WORLD
CAPITAL, October 8 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) – The
killer earthquake that battered vast areas across South East Asia
Saturday, October 8, triggered an immediate relief and rescue drive
across the globe.
The
Irish government pledged an initial one million euros (1.2 million
dollars) to assist with immediate needs to deal with the aftermath of
the earthquake in northern Pakistan, reported Agence France-Presse
(AFP).
Development
Cooperation Minister Conor Lenihan said the earthquake appeared to
have had "devastating consequences" and there were initial
needs for food, shelter and other basic requirements.
An
earthquake measuring at least 7.6 on the Richter scale caused massive
devastation across a swathe of Pakistan, India and Afghanistan,
leaving more than 1,800 dead with fears for many more.
Officials
said the death toll topped 1,000 in Pakistani-controlled Kashmir
alone, while more than 550 people died in Pakistan's North West
Frontier Province bordering Afghanistan.
Many
people will have been left homeless and many others may still be
missing and trapped in collapsed buildings," Lenihan said in a
statement.
The
initial funding will be available for the Red Cross and Red Crescent
organizations.
"Funding
will also be provided if necessary for coordination of the
humanitarian effort through the UN Office for the Coordination of
Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) and for other needs as they become
clearer," Lenihan said.
The
quake is thought to be one of the most powerful to hit the south East
Asia region in decades.
Rescue
Teams
Meanwhile,
a team of officers from Abu Dhabi police left for Pakistan to help in
search and rescue operations, the official WAM news agency reported.
The
26-strong police rescue team will help search for survivors and treat
the wounded from the earthquake, "in the first overseas mission
on such a (large) scale," it said.
Oil-rich
Abu Dhabi is the largest and wealthiest member of the seven-strong
United Arab Emirates.
Similarly,
a UN team left Switzerland for Islamabad to coordinate humanitarian
assistance, a UN spokeswoman said.
"The
plane left with seven experts on board... charged with setting up the
first coordination and evaluation team," said UN spokeswoman
Elizabeth Byrs.
The
Swiss plane was chartered by the OCHA.
Muslim
Aid
 |
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Gul said Ankara had a "duty" to help earthquake areas. (Reuters)
|
Turkey,
a frequent victim of earthquakes which have killed many thousands of
people, also offered aid to fellow Muslim country Pakistan.
"We
are ready to provide every sort of help," Foreign Minister
Abdullah Gul said, adding that Ankara had a "duty" to do so.
Turkish
civil defense and Red Crescent teams, experienced in working in
earthquake zones, had been placed on the alert.
The
Turkish Red Crescent will send a team of seven experts, medicines,
food and hygienic materials to quake-hit Pakistan.
The
seven disaster experts and aid materials will go to Pakistan in an
airplane provided by the Turkish prime ministry, it said in a press
release.
The
Islamic Relief organization immediately posting a fund-raising appeal
on its Web site.
The
aid group said its staff are already in the affected region preparing
to help the survivors.
The
Muslim Association of Britain (MAB) urged everyone to pray for those
who lost their lives and for the people who are affected by the
earthquake.
It
called on British Muslims and non-Muslims alike to help with the
massive relief effort needed by helping the aid agencies involved.
"(The
disaster) would require the help of the international community to
coordinate and fund relief efforts to those who need it most and we
appeal to the British public to donate generously in this
regard," said MAB’s President Ahmed Sheikh on the group's Web
site.
The
Muslim group has already begun contacting various charities to assess
how it can help coordinate their efforts to bring immediate relief to
those affected.
European
Assistance
The
European Commission, the EU's executive arm, said up to three million
euros (3.6 million dollars) could be approved within a day if
requested by agencies working on the ground.
"We
are all hoping that the news does not get steadily worse as the day
progresses but we are fearful that the casualty figures may mount and
that international support may be needed," said EU aid
commissioner Louis Michel.
A
spokesman said the commission's Humanitarian Aid department (ECHO) was
in touch with two organizations -- Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF)
Netherlands and the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) --
about the crisis.
"It
depends on what these organizations tell us they need," said
Amadeu Altafaj, stressing that the two organizations were chosen
because they are already on the ground.
"They
can save more lives and faster. This is the priority of course,"
he told AFP.
British
Foreign Secretary Jack Straw said his country was "offering help
to the Pakistani government and are ready to respond to all
requests."
Straw
said he had been "very distressed" to hear of the quake,
particularly as "so many British people of Pakistani heritage
come from the area affected or have relatives who live there."
In
Berlin, Foreign Minister Joschka Fischer said Germany had immediately
released 50,000 euros to be made available to Pakistani authorities
through Berlin's embassy in Islamabad.
The
German Red Cross would be working with the Pakistani Red Crescent to
bring relief to affected areas, and Berlin was in contact with the UN
with regard to further humanitarian action, he said.
Welcomed
Pakistan
Prime Minister Shaukat Aziz welcomed aid from foreign countries,
adding his country may cooperate with rival India for relief work in
the worst-hit area, which is near the Line of Control (LoC) between
the Indian and Pakistani controlled zones of the disputed Himalayan
region of Kashmir.
"We
have set up the President's Relief Fund for the earthquake victims and
we welcome financial donations for the fund," Aziz told the BBC.
He
said Islamabad would need foreign help to rebuild homes in the worst
affected areas, where he said more than half of the houses have been
destroyed.
"It
will be very difficult for them to survive" when the winter
comes, he added.
"So
we have said 'yes', we will take financial help from friends in the
president's relief fund. That money can also be used to buy equipment
locally like foodstuff and water etcetera."