Tuesday, August 31, 2010

He Who Has Hope Has Everything

18,000,000 million people affected x $10/day = $180,000,000
$180,000,000/day x 30 days = $5,400,000,000

5 billion dollars to support 18 million people on $10 (about 850 rupees) a day for one month

Number of homes damaged:  1,237,493
If give each homeowner $5,000 to rebuild(about 425,000 pakistani rupees)
1,237,493 x $5,000 = $6,187,465,000
 
Amount of funds collected thus far:  $291,953,794
Amount required:  $459,724,847 

If my math is correct, do you think the above amount required is enough to help 18 million people?    If you ask me, I couldn't live in a tent for more than a day.  If I lost everything - my home, my family, all my belongings -- what would I need in order to survive? 

 We are all people.  Our needs are the same.  Some things you just can't put a dollar amount on.  Pakistan has lost much.  What the people are most at risk for, is losing "hope".  I am reminded of an Arabian proverb:  He who has hope has everything.  So, Pakistan may be worlds apart from where you and I are.  They may be completely opposite from you.  However, they too, are people -- who think and feel the same as you do.  So give someone something to hang on to!  Give someone a reason to live!  Send them a 'Life Box' Food Package.  

(Stay tuned for a detailed post on how to make and send a Life Box. Also, click on the 'Videos' tab to get instructions from Fakhr-E-Alam about the PIA Life Box.  Please feel free to leave your comments and/or questions below.)

Sunday, August 29, 2010

What Would You Save?

In the blink of an eye,
everything is gone.  
People left with what little they could..
  blankets...clothes...food...
One man tied a chicken around his neck when he had to swim to higher ground (Photo courtesy of BBC)
If it happened to you, what would you do? What would you try to save?  (Please leave your comments below)

A Pakistani boy swims as he tries to keep his food dry in a flooded area near Basira village in Punjab on Aug. 22.     (Photo courtesy of:  Pedro Ugarte / AFP - Getty Images)

Heartfelt Efforts of United Arab Emirates for Pakistan

The United Arab Emirates (UAE) held a telethon, called Awnkum, or "Your Help" to raise Dh100million (approximately $27.3 million) for Pakistan flood victims.  Organized by UAE's Red Crescent Authority (RCA), television presenters, actors and clerics from UAE hosted the three-day telethon that began on August 26, 2010.

At last count, Dh72million has been raised.  UAE will be extending the telecasting of the telethon in order to reach the goal of Dh100million.  Broadcast on 10 different channels, including Sama Dubai and Dunia al Fujairah, the campaign, called Awnkum, or “your help”, will feature a number of celebrities such as actors from Bab el Hara and Ma Asa’ab al Kalam shows as well as Muslim clerics and ambassadors.

If you live in the UAE, here's how to donate:   Telethon hotline is toll-free 800RED or 800733.
To read more, click here.  Also, visit www.thenational.ae to read more about the efforts by UAE.  

Sincere thanks to UAE for their efforts!  Together, we'll show Pakistan they are not alone!

Saturday, August 28, 2010

If I Had a Million Dollars..

In the last few weeks, several people have told me "If they only had a million dollars", they would keep a little for themselves and donate the rest.  What happens if we never earn a million dollars?  Do we sit and wait?  Do we become numb to our surround and carry on with life as if nothing happened?  Do we close our eyes?


During a speech entitled "Turning Good Intentions into Positive Actions" at the University of California Berkeley, Former President Clinton said the world is more unequal, more unstable and more unsustainable.  "We are interdependent on each other ---this is not a philosophy that is left-wing but more embracing ....Divorce is not an option (from the world that is)...What we do affects us and others around us...So do things that increase the positive and decrease the negative forces of interdependence..."(The video is a bit long but well worth it -- listen to it in bits and pieces.)

If we choose, we have the capacity and ability to do all the things, that we think only money can buy.  The question is not how much you give, it's that you gave!  Give with whatever you have.  During the fundraiser "Hope for Haiti", hosted by George Clooney and others, $66 million dollars was raised.  The majority of that money was from people texting "HAITI" giving $10 pledges or people going online and giving money.  That's the power of our interdependence --- the sum of the whole is more than the sum of one!

