A Internacional

__ dementesim . . Do rio que tudo arrasta se diz que é violento Mas ninguém diz violentas as margens que o comprimem. . _____ . Quem luta pelo comunismo Deve saber lutar e não lutar, Dizer a verdade e não dizer a verdade, Prestar serviços e recusar serviços, Ter fé e não ter fé, Expor-se ao perigo e evitá-lo, Ser reconhecido e não ser reconhecido. Quem luta pelo comunismo . . Só tem uma verdade: A de lutar pelo comunismo. . . Bertold Brecht
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Mostrar mensagens com a etiqueta Paquistão. Mostrar todas as mensagens

terça-feira, agosto 31, 2010

Pakistan’s floods, partition and imperialist oppression

 
 
30 August 2010
Over the past month more than a fifth of Pakistan’s territory and close to a quarter of its cropland have been engulfed in floods, creating a humanitarian crisis which UN officials describe as the greatest in that organization’s 65-year history.
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Twenty million people are now said to have been affected, whether by the inundation of their homes and workplaces or the destruction of their crops and livestock. Eight million Pakistanis require emergency relief, including many of the more than one million people who have been displaced in southern Sind just in the past few days.
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The official death toll is currently above 1,600, but it is universally conceded that it will rise much higher once the flood waters recede and the full extent of the destruction is revealed.
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The UN and international aid agencies warn that literally millions are at risk of death from acute cholera, other water-borne diseases, and hunger, since the government-led relief effort has failed to provide clean water, food and shelter to more than a tiny fraction of those affected.
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This is a calamity of monumental dimensions. Yet for the rival national bourgeoisies of Pakistan and India, who have been locked in a reactionary military and geo-political rivalry since their states’ birth as a result of the 1947 Partition of the subcontinent, it has been business as usual.
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Only after the floods had been ravaging Pakistan for more than two weeks did India’s government offer Islamabad a paltry $5 million in aid as a “gesture of solidarity with the people of Pakistan.”
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Pakistan then took a week to weigh the offer, citing the “sensitivities involved.” It took a telephone call from the Indian prime minister to his Pakistani counterpart and public prodding from Washington to get Pakistan Foreign Minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi to announce that his government would accept New Delhi’s aid offer.
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The diplomatic to-do over providing a spoonful of aid to Pakistan’s flooded toilers elicited little comment from the press in either India or Pakistan. The countries’ respective media have a long history of echoing and amplifying the politicians’ nationalist and communally-charged claims, blaming all manner of social and political problems on the archrival’s “hidden hand.”
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The India-Pakistan rivalry and Partition are, however, very much at the root of the current tragedy.
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Defying socio-economic, historical, and cultural logic, the subcontinent was divided in 1947 by India’s departing British colonial overlords and the bourgeois politicians of the Indian National Congress and the Muslim League into a Muslim Pakistan and a predominantly Hindu India.
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The artificial borders imposed though Partition have made it impossible to rationally manage South Asia’s internal waterways so as to provide irrigation, electrification and flood-protection for all. Indeed, water is one of the principal issues in dispute between New Delhi and Islamabad, notwithstanding the World Bank-sponsored 1960 Indus Water Treaty.
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In India as in Pakistan, the ruling elite has failed to develop basic public infrastructure, preferring to squander vital resources on war and armaments, including nuclear weapons. India and Pakistan have fought three declared wars and less than a decade ago came to the brink of a fourth.
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Partition is treated by the ruling elites of India and Pakistan as a “birth-pang” in the emergence of “democratic India” and a “national homeland for South Asia’s Muslims.” This only underscores their callous indifference to the masses of South Asia, whatever their ethnicity, religion, or caste.
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The immediate outcome of Partition was massive communal bloodletting that resulted in the death of up to two million Hindus, Sikhs and Muslims and the forced relocation of 14 million people—the largest mass migration in human history.
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Partition defined and defines the “freedom” and “independence” incarnated in bourgeois India and Pakistan. Far from being an aberration, it was only the most bloody and immediately apparent consequence of the political suppression of the mass anti-imperialist movement that convulsed South Asia in the first half of the 20th century.
