1001Messages is a daily-updated, Science Website for everyone who loves Space, Art, Technology, Photography, Nature, Travel and more... We help you discover and share great Websites...and read remarkable articles...!!
We are Sure You Will Find Here Something to Excite Your Mind !!!.---- Welcome and Become a Friend of Us !!!

Sunday, February 26, 2012

Dozens of children die in Afghanistan cold


Afghan boy waits for food

The deaths in camps so close to the offices of international organisations have shocked many in Kabul. Photograph: Musadeq Sadeq/AP

Heaviest snowfall and coldest winter for 15 years claims the lives of more than 40 people, most of them children


More than 40 people, most of them children, have frozen to death in what has been Afghanistan's coldest winter in years.
The government has recorded 41 deaths from freezing in three provinces Kabul, Ghor and Badakhshan, said health ministry spokesman Ghulam Sakhi Kargar.
All but three or four of those deaths were children, he said. Twenty-four were in the capital, Kabul, mostly in camps for people who have fled fighting elsewhere in the country.
Kabul has been experiencing its worst cold snap and heaviest snowfall in 15 years, according to the national weather centre. It said the weather was expected to improve by the end of the week.
Heavy snowfall in Day Kundi province caused an avalanche late on Sunday in the Sang-i-Takht district that damaged dozens of homes and shops. The avalanche caused no injuries, said Nasrullah Sadiqizada, a member of parliament from the central province.
The hardest hit have been people living in tents in a number of camps around the capital. The deaths in these camps, so close to the offices of international organisations overseeing billions of dollars in aid to the country, have shocked many in Kabul.
The United Nations and the US aid agency have started distributing extra blankets, tarpaulins and fuel to people living in 40 camps throughout the city, the US embassy said in a statement last week. Most of those in the camps have fled from Helmand and Kunduz provinces, though some are Afghans who have returned from years living in Iran and Pakistan to find themselves homeless, the statement said.
Nato also delivered an estimated 1,000 blankets, coats, socks, mittens and hats to a refugee camp in Kabul. The coalition said it was planning additional delivers within the next week.
Kargar said the ministry was establishing mobile clinics to try to get help out to people suffering in the cold.
The cold spell has also caused a spike in the price of gas and wood, the main fuel used by the city's five million or so residents to heat their homes. Heavy snows also damaged high-tension wires coming into the capital, causing sporadic blackouts in large swaths of Kabul. About 75% of the city has electricity.
Kabul city hall said the capital's markets have supplies to last out the bad weather and there was no shortage of firewood or food. Kabul Kahid Mohammad, director of Kabul markets, said main highways leading into the city were clear.
Kabul airport was also operating, officials said, although there were delays at times due to poor visibility because of the snowfall.

Heaviest snowfall and coldest winter for 15 years claims the lives of more than 40 people, most of them children
Source : http://www.guardian.co.uk/

No comments:

Post a Comment

1001Messages - Our Last 25 Posts

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...