The world, including the US, is facing much economic strain -- now more than ever, we have learned how to stretch our pennies.  A little does go a long way.  So keep your eyes open, see the pain and suffering around you, and let your heart be pushed into actionStart saving those pennies.   

Friday, August 27, 2010

An Alarming New Development - Malaria

A new threat has emerged as the flood recedes.  Malaria is increasing every day as the water makes way for mud and mosquitoes.  World Health Organization (WHO) experts say malaria cases in three Pakistan provinces - Punjab, Balochistan and Sindh, are increasing at an alarming rate.  Half of the 60,000 cases reported on August 23 were detected in just six days.  Reports from the a district hospital in Muzaffargarh are that 30% of all new patients admitted are suffering from Malaria.

In response to increasing disease, 21 diarrhea disease centers operating, through funding from USAID/OFDA, in affected districts of KPK, Punjab and Sindh provinces.  On August 23, 2010, out of the 101,925 patients treated in the flood affected districts, 5% (n=4,966) of cases was related to malaria.  Also, the number of cases of suspected malaria is rising in Balochistan and Sindh provinces compared to KPK and Punjab.  During the last 24 hours, the number of cases reported from suspected malaria comprised 17% of patients' consultations in Balochistan and 11% in Sindh.  Sadly, this trend is likely to increase dramatically over the coming days.

Men load medicine from a WHO warehouse in Islamabad.  WHO has delivered medicine and supplied to treate about 2 million people.  But more is still needed.
What is Malaria?  
Etiology (cause):  A parasite that's transmitted by mosquito bites.
Symptoms:  moderate to severe shaking chills, high fever, profuse sweating, flu-like symptoms, and anemia
Diagnosis: malaria blood smear (look at it under the microscope!), enlarged liver or spleen (because that's where the parasite goes first before it enters the bloodstream and into red blood cells. 
Treatment:  Chloroquine, Quinine sulfate, Hydroxychloroquine, Mefloquine, combo of Atovaquone and Proguanil.  Resistance has lead to drugs being ineffective. 
- No vaccine yet - still under research

I know I'm going overboard with the medicine stuff.  The key is that malaria is a major disease hazard in warm climates.  The CDC estimates that 300-500 million cases of malaria each year, and more than 1 million people die.  According to the World Health Organization (WHO), Pakistan has been classified with a moderate malaria prevalence.  The disease causes at least 50,000 deaths out of an estimated 500,000 reported cases of malaria each year.  The flooding and unhygienic conditions has the potential to cause an epidemic. 

What you can do:  donate to the World Health Organization (www.who.org) so that more medications can be sent to Pakistan.  Also, donate to Doctors Without Borders (www.doctorswithoutborders.org). 

Stay tuned as I'll do a similar assessment of cholera --- an imminent threat.

Drops of Wisdom

Whatever you have in your mind:  Forget it!
Whatever you have in your hands:  Give it!
Whatever is to be your fate:  Face it!
- Abu Sa'id - 

Nasiba, 3-months-old, sleeps in a hammock while taking refuge from the flood with her family in a classroom in Sukkur, Pakistan, Aug. 25.  (Courtesy of Akhtar Soomro/Reuters)

Wednesday, August 25, 2010

Sami Yusuf: Hear Your Call

Sami Yusuf, a British composer, singer and musicians is a voice known throughout the world.  As a devout Muslim, Sami sees song as a means of promoting the message of love, mercy, peace and tolerance.  Here's a video dedicated to the Pakistani flood victims:


Please donate to the Pakistan flood relief effort by purchasing this single.  It's only $1.99!  Proceeds from Sami's single 'Hear Your Call' will help Save the Children's relief efforts in Pakistan.  Click here to visit Sami Yusuf's website or go to www.samiyusufofficial.com/pakistan/.

