| Home
Displaced Pakistanis live in appalling conditions, says rights group
Karachi News.Net Saturday 4th July, 2009 (IANS)
More than two million Pakistanis who have been displaced by the ongoing war between security forces and militants, but who have not got admission into any relief camp, are in appalling condition as they have no access to government aid, the Amnesty International has said.
The government must ensure the ethnic Pashtuns fleeing the fighting in northwest Pakistan do not face discrimination in receiving assistance, the Online news agency said Saturday, citing the rights group Amnesty.
As the government expanded its military operations to North and South Waziristan, there has been no immediate relief in sight for millions of displaced people, it said.
To make matters worse, the vast majority of the displaced people are living outside the registered camps where aid agencies are distributing shelter, food and water to those in need, Amnesty Asia-Pacific director Sam Zarifi said.
Nearly 90 percent of the displaced people do not have access to the relief camps and live in extremely overcrowded conditions in slums and abandoned buildings. At least three or four families are sharing a house with inadequate food and water, the agency said.
The World Health Organisation has warned of a significant risk of communicable diseases with the arrival of hot weather and monsoons.
Amnesty has documented some two dozen instances where displaced Pashtuns have been told they cannot rent property, access health care or admit their children in schools without security clearance - which is difficult for many people who lost their documentation as they fled.
In such a scenario, the women and children are the worst affected, it noted.
Conditions seem particularly difficult in the Sindh province, where some local political groups have fanned fears that the influx of Pashtuns would threaten the local population.
According to local aid groups, more then 200,000 displaced people have already reached various cities in Sindh, including Jamshoro, Kotri, and Sukkhar, joining millions of Pashtuns already living there.
A leader of the Sindh Taraqi Pasand Party said people in Sindh are against the settlement of displaced people from North West Frontier Province (NWFP) as the Sindhi population in the province would become a minority. Email this story to a friend
Comments on this story
dv 07-04-09, 07:11 AM |
Displaced Pakistanis live in appalling conditions, says rights group
India undivided was certainly a better place to live, we had at least some government. What do we have now in Pakistan, India and Bangladesh - something as useless and corrupt as anything could be.
|
Have your say on this story
|
 |
 |
- Putin shares India's concerns on AFPAK, but hails Pakistan's counter-terror efforts
Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin, who is here on a two-day visit, has expressed his concern over terrorism emanating from the AFPAK region and the danger it poses to India's security interests, but at the same time, has also hailed Pakistan's counter-terrorism efforts. [read story]
- Pakistan tests missiles, torpedoes in Arabian Sea
Pakistan Friday successfully test-fired new missiles and torpedoes in the Arabian Sea, the country's navy said. [read story]
- Pakistan announce Twenty20 squad, captain to be named later
Holders Pakistan Friday announced their final 15-man squad, without naming the captain, for the World Twenty20 championship in the West Indies. [read story]
- Pakistan is a difficult neighbour: Chidambaram
New Delhi, Mar 12 (ANI) Union Home Minister P Chidambaram on Friday said that Pakistan is a difficult neighbour. [read story]
- Supreme Court orders Zardari graft cases to be reopened
The noose seems to be tightening around Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari, with the Supreme Court saying a Swiss money laundering case against him should be immediately reopened. [read story]
|
|
 |
 |
|
|