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World Bank raises Pakistan funding

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The World Bank has raised its funding for Pakistan's flood disaster recuperation to $1bn.

An additional $100 million has been pledged, the bank said on Wednesday, to help with the worst disaster in the country's history.

Robert Zoellick, the World Bank president, was quoted in the statement as having said to Hafeez Shaikh, Pakistani finance minister, in Washington DC: "The World Bank is committed to helping the people of Pakistan during this time of need and has made US$1 billion available to finance immediate recovery needs and longer-term reconstruction."

Zoellick also said that vital economic, governance and institutional overhaul in Pakistan needed to continue to maintain donor confidence and continue to provide aid to the eight million people dependent on it to survive.

"Renewed commitment to governance and fiscal reforms will be important to mobilise domestic revenues and ensure that funds reach the poor people it is intended for," Zoellick said.

"The response of donors to the floods will also depend on the government's ability to deliver in this area."

No interest obligations

The additional $100 million, which comes without interest obligations, was already promised to Pakistan but not for the relief of flooding or its effects.

Shaikh is in Washington DC to attend meetings with the Internaional Monetary Fund (IMF) over Pakistan's current $11bn loan programme from the fund.

Shaikh said that the country would not renege on repayment of the loan but that he wished to provide clarity on the current disaster to the IMF.

The World Food Programme on Wednesday warned that Pakistan faced a "triple threat".

"There is a triple threat unfolding as this crisis widens and deepens," Josette Sheeran, the World Food Programme chief, said at a conference with other UN officials in the Pakistani capital, Islamabad, after visiting flooded areas on Wednesday.
 
"People have lost seeds, crops and their incomes, leaving them vulnerable to hunger, homelessness and desperation - the situation is extremely critical."

Torrential rains triggered massive floods that have moved steadily from north to south over the past month, engulfing a fifth of the country and affecting 17 million of Pakistan's 167 million people.

The floods have washed away huge swathes of the rich farmland on which the country's struggling economy depends.

Children affected

Anthony Lake, the head of Unicef, the UN children's fund, said that the disaster had affected nearly 8.6 million children.
 
"In many ways, it is a children's emergency," he said.
 
"There is also a potential second wave of death from waterborne diseases.This is likely to get much worse if we can't reach people with clean water, adequate nutrition, sanitation and vaccination."

Floodwaters have continued to sweep towards two small southern towns as authorities managed finally to plug a breach in defences across the Indus river in nearby Thatta city.
 
Pakistani troops and city workers had been battling over the weekend to save Thatta, with most of the population of 300,000 fleeing the advancing waters.
 
"Thatta city has been declared safe after a breach in the river caused by floods at nearby Faqir Jo Goth village was fully plugged," Hadi Bakhsh Kalhoro, a senior city official, told the AFP news agency.
 
But he said the fast-moving waters that left the low-lying town of Sujawal submerged on Sunday were now threatening the towns of Jati and Choohar Jamali, where official warnings have been issued to  residents to evacuate.
 
"We are making efforts to save the two towns which have a combined population of more than 100,000," Kalhoro said.

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