"Give me your hand my brother
I will not let you go
Please don't look back my sister
I swear I hear your call
Give me your hand my brother
I will not let you fall
Please don't look back my sister
Cause I swear I hear your call"

Monday, August 23, 2010

A Salute to the Men in Uniform

A unique partnership between the Pakistani Army and the U.S. military, is working around the clock in Pakistan.  The men in uniform have gone where no one else can. The U.S. department of state gave the following information today in a press release: 
"The U.S. also is providing millions of dollars of additional in-kind and technical assistance. We are expanding pre-existing programs in flood-affected areas, providing temporary bridges, and mobilizing significant U.S. military and civilian resources to rescue victims of the disaster and deliver needed supplies. U.S. military and civilian aircraft continue to support flood relief operations. Through August 22, these aircraft have evacuated 7,835 people and delivered more than 1,600,000 pounds of relief supplies."

"As Secretary Clinton announced August 18, the U.S. government, through the Department of State, has established the Pakistan Relief Fund for all to join in the tremendous relief, recovery and reconstruction effort. Individuals, corporations, and other organizations can send much needed help to the people of Pakistan by contributing to this fund at www.state.gov. In the U.S., individuals can send $10 through mobile phones by texting “FLOOD” to 27722."

While President Asif Zardari has been sleeping peacefully in his home, some 65,000 Pakistani Army troops have been working day and night in rescue and relief operations.  It's estimated that more than half a million people have been rescued thanks to the Pakistan Army.  With 55 helicopter from Pakistan, and 19 U.S. helicopters (as late as August 13, 2010), the rescue mission has reached many stranded Pakistanis.  Also, the number of boats used in the operation is estimated to be about 912.  The Pakistani Army has also dropped 4,500,000 kg of food and goods at various flooded areas. 

Thus far, a total of 440,928 halal meals have been delivered to civilian and military officials in Pakistan via the U.S. Air Force airlift.  The U.S. has also kindly delivered the following items to the National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA):  18 Zodiac rescue boats, 6 water filtration units, 10 water storage bladders, 30 concrete-cutting saws, 12 pre-fabricated steel bridges and a 25kw generator.

A sincere thanks to the men in uniform, to the U.S. military and the Pakistani Army.  May you be successful in serving the 20 million Pakistanis affected by the flood.

Saturday, August 21, 2010

Drops of Wisdom

Pakistani woman floating in water in a pan!!!
"The shortest distance 
between a problem and its solution is the distance between your knees and the floor.  The one who kneels to Allah can stand up to anything."

You are powerful beyond measure.
Rise up and lend a hand!

Friday, August 20, 2010

How to Make Food Packages


Thanks to Fakhar Alam, here's a video (in English and Urdu) with detailed information about making food packages to send on PIA FREE of cost:





What you have is more than you know.  
Give without thinking.  
Do what can, with what you have. 

Ways You Can Help

New Organizations have been added and information updated on Good Ways to Help Victims of Pakistan Floods. http://bit.ly/bn9ajq
45933_415241731145_60417336145_5274137_8104846_n.jpg

Thursday, August 19, 2010

Shattered Dreams

The American Academy of Pediatrics sent a press release today to thousands of Pediatricians in the U.S. about the lives of millions of children.

At the International Pediatric Association Congress of Pediatrics in South Africa this month, the Pakistan Pediatric Association (PPA) reached out to the Academy American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) for assistance. The AAP has been working for many years with its colleagues in Pakistan to help children and families in Pakistan.

Thanks to gifts made to the AAP Friends of Children Fund's disaster relief account, the AAP is able to pledge immediate aid to the PPA, to help children and families. The AAP Friends of Children Fund for disaster relief has already committed $10,000 for Pakistan.

Make your donations online at the Friends of Children Fund donation page. Or call 888-700-5378 and make your donation over the phone. Please direct your gift to "Friends of Children Fund -- Disaster Relief".

The AAP is racing against the clock to reach children and families in desperate need of help.


Homes swept away, 
No food,
No water,
Streams of tears,
Fear in their eyes,
Hopes and Dreams,
Shattered.

Fakhar Alam Appeals to the World

Wednesday, August 18, 2010

Are You Thirsty?

It's hot this summer.  We have to drink more to keep from getting dehydrated.  Imagine what would happen if every faucet you turned on was dry.  We so often overlook the small things in life.  Having water doesn't sound like a lot.  In reality, without water, we are doomed.

