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US envoy urges more aid for Swat | US envoy urges more aid for Swat |
(about 1 hour later) | |
US envoy Richard Holbrooke has urged European and Muslim nations to send more aid to those displaced by fighting in north-west Pakistan. | US envoy Richard Holbrooke has urged European and Muslim nations to send more aid to those displaced by fighting in north-west Pakistan. |
Mr Holbrooke visited refugees and said the task "requires security and assistance from the rest of the world". | Mr Holbrooke visited refugees and said the task "requires security and assistance from the rest of the world". |
The US has already pledged $110m and hopes to provide an extra $200m for people who fled their homes as the Pakistani army battles the Taliban. | The US has already pledged $110m and hopes to provide an extra $200m for people who fled their homes as the Pakistani army battles the Taliban. |
The army says several former militant strongholds are now under its control. | The army says several former militant strongholds are now under its control. |
A statement on Wednesday said Charbagh - about 20km (12 miles) north of Mingora, the main town in Swat valley - had been retaken. | A statement on Wednesday said Charbagh - about 20km (12 miles) north of Mingora, the main town in Swat valley - had been retaken. |
Troops had also "successfully secured Pir Baba and Bhai Kalay" in neighbouring Buner district, where heavy fighting has gone on for weeks. | Troops had also "successfully secured Pir Baba and Bhai Kalay" in neighbouring Buner district, where heavy fighting has gone on for weeks. |
'Overwhelming' | 'Overwhelming' |
More than two million people have been displaced by the fighting between government forces and Taliban militants around Swat in the past month. Another half a million or so fled had already fighting elsewhere in the north-west. | More than two million people have been displaced by the fighting between government forces and Taliban militants around Swat in the past month. Another half a million or so fled had already fighting elsewhere in the north-west. |
Mr Holbrooke says militants are to blame for the conflict | |
On Thursday Richard Holbrooke, the US special envoy to Afghanistan and Pakistan, met refugees at the Shah Mansoor Camp, on the outskirts of the town of Swabi. | On Thursday Richard Holbrooke, the US special envoy to Afghanistan and Pakistan, met refugees at the Shah Mansoor Camp, on the outskirts of the town of Swabi. |
Refugees told him about the sweltering heat and the need for adequate food. | Refugees told him about the sweltering heat and the need for adequate food. |
"The size of the problem is just overwhelming. And they do not have enough international assistance by a long shot," Mr Holbrooke said. | "The size of the problem is just overwhelming. And they do not have enough international assistance by a long shot," Mr Holbrooke said. |
"The reconstruction phase is going to cost as much as the humanitarian phase," he added, as he renewed his call for other countries to provide more assistance to the displaced. | "The reconstruction phase is going to cost as much as the humanitarian phase," he added, as he renewed his call for other countries to provide more assistance to the displaced. |
The United Nations has said that without the contribution of urgently-needed funds, it and its partners will only be able to feed the 2.6 million Pakistanis uprooted from Swat region for the next month or two. | The United Nations has said that without the contribution of urgently-needed funds, it and its partners will only be able to feed the 2.6 million Pakistanis uprooted from Swat region for the next month or two. |
Less than half of the $280m required to feed the displaced in Pakistan has come in, the UN Office for the Co-ordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) said. | Less than half of the $280m required to feed the displaced in Pakistan has come in, the UN Office for the Co-ordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) said. |
Mr Holbrooke also visited the Shaikh Shahzad camp in Mardan and repeated his earlier assertion that the Taliban and not the US were the fundamental cause of suffering in the area. | |
He said that criticism of the US in the Pakistani media was unfair. | |
"There is so much false information being put out by the Taliban and al-Qaeda, and because there are so many small illegal FM radio stations... a lot of misinformation is out there." | |
Humanitarian focus | Humanitarian focus |
Correspondents say Mr Holbrooke, who arrived in Islamabad on Wednesday, wants to focus in public on the issue of helping those displaced by the fighting. | Correspondents say Mr Holbrooke, who arrived in Islamabad on Wednesday, wants to focus in public on the issue of helping those displaced by the fighting. |
He pointed out on Wednesday that the US was providing the bulk of all the assistance to Pakistan's refugees. | He pointed out on Wednesday that the US was providing the bulk of all the assistance to Pakistan's refugees. |
The BBC's Chris Morris in Islamabad says concentrating on the humanitarian crisis is a deliberate strategy in a country where the United States is not popular. | The BBC's Chris Morris in Islamabad says concentrating on the humanitarian crisis is a deliberate strategy in a country where the United States is not popular. |
Mr Holbrooke is as ever treading a diplomatic tightrope - wanting to express support for military action by Pakistan, without giving the impression that it is being done at the behest of the US, our correspondent says. | Mr Holbrooke is as ever treading a diplomatic tightrope - wanting to express support for military action by Pakistan, without giving the impression that it is being done at the behest of the US, our correspondent says. |
A new report from the International Crisis Group has warned that unless relief, rehabilitation and reconstruction efforts are urgently improved, the army's offensive against the Taliban risks leaving extremists as the ultimate winners. | A new report from the International Crisis Group has warned that unless relief, rehabilitation and reconstruction efforts are urgently improved, the army's offensive against the Taliban risks leaving extremists as the ultimate winners. |