Growing Concerns over IDP Plight in Pakistan- Urgent Humanitarian Help Needed.
Posted in Latest NewsPress ReleaseSikh AID
Click here for the video. We need to raise $215,000. For full list of requirements click here.

Pakistan IDP map Courtesy: BBC.com

Islamabad, Pakistan: The future of Pakistan’s Internally Displaced People (IDPs) becomes more uncertain with each passing day in the camps. UNITED SIKHS appeals for immediate help to rehabilitate people living in make shift camps, where they face extreme heat and poor hygiene.

“It’s very hot and we are living in miserable conditions without a cooler or a fan. Our children and women inside a tent feel they are in a clay oven,” said Kareem Khan, an IDP at the Jalozai camp. The Jalozai camp has 21,000 families with more than 140,000 IDPs. The camp has been divided into 4 sectors and was an Afghan refugee camp during the Soviet- Afghan war. The Camp Director, Mr. Muhammad Tahir Orakzhai requested UNITED SIKHS to supply 800 pedestal fans and 800 water coolers.

The UNITED SIKHS relief team found that there is a shortage of food, drinking water and hygiene facilities at the campsites. The camp toilets are in a squalid condition and due to the summer heat contagious bacterial infections have increased among women and children. A significant number of women and children are suffering from diarrhea, scabies and high fever.

Dr Suarab Singh,Panja Sahib IDP coordinator, and Sikhs at Gurdwara Panja Sahib A forlorn IDP woman at Panja Sahib

“The conditions at the camps are deteriorating because of the weather and the onset of the monsoons. There is an increase in cases of snake and scorpion bites. During our visit to the camp sites with the team of local doctors from the National Trust for Population Welfare (NATPOW), we learnt of the increase in the number of people requesting medicines for treating scabies, malaria, insect bites and diarrhea. The situation is aggravated by the fact that there is a shortage of female doctors to treat children and women who refuse to be attended to by male doctors. Some people have not taken a bath for more than a month,” said Sundeep Singh, UNITED SIKHS Projects Media Coordinator, who returned from Pakistan this past week.

Mr. Iftikhar Durrani, CEO of Pakistan’s National Trust For Population Welfare (NATPOW) commented, “The humanitarian aid to be provided needs to be more humane, we need assistance, today!”

IDP children met by UNITED SIKHS volunteers A make shift Camp for IDPs in Mardan

“We need to provide IDPs with a cleaning kit that has clean towels, antibacterial soaps, bed sheets and clothing to stop the spread of contagious bacteria. There is also a dire need for a clinical facility at every camp site, especially for mothers and their children, to prevent the spread of infection in the camps,” said Kuldip Singh, President, UNITED SIKHS-USA, who is coordinating fundraising efforts. He continued, “Each Mother and Child Health (MCH) clinic would cost $9,200 USD to build, maintain, and run, and we have been told that 20 clinics are needed, covering the 19 IDP camps and the IDPs staying at the Panja Sahib Gurdwara.”

Herdyal Singh, a resident of Peshawar who has family in the Orakzai Agency, said, “There are 12 Sikh families who are from Orakzai and are now living in Peshawar; we left our homes from the fear of the Taliban. Right now, we have to rebuild our lives from scratch and don’t know what’s in store for the future. We don’t know when will we be going back to our homes. Our home articles have been auctioned off by the Taliban and we have no means of recovering them. We look forward to any assistance that can be provided to help us start again. “

“We will also be working with the office of the UNHRC and the local government officials to assist the IDPs that would need legal assistance.” said Mejindarpal Kaur, UNITED SIKHS Legal Director.

“UNITED SIKHS needs to raise about $215,000 USD to support our relief efforts for the needy IDPs living in the camps. We have had to revise our funding estimates to accommodate new requests for relief supplies, rehabilitation and medical emergencies. We request the public to donate generously to provide the IDPs with immediate humanitarian relief and advocacy support,” said Kuldip Singh. For a full list of IDP needs that we would like to meet click here.

For a previous press release on UNITED SIKHS Pakistan IDP efforts, please visit: https://www.unitedsikhs.org/PressReleases/PRSRLS-26-06-2009-00.htm

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