Millions in Pakistan are struggling to get exactly what we overlook in our lives ---- clean drinking water.  In a recent press release, UNICEF indicated it is struggling to maintain its water and sanitation operation.  UNICEF is providing clean water to 1.3 million people a day.  As we know, the flood has devastated more than 15 million people.

Here is what Martin Mogwanja, UNICEF representative in Pakistan had to say about the current situation:  "Providing clean water and adequate sanitation is key to the survival of millions of flood affected people in Pakistan. In terms of numbers of people needing life-saving assistance, this emergency is bigger than the Tsunami, Haiti, and the last Pakistan earthquake put together.”

Furthermore, Mogwanja said, "We urgently need to scale up the distribution of water. If we are not able to do so because of lack funding, water-borne diseases such as cholera, diarrhoea and dysentery will spread and begin killing affected populations, especially children, already weak and vulnerable to disease and malnutrition", added Mogwanja.

To donate to Pakistan relief efforts, visit: http://www.supportunicef.org/site/pp.asp?c=9fLEJSOALpE&b=6161181

For further information, please contact:Patrick McCormick, UNICEF Media, New York,
Tel + 1 212 326-7426,
pmccormick@unicef.org 

Marco Jimenez Rodriguez, UNICEF Media, Geneva,
Tel + 41 22 909 5716,
mjrodriguez@unicef.org

Text "SWAT" to 50555

 The U.S. Department of State has released the following information:

How You Can Help: Text "SWAT" to 50555; $10 goes to fund for flood victims




So, pick up the phone and dial now! 


Yahoo News: How to Help Pakistan

The yahoo news blog has posted an interesting article entitled:  "Pakistan Flood How to Help".  While the magnitude of this disaster has not been fully assessed, the number is greater than the 2005 South Asia tsunami (5 million), the 2005 South Asia earthquake (3 million), or the 2010 Haiti earthquake (3 million). 

Here is a list of organizations identified by yahoo news as working on relief and recovery in the region:

Church World Service
Distributing food packages and shelter material for families affected by the floods in Balochistan and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa provinces. Click here to donate.

International Rescue Committee
Bringing help to victims of the monsoon floods. Click here to donate.

Islamic Relief
Carrying out an emergency campaign to aid the victims of the floods. Click here to donate.

Oxfam

Conducting emergency aid effort for the victims of the flood. Click here to donate.

Save the Children
Providing humanitarian relief in the shape of emergency health care and provision of non-food items and shelter. Click here to donate.

UNICEF
Providing assistance in the areas of water and sanitation, health, and nutrition. Click here to donate.

World Food Programme
Mobilizing resources to make sure needs in Pakistan are met as quickly as is humanly possible. Click here to donate.
 
World Vision
Providing a rapid response in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (former North West Frontiere Province) and Punjab. Click here to donate.

 
To read the whole article, visit this link:  http://news.yahoo.com/s/ynews/ynews_wl3431.

Tuesday, August 17, 2010

What it Looks Like Right Now

On July 29th, 2010 a massive flood hit Pakistan.

PEOPLE AFFECTED:
According to the latest Government estimates, the number of people directly affected by the floods are 15.4 million, and the number continues to rise. This is more than the number of people affected by the 2005 South Asia tsunami, the 2005 South Asia earthquake and the 2010 Haiti earthquake combined. As you know, the Pakistani government does not have the capacity to cope with all these people.

DEATHS AND INJURED:
The official death toll has risen to 1,402, with 2,024 people reported as injured.

LIVE STOCK & POULTRY:
Over 200,000 livestock have been lost, in addition to up to 100% poultry losses in some districts.

DAMAGED HOUSES:
Over 893,662 houses are now reported to have been either damaged or destroyed.
This is twice the number of those destroyed in Haiti.

DAMAGED SCHOOLS:
5,457 schools have been damaged or destroyed across affected areas, of which 4,419 are in Punjab and Sindh. 4,911 schools have been converted into IDP shelters.

DAMAGED HOSPITALS:
Out of 1,167 health facilities, 189 health facilities have either been damaged or destroyed. There is an urgent need to restore health facilities damaged or destroyed by the floods.