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The Indian National Congress led by Mahatma Gandhi and Jawaharlal Nehru presented themselves as the innocent victims of a Partition purportedly orchestrated by the British and the Muslim League. But if the bourgeois leaders of the Congress betrayed their own ideal of a democratic secular India uniting all the peoples of the subcontinent, it was because they were hostile to and organically incapable of mounting a struggle to unify South Asia from below through an appeal to the common class interests of the workers and peasants of the subcontinent.
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To the contrary, the growing wave of working class and peasant struggles in post-World War II India and the evident dissension within the ranks of the British Indian Army convinced the Congress leaders that they needed to get control of the colonial state forthwith to thwart social revolution.
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Post-independence, the rival regimes consolidated the rule of the bourgeoisie at the expense of the masses, preventing an agrarian revolution, protecting the wealth of the princes, and suppressing worker unrest.
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Six decades on, the rival bourgeoisies of India and Pakistan have proven their utter incapacity to resolve any of the burning democratic and social issues that confront the toilers of South Asia. Half of the world’s poor live in the subcontinent. In no region of the world is a greater proportion of the population malnourished. Neither the Indian or Pakistani state spends more than 5 percent of gross domestic product on education and health care.
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And in keeping with the reactionary logic of Partition and the Indo-Pakistani rivalry, no region of the world is less economically integrated.
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Unable to provide any progressive solution to the crisis of capitalist rule in South Asia, the Indian and Pakistani bourgeoisies have increasingly resorted to communalism, ethnic-nationalism, casteism, and religious fundamentalism to divide the masses.
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Partition was and remains a mechanism for imperialist domination of the region. The Pakistani bourgeoisie quickly accepted Washington’s offer to serve as a “frontline state” in the US’s cold war confrontation with the Soviet Union. Time and again, the US has propped up military dictatorships in Pakistan, most recently that of General Pervez Musharraf. With devastating consequences for the people of Afghanistan and Pakistan, the US partnered with Pakistani dictator General Zia-ul Haq in the 1980s to organize and arm the Islamic fundamentalist opposition to the pro-Soviet regime in Afghanistan.
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Today, in defiance of the sentiments of its own people, the Pakistani government is playing a pivotal role in supporting the US-NATO occupation of Afghanistan.
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The Indian bourgeoisie made a show of “independence” from Washington during much of the cold war. But this conflict was about nothing more than gaining greater maneuvering room and the terms of its subordinate relationship with world imperialism. Over the past decade, while the US has waged wars of aggression in Afghanistan and Iraq, the Indian bourgeoisie has forged a “global strategic” partnership with Washington.
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During the cold war, the US helped perpetuate and manipulate the Indo-Pakistani conflict in pursuit of its own predatory interests. Recently it has sought to lessen tensions between New Delhi and Islamabad. Hence its pressure on Islamabad to accept the pittance in flood relief money offered by New Delhi.
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But such actions are motivated solely by the US’s current strategic calculations. It needs Pakistan’s support in Afghanistan and wants Islamabad to use troops deployed on its eastern border with India to intensify the counter-insurgency war against anti-occupation forces inside Pakistan.
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Washington has spared no effort to scuttle the plans for a “peace pipeline” that would carry natural gas from Iran to Pakistan and then India, because it would undermine its campaign to economically isolate Iran. Similarly, the US ignored Pakistani warnings that the Indo-US civilian nuclear accord could trigger a nuclear arms race in South Asia, because Washington is eager to woo India as a strategic partner and counterweight to China.
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Six decades of independence have demonstrated the incapacity of the Indian and Pakistani bourgeoisie to achieve the fundamental tasks of the democratic revolution—the liquidation of landlordism, the abolition of caste oppression, the separation of church and state, national unification and independence. These burning tasks will be achieved only on the basis of the perspective of Permanent Revolution, i.e., as part of an anti-capitalist struggle led by the working class and embracing all the toilers and oppressed.
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In South Asia a key element in the perspective of Permanent Revolution is the fight to liquidate the 1947 Partition from below, through the establishment of the Socialist United States of South Asia.
Keith Jones
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segunda-feira, agosto 30, 2010

