Text Only
Search

 
UNICEF Appeals for Money to Immunize Children in Quake-hit Pakistan

03 November 2005

Queen Rania
Queen Rania
Jordan's Queen Rania has launched a television appeal for the child victims of last month's South Asia earthquake that killed more than 73,000 people and left three million homeless.

As an envoy for the United Nations Children's Fund, UNICEF, the queen says the outbreak of disease poses an immediate threat to some four million children. She says they need immunization, which costs $5 per child.

The appeal comes amid UNICEF plans to soon launch a measles vaccination drive to stop its spread in makeshift tent settlements.

Meanwhile, U.N. officials said Thursday that sickness is increasing among survivors. They said they have noticed a sharp increase in acute respiratory infection that can lead to pneumonia.

The officials said that so far there have been no deaths from exposure, but several deaths from diarrhea have been reported in a town in North West Frontier Province.

On Thursday, the commander of U.S.-led coalition forces in Afghanistan, Lt. Gen. Karl Eikenberry, made a visit to Muzaffarabad, the worst hit region in Pakistan. He said that the U.S. helicopters and troops diverted from Afghanistan to quake relief in Pakistan would keep up their work for months. His remarks follow warnings by the World Food Program that its deliveries may be scaled back within days unless more donations come through.

emailme.gif E-mail This Article
printerfriendly.gif Print Version

  Related Stories
UNICEF: 17,000 Schoolchildren Died in Pakistan Quake
UN Says Funding Shortfall Hampering Earthquake Relief
Earthquake Galvanizes Pakistani Islamists
Pakistan Raises Quake Death Toll to 73,276
 
  Top Story
Russian General: Withdrawal from Georgia to Take 10 Days  Audio Clip Available

  More Stories
Taliban Claims Responsibility for  Pakistan Bombings  Audio Clip Available
Russia Suspends Cooperation With NATO  Audio Clip Available
US, Iraq Close to Agreement on US Troop Withdrawal
Israel Warns Against US, International Pressure for Palestinian Agreement  Audio Clip Available
US Sees Prospect of Better Relations With Belarus
Zimbabwean Opposition Warns Convening Parliament Violates Power-Sharing Deal  Audio Clip Available
Somalia Peace Deal Jeopardized by Continuing Violence
Darfurian Refugees in CAR Receive Welcome in Village Not Camps  Audio Clip Available
Chinese Police Sentence 6 Foreigners to 10 Days Detention
Experts Debate Legacy of Beijing Olympics  Audio Clip Available