Subject: [refugee-rights] Pakistan: Urgent need to set up more camps for
displaced

 20 May 2009 – With thousands of people uprooted by violence in north-west
Pakistan continuing to make their way to safety, the United Nations refugee
agency said today it is crucial to set up more camps and ensure speedy
access to assistance.

Almost 1.5 million people have escaped fighting between Government troops
and militants in the Pakistan’s North West Frontier Province (NWFP) in
recent weeks, according to the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR).

“Thousands of displaced people continue to arrive in camps and to approach
registration centres,” UNHCR spokesperson Ron Redmond told reporters in
Geneva today.

He said that on average, some 100,000 people have been registered daily in
the 89 registration points established in Mardan, Swabi, Nowshera, Peshawar,
Kohat and Charsaddda districts of NWFP.

With reports of thousands of new arrivals in Abottabad, Manshera and Haripur
districts, the agency is planning to help set up more registration centres
to ensure the internally displaced persons (IDPs) can get the help they need
as quickly as possible, he added.

Of the nearly 1.5 million people that have fled so far, some 131,000 people
are staying in camps, with more than 1.3 million staying in private
accommodation, with host families or friends, and some in schools.

The new influx is in addition to the over half a million people registered
in NWFP who had fled other parts of the north-west, including the tribal
areas, over several months since August 2008.

“Most of the 15 new camps established this month in response to the new
influx are already full,” noted Mr. Redmond. “There is an urgent need to
identify new sites and establish new camps.”

UNHCR is also helping the NWFP Ministry of Social Welfare to carry out a
‘fast track’ registration process to ensure people can get assistance. It is
discussing with authorities a process to cross-check and verify data in a
way that will identify duplicate registrations, inconsistencies and remove
people from the earlier influx who may have returned home.

High Commissioner for Refugees António Guterres, who wrapped up a three-day
visit to the area last weekend, has called on the international community
for a massive influx of support to assist the surging numbers of uprooted
people in the South Asian nation.

UN News Centre
-- 
W A Laskar
Freelance Reporter and Human Rights Activist
with Barak Human Rights Protection Committee,
http://bhrpc.net.googlepages.com
15, Panjabari Road, Darandha, Six Mile, Guwahati-781037, Assam, India
Cell: +919401134314

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