World Notes: UN, Pakistan, Iran, Honduras, South Africa, Cuba

assets/Uploads/_resampled/CroppedImage6060-TomWhitneyCROP.jpg

ForRealJobs
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United Nations: Labor group reports bad news on young workers
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The International Labor Organization issued a report August 12 indicating that at the end of 2009 81 million people between 15 and 24 years of age were unemployed, up from 11.9 percent in 2007 to 13 percent last year. The report highlights the social risk of unemployed youth, a "lost generation" who, discouraged during a time of economic crisis, have abandoned the labor market. In these circumstances, young people in underdeveloped countries are seen as particularly vulnerable to underemployment and poverty. In 2008, young workers constituted 24 percent of the world's working poor and 18.1 percent of the world total of unemployed people. The report, accessible at www.ilo.org, shows young females experiencing more difficulties in finding work than young men.  
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Pakistan: U.S. base is protected at people's expense
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The Asian Human Rights Commission issued a statement August 20 condemning U.S. and Pakistani officials deemed as responsible for destroying a water bypass seven days earlier in Sindh Province. Pakistan's Army put Sports Minister Ejaz Jakhrani, elected from the area, in charge of the operation aimed at protecting the US - operated Shahbaz airbase from flooding. Water thus diverted inundated Jacobabad district, destroying hundreds of homes, drowning the town of Dera Allahyar, and forcing the dislocation of 800,000 people. It is alleged also that the base has been closed to relief agencies. With other airfields beneath water, that prohibition has hindered medical rescue missions and food supply flights from reaching areas of need. The statement is accessible at: www.ahrchk.net/
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Iran: Nuclear power plant is fueled
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On August 21, after decades of delay, the Russian - built Bushehr nuclear power plant began taking on fuel. International Atomic Energy Agency inspectors were on hand, although observers agreed the $1 billion plant poses no proliferation risk, especially as return of spent plutonium-containing fuel to Russia was written into the agreement. In June, Russia backed UN sanctions against uranium enrichment by Iran. Yet Iranian spokespersons claim enrichment would be aimed at producing fuel for electricity generation thereby removing dependency on Russian fuel. The Moscow Times reported the CEO of the Rosatom Corporation, builder of the power plant, as stressing international participation in the project. Supplies were "made from more than 10 countries," said Sergei Kirivenko.
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Honduras: Land dispute pits rich versus poor
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In July, soldiers harassed residents of Zacata Grande Island on behalf of Miguel Facusse. Thugs returned to the island in mid August, reinforcing demands that inhabitants leave. According to Rebelion.org, the real estate magnate, agribusiness mogul, and food manufacturer was targeting the ADEPZA cooperative, champion of land rights for families arriving on the sparsely populated island decades ago. Promising to build a school and deliver land to poor people, Facusse, whose ownership claims may be tenuous, promotes the island's exclusive Coyolito Club. Protests erupted in April following the killing in Colon of a peasant protesting Facusse's alleged illegal ownership of an African palm farm. Earlier he had suggested that confrontations reflect badly on "the image that Honduras projects to the world of the investors."
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South Africa: Massive strike portends future divisions 
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According to www.iol.co.za, it was "South Africa's worst industrial action." One million public sector unions affiliated with the COSATU labor federation launched an indefinite strike on August 19 when governmental offers of a seven percent wage increase and a $90 monthly housing allowance were rejected. Unions are demanding an 8.6 percent wage hike and a $130 housing allowance. Violence spread, security forces were mobilized, hospitals were barricaded, and criminal courts moved into high gear. Labor support for the Jacob Zuma presidency has plummeted. Strikers condemn government spending on World Cup facilities and on infrastructure projects, reports Al Jazeera. With government debt rising, inflation is at 4.2 percent and one million jobs have been lost since 2008, when joblessness was already 25 percent. A labor court on August 21 banned essential services workers from striking.
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Cuba: American Ballet Theater will visit 
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"We believe in the power of the arts to connect people and transform lives," said American Ballet Theater executive director Rachel Moore. She recently announced plans for the company to perform at Havana's International Ballet Festival in early November at the Karl Marx Theater. Later principal dancers will be offering additional performances. This, the U.S. troupe's first visit to the island in fifty years, comes two months after Alicia Alonso, Cuba's famous ballerina and director of its national ballet company, was honored in New York. AFP news speculates that the U.S. government will soon expand other educational and cultural contacts between the two nations subjected to a prolonged U.S. economic blockade.  
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Photo: Youth Fight For Jobs demonstration in the United Kingdom. (CC)
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sábado, agosto 14, 2010

Grupos extremistas tiram vantagem ideológica de enchentes no Paquistão

Mundo | 11.08.2010 DW World

 

Talibã e outros preenchem lacunas humanitárias deixadas por Islamabad e comunidade internacional. Em meio a milhares de mortos, subnutridos e desabrigados, paquistaneses são presa fácil para ideologia radical islâmica.

