U.S. responded today by sending three military cargo planes laden with emergency supplies and eight U.S. helicopters, diverted from Afghanistan, carrying supplies, tarpaulins and equipment including high-tech cameras for finding buried survivors, according to a CNN report.
Parvez said earthquake survivors are pleading for coffins and assistance to bury the dead bodies lying in the rubble.
"This has been the most severe earthquake in this area for 120 years," said Parvez. People are grief-stricken. There are towns that have been completely destroyed. Many children are still missing, as they were in school at the time of the incident."
CWS further reported that areas ahead of Balakot town and Gari Habib Ullah are not yet accessible. From
"In Abbottabad, a
"The worst hit place was Bagh, 40 kilometers southeast of Muzaffarabad There are no survivors in villages like Jaglari, Kufalgarh, Harigal and Baniyali in Bagh district," Parvez said.
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