CAIRO,
October 11, 2005 (IslamOnline.net) – British Pakistanis are furious
over the meager £500,000 aid initially pledged by Britain to their
homeland which has been battered by a massive killer quake, reported the
Gurdian on Tuesday, October 11.
"If
the British government can afford to spend billions of pounds on Iraq
for the sake of protecting oil supplies for the West then to offer this
amount of money is a sick joke," said Farooq Qureshi, a local
councilor.
He
said he felt numb after hearing the news of the earthquake and was
irritated by the £500,000 the government had first pledged for a
disaster of this scale.
Britain’s
international development secretary, Hilary Benn, said the government
had already given some £1m to the relief effort.
A
massive earthquake struck Saturday, October 8, the Indian subcontinent,
devastating entire villages in Pakistan, India and Afghanistan.
Some
23,000 people were confirmed dead in Pakistan alone and about
51,000 others were injured, with the death toll expected to rise.
The
epicenter of the quake was near Muzaffarabad, the main city of
Pakistan-administered Kashmir.
"It's
very cold right now in Kashmir, and they don't have any blankets or
anything. They're standing outside of the house, open space, and they
don't have any piece of bread and food or nothing — no electricity
over there, no road over there," said a Pakistani living in the UK.
Pakistanis
React
Kashmir
International Relief Fund (Kirf), a charity located in ease London’s
Leytonstone, has barely closed since the disaster, The Independent
reported Tuesday.
KIRF
had been working round the clock to counsel relatives, take donations
and provide information for Britain's Pakistani community.
Fozia
Aslam, 23, a Briton of Pakistani origin, said she was shocked by the
televised reports on the disaster.
"We
have spoken to relatives and friends of relatives. So many are sitting
in open fields with no water, unable to sleep, while we are sitting here
with everything available to us. I couldn't stay at home at a time like
this," she said.
At
the nearby mosque, the Waltham Forest Islamic Association, a 15-minute
collection after the Noon prayer gathered over £1,000 from the
congregation, the majority of whom originate from Azad, Kashmir.
The
money was added to the mosque's £15,000 collected over just three days.
The mosque committee will continue daily collections during the Muslim
holy fasting month of Ramadan.
Ishfaq
Ahmed, Kirf's chief executive, said people were angry over trickling aid
to the quake victims.
"Yesterday
people were worried, upset and shocked. Today they are angry. They are
angry at the news they are getting that no aid has arrived for many of
their relatives."
British
Charities
Britain’s
Disasters Emergency Committee is following assessment of reports from
the worst-hit areas and discussions with charities providing relief to
the some 4 million people left homeless.
An
appeal, to be formally launched later this week by a coalition of 13
major aid groups, is the third this year in response to a major natural
disaster.
Around
£400m was raised for survivors of the Asian tsunami and £24m has so
far been collected to help those suffering food shortages in Niger and
sub-Saharan Africa.
Oxfam
unveiled a £4m package, focusing on blankets, tents, medicine and clean
water.
"We're
sending public health and water engineers," said an Oxfam
spokeswoman.
"Some
will be going to Kashmir, but others will be staying in Islamabad to
coordinate the international effort for water and sanitation. We need
people to dig into their pockets and show us the generosity they
demonstrated during the tsunami."
A
further £3m has been committed by other UK groups, including
London-based relief agency Muslim Aid, Islamic Relief, Unicef's UK
office, Christian Aid, and the British Red Cross.
The
British charity Shelter Box, based in Helston, Cornwall, will send 400
boxes of essential supplies this week.
Each
£490 box contains everything needed to provide a temporary home for 10
people for three to six months.