 

Após as devastadoras enchentes no Paquistão, o grupo fundamentalista islâmico Talibã procura se beneficiar da situação catastrófica. Apresentando-se entre os primeiros grupos de ajuda nos locais do sinistro, os radicais procuram melhorar a própria reputação e ampliar sua influência no país.
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Assim, eles exigiram do governo paquistanês que renuncie aos 55 milhões de dólares de apoio financeiro dos Estados Unidos, oferecendo, em contrapartida, verbas totalizando 20 milhões de dólares. Como a impressão que reina entre a população é de que o governo em Islamabad nada faz pelos flagelados, trata-se de uma ótima oportunidade para os talibãs de dizer "mas nós, sim".
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Vulnerabilidade emocional
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A funcionária de uma organização humanitária, que preferiu permanecer anônima, confirmou à Deutsche Welle que diferentes grupos ou partidos religiosos estão sempre na linha de frente, quando se trata de medidas de auxílio, embora ela não tenha certeza de que se trate de talibãs.
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Dentre os diferentes grupos terroristas que mantêm organizações beneficentes, encontra-se o famigerado Lashkar-e-Taiba (Exército dos Bons). Responsável pela série de atentados de 2008, em Mumbai, ele procura se aproveitar da atual lacuna de abastecimento. Segundo o jornal New York Times, os bens de ajuda são acompanhados da mensagem: "não confiem no governo e nos seus aliados ocidentais".
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A funcionária humanitária analisa: "As pessoas pranteiam os entes queridos, estão subnutridas, perderam suas casas: tudo isso cria uma situação emotiva bem fácil de se explorar. Muitas vezes é difícil distinguir se os grupos estão se aproveitando delas para seus fins políticos, se é ajuda real, ou uma mistura de ambos."
Guerrilheiros talibãs no Paquistão 
Bildunterschrift: Guerrilheiros talibãs no Paquistão
Ajuda e ideologia

E não precisa ser sempre o Talibã. Ela recorda que após o arrasador terremoto de 2005 no Paquistão, grupos religiosos extremistas também foram rápidos em prover auxílio humanitário e mensagens políticas, num mesmo pacote. "Eles foram muito ativos. Dá para dizer que tudo o que aconteceu nas primeiras 24, 48 horas, foi assumido por grupos locais, o governo precisou de muito tempo para chegar. Isso lhes deu um espaço grande."
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Nada positivo para o governo paquistanês é o fato de – justamente agora, durante as inundações – o presidente do Paquistão, Asif Ali Zardari, ter feito longa visita à França e à Inglaterra. Pois também agora os radicais procuram mais uma vez ganhar os corações e mentes dos cidadãos que o Estado parece ter perdido.
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O enviado especial da Organização das Nações Unidas para o Paquistão, Jean-Maurice Ripert, acentua o quanto o país já sofre normalmente pelas atividades dos militantes. "É um fato que eles se aproveitam de cada oportunidade para proclamar suas metas. Isso nada tem a ver com os esforços da comunidade internacional. Precisamos trabalhar, precisamos ajudar a população, para demonstrar: nós nos preocupamos com a gente do Paquistão."
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Contra o tempo e contra os terroristas
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De fato, a corrida das forças humanitárias contra a devastação parece, pelo menos em parte, ser também uma corrida contra os extremistas. Até o momento, as nações ocidentais haviam oferecido 150 milhões de dólares para as vítimas da inundação. Porém nesta quarta-feira (11/08), a ONU lançou um apelo à comunidade internacional para que sejam angariados 459 milhões de dólares em ajuda imediata.
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O governo alemão já anunciou que elevará sua contribuição para cerca de 13 milhões de dólares (10 milhões de euros). A maior ação humanitária da história das Nações Unidas visa atender às vítimas paquistanesas durante os próximos três meses.
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"Temos muito a fazer", afirmou em Nova York o subsecretário-geral da ONU para Assuntos Humanitários e Ajuda de Emergência, John Holmes. Segundo ele, nas regiões atingidas, 14 milhões de pessoas precisam de cuidados médicos, 6 milhões necessitam de água e alimentos, e há o perigo de que epidemias se alastrem.
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Holmes calcula que, até o momento, mais de 1.600 pessoas tenham perdido a vida. Entretanto o representante permanente do Paquistão na ONU, Abdullah Hussain Haroon, observou não ser possível estimar o número real de mortos, já que quase 5 mil aldeias foram totalmente aniquiladas pelas águas. O alcance da catástrofe ultrapassa qualquer poder de imaginação, afirmou Haroon.
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Autor: Kai Küstner / Augusto Valente
Revisão: Carlos Albuquerque
 

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quinta-feira, agosto 12, 2010

FAO alerta para o risco de fome de milhões de paquistaneses

 

Mundo

Vermelho - 12 de Agosto de 2010 - 19h03

As colheitas estão perdidas em várias zonas alagadas pelas monções e mais de 13 milhões de pessoas correm risco de fome se não houver uma resposta imediata da ajuda internacional ao Paquistão.

