Annan calls Asian quake response 'weak' (AP) Updated: 2005-11-18 22:54
U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan chided the international community Friday
for a "weak and tardy" response to the South Asia quake that killed more than
87,000 people.
U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan, right, addresses a news
conference with Pakistan Foreign Minister khursheed Kasuri at the Foreign
Ministry in Islamabad, Pakistan, Friday, Nov 18, 2005. Annan toured
quake-hit northern Pakistan as international aid groups warned that quake
survivors still need emergency help even as donor nations gather to
discuss long-term reconstruction needs.
[AP] |
Annan said on the eve of a key donors conference that only 30 percent of the
money pledged for quake relief had been donated so far. He said that paled in
comparison to donations after the Dec. 26 earthquake and tsunami that devastated
11 nations on the Indian Ocean.
"I think there is no doubt that donors' response has been weak and tardy,"
Annan said. "When the tsunami struck at the 10-day point we had 80 percent of
the money we needed. In the case of Pakistan at the 10-day point we had 12
percent. Today we have 30 percent."
Annan also warned of a "gigantic task" ahead for quake recovery efforts in
northern Pakistan, where most of the deaths occurred.
The U.N. chief visited families sheltering in tents inside the quake zone and
said he would renew funding appeals at Saturday's conference for what he called
"one of the largest humanitarian tragedies we've had to deal with."
He said the difficulties posed by winter's onset and the logistics of
reaching mountain villages made the Oct. 8 quake disaster comparable to the
tsunami, which killed 180,000 people.
|