Taliban dan ndeboost yang berotak anjing lia itu lebih senang orang Pakistan 
mati kelaparan dan kena penyakit dari pada menerima pertolognan dari orang 
asing.....

--

http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2010/08/10/world/main6759871.shtml

Pakistani Taliban: Reject Foreign Flood Aid

Militants Offer Relief Funds, Say Gov't Must Refuse Western Aid; 

(CBS/AP)  The Pakistani Taliban has urged the government not to accept any 
foreign aid for victims of the worst flooding in the country's history.

Spokesman Azam Tariq told an Associated Press reporter Tuesday that the Taliban 
would themselves provide money if the government stopped accepting 
international help.

"Pakistan should reject this aid to maintain sovereignty and independence," 
Tariq said in a telephone call to an Associated Press reporter.

The Taliban has often attacked foreign aid groups, which they say serve a 
Western agenda.

Pakistan Floods
Pakistanis Trapped by Deadly Floods

Meanwhile, President Asif Ali Zardari returned Tuesday to flood-ravaged 
Pakistan, where he faced a storm of criticism for visiting Europe as his 
country was gripped by what his government called the nation's worst natural 
disaster.

His arrival came as thousands fled a major city in central Pakistan threatened 
by swollen rivers, and as the United Nations said the nationwide aid response 
needed to be scaled up "massively." The world body says it is working on a 
response plan that will likely require hundreds of millions of dollars in 
initial international assistance.

The U.N., relying on Pakistani figures, says the number of people affected by 
flooding over the past two weeks is 13.8 million - more than the combined total 
of the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami, the 2005 Kashmir earthquake and the 2010 
Haiti earthquake, although the death toll in each of those disasters was much 
higher than the 1,500 people killed in the floods.

The widespread crisis has overwhelmed the government and frustrated citizens 
who have complained about slow or non-existent aid efforts. A person is 
considered "affected" by the floods if he or she will need some form of 
assistance to recover, either short-term humanitarian aid or longer-term 
reconstruction help, the U.N. said.

Amid the relentless rains, Zardari - an unpopular figure to begin with - took 
off for a visit to France and Britain. His aides said he had to undertake the 
trip for diplomatic reasons, especially in the U.K., whose Prime Minister David 
Cameron had recently accused Pakistan of exporting terror.

But the timing of trip struck a raw nerve among many who said Zardari should 
have stayed with his suffering people - even though the president, fearful of 
assassination, rarely makes public appearances in Pakistan anyway. The 
criticism was particularly harsh after reports that he'd visited his family's 
elegant chateau in France.

Zardari returned first to the southern city of Karachi and was expected back in 
the capital, Islamabad, on Wednesday. He is set to meet with the chief 
ministers of the provinces to map out a rehabilitation program, said Fauzia 
Wahab, spokeswoman for the ruling Pakistan People's Party.

In Punjab province, the normally bustling city of Muzaffargarh looked largely 
deserted Tuesday after large numbers of people left following flood warnings 
the previous evening. Many men, however, stayed behind to guard homes and 
businesses.

"There is no doubt that our city is almost empty now," said Mohammed Saleem, 
42, a shop owner who sent his wife and children to Multan city.

The local government hospital had staffing shortages because many doctors and 
other workers had decided to leave.

"We have put sandbags around our hospital to protect it from any possible 
floodwaters, but we do not know whether it will help," said Ashiq Malik, a 
hospital official.

The population of Muzaffargarh is around 250,000, said Hassan Iqbal, a senior 
government official in Dera Ghazi Khan district. The evacuation warning was 
issued only after authorities assessed that the floods could hit the city, 
Iqbal said.

"It may not happen, but there is a danger to the city," he told The Associated 
Press.

Pakistani Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani has called the crisis the worst 
natural disaster in Pakistan's history.

The U.N. estimates that immediate relief will require hundreds of millions of 
dollars, while longer-term reconstruction and rehabilitation will cost 
billions. It is still working on estimating what is needed from the 
international community, and says more than $100 million has been pledged 
already, including funds from the U.S.

Asked whether that response has been anemic, U.N. officials would only say 
they'd like to see more.

"Yes, we need to have more, and yes, the tempo needs to increase," said Martin 
Mogwanja, a top U.N. humanitarian official in Islamabad. The response "now 
needs to be scaled up, massively."

The hardest hit region has been the northwest, which also is the epicenter of 
Pakistan's fight against al Qaeda and the Taliban. But as swollen rivers have 
flown south and east, Sindh and Punjab provinces have also been affected.

Rescue work has been hampered by ongoing monsoon rains, which have washed away 
roads and bridges. Six U.S. helicopters sent from Afghanistan to assist in aid 
delivery and evacuations lost at least three days of flights because of the 
weather.

The floods hit the country at a time when the government is already struggling 
with a faltering economy and a brutal war against Taliban militants that has 
killed thousands of people. The patchy government response has given room for 
Islamist groups, some allegedly linked to militant outfits, to step in and 
offer their own aid to displaced and hungry flood victims. 




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