A Organização das Nações Unidas para Agricultura e Alimentação, FAO, lançou um alerta ao mundo sobre o risco de fome que correm milhões de pessoas vítimas das cheias que resultam das monções no Paquistão.

Segundo a FAO, 13,8 milhões de pessoas terão ficado directamente afectadas por esta catástrofe e a contagem ainda não acabou.

Culturas em risco

A devastação provocada pelas cheias no norte e centro do país poderá ter consequências maiores à medida que as enchentes atingirem o sul do país.

Em consequência, estão perdidas todas as culturas em várias regiões afectadas e milhares de animais morreram.

Cerca de 700 mil hectares de terrenos cultivados estão agora submersos ou destruídos. Os animais que sobreviveram não têm o que comer.

Está em risco a próxima colheita de trigo, prevista para o Outono, naquela que é considerada a mais produtiva região do país.

Prioridade ao gado

O responsável pelos programas da FAO no Paquistão, David Doolan, declarou que "as primeiras estimativas apontam para a perda das colheitas e do gado. As consequências para a segurança alimentar das populações locais serão muito graves, uma vez que os preços dos alimentos começaram imediatamente a subir".

Doolan acrescentou que "mais de 75% da população afectada depende da agricultura. A prioridade da FAO é assegurar a manutenção do gado que sobreviveu".

A FAO pediu aos doadores internacionais US$ 5,7 milhões para medidas imediatas que assegurem a sobrevivência dos animais uma vez que o gado tem uma enorme importância na economia local, não só pelo seu papel como alimento como também porque muitas vezes representam as economias de famílias inteiras.

Até ao momento, a FAO reuniu US$ 1,6 milhão para as necessidades imediatas e em antecipação à próxima campanha, de forma a beneficiar 25 mil agricultores com sementes, ferramentas e fertilizantes.

Fonte: Rádio das Nações Unidas
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Águas começam a baixar depois das cheias no Paquistão

13h26m - 2010 - 08 - 12

As águas das inundações começaram hoje, quinta-feira, a recuar no Paquistão, depois de terem obrigado milhões de pessoas a deixarem as suas aldeias devastadas. A ONU lançou ontem, quarta-feira, um apelo de fundos no valor de 460 milhões de dólares para ajuda ao país.
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Embora os alertas de cheias continuem em vigor até amanhã, sexta-feira, em algumas regiões do Sind (sul) e do Pendjab (centro), os meteorologistas prevêem a partir de agora chuvas mais dispersas.
"O nível das águas está a baixar nos rios de Sind e de Swat (noroeste)", sublinhou o chefe dos serviços meteorológicos paquistaneses, Arif Mehmood.
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"O nível da água também está a baixar no rio de Chenab, no Pendjab. Mas deve aumentar na zona de Taunsa, embora sem atingir um nível perigoso", adiantou.
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Segundo o governo, cerca de 14 milhões de pessoas foram afectadas pelas piores inundações nos últimos 80 anos.
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"Calculamos que pelo menos dois milhões precisam de abrigo, o que já foi dado a um quarto dessas pessoas", declarou Maurizio Giuliano, porta-voz do gabinete de coordenação da ONU para os assuntos humanitários (OCHA). "A distribuição de tendas já começou no Penjab e está a ser preparada no Sind", disse ainda.
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A ONU calcula o número de mortos em 1600 e o governo paquistanês já confirmou 1243 mortes.
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Inundações deixam quase 14 milhões desabrigados no Paquistão - 09/08/2010 21h40 UOL
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Mundo

ONU prepara plano de ajuda ao Paquistão

As Nações Unidas vão reunir-se de emergência para lançar um plano de ajuda internacional ao Paquistão. O Governo paquistanês admite que não tem recursos nem capacidade para ajudar três milhões de pessoas desalojadas pelas inundações e alcançar os locais isolados há mais de uma semana.

RTP - 2010-08-03 20:33:42
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