Healthcare Needs in Flood affected areas:
- Skin diseases (113,045 cases recorded through medical consultations),
- Acute watery diarrhea (86,671 cases)
- Respiratory tract infection (83,050 cases)
Up to 3.5 million children are at risk from water-borne diseases

CURRENT MEDICAL RESPONSE:
Essential drugs and medicines have been distributed to Ministry of Health and cluster partners, covering the needs of 1.8 million people. This includes 179 emergency health kits, 152 cholera kits, 700 vials of anti-snake venom and 1.8 million water purification tablets.

SHORTAGE OF FOOD:
50% of households reported having no food for an entire day.

INTERNATIONAL RESPONSE:
International medical teams are now arriving in the country. Teams have arrived from:
      o Indonesia,
      o Sri Lanka
      o Jordan
      o Hungary
      o U.S.A.
      o Italy

PAKISTAN GOVERNMENT RESPONSE:
Over 60,000 troops are involved in flood relief operations trying to assist people. Six helicopters and 200 boats are supporting evacuations but that thousands are still trapped in flooded districts.

FINANCIAL NEEDS:
The United Nations has now estimated that Pakistan will need billions of dollars to recover from its worst floods in 80 years. The U.N. has just launched an appeal for $459 million in immediate aid. The World Bank said it had agreed to provide Pakistan with a loan of 900 million dollars. HOWEVER, the impact of the disaster on the economy is expected to be "huge" and billions will be needed to recover from this disaster.

As of 16 August, only 32% of funding requirements indicated in the Pakistan Initial Floods Emergency Response Plan (PIFERP) have been covered (US $148.1 million out of total requirements of US $459.7 million).

The United Nations has announced a further allocation of US $10million from the Central Emergency Response Fund (CERF), in addition to the US$16.3 million that the CERF has already contributed.

OUR IMMEDIATE FOCUSThis is where your help comes in!
Our focus will be on the immediate humanitarian relief needs to keep people alive an give them the basic minimum to survive.

IMMEDIATE RELIEF SUPPLIES NEEDED:
    1. TENTS*
    2. MEDICATIONS*: Antibiotics, pain killer, bandages, wheelchairs, antivenin
    3. CLOTHES: For any age. Make sure they are in usable condition.
    4. SHOES: Any size. Make sure they are in usable condition.
    5. BLANKETS: Make sure they are in usable condition.
    6. CANNED FOOD: Must be halal and have long shelf life.
 *These items are most important items.

Every little bit helps. Act now. Don't wait. Time is running out.

Monday, August 16, 2010

Map of Affected Area

What You Can Do

The United Nations has now estimated that Pakistan will need billions of dollars to recover from its worst floods in 80 years - further straining a country already dependent on foreign aid to prop up its economy. Over 60,000 troops are involved in flood relief operations trying to assist nearly 14 million people who are now affected by the flooding. The U.N. has just launched an appeal for $459 million in immediate aid.

The Organizing Committee of PAK DAY LA has planned to work together with the community to provide efforts in response to the catastrophe in Pakistan. The Floods have left many people homeless in this month of Ramadhan.  We need your support now more than ever to help provide clean water, food, medicine and tents to our affected brothers and sisters of Pakistan.

Please open your heart and donate generously to this cause and directly contact the members listed below for your generous support. Your support will go a long way.  Updated information and updated statues on the conditions will InshAllah be provided to each of member of this group.

Please donate generously and contact the following people with an open heart.
Ismail 310 621 2807            Sameer 714 932 5590
Zubair 310 213 9701            YKKB   310 770 1904
Majeed Shaikh 562 965 6770

Please visit this link to see the big picture and to see what our land has become.

http://www.boston.com/bigpicture/2010/08/continuing_pakistani_floods.html?camp

Pakistan Needs You

To all you Pakistanis all over the world, our country is unquestionably faced with the worst crisis of all time.  I cannot express the grief and the sorrow that I am witnessing.

I want you all to understand that this is worst then the 2005 earthquake.  Do not use the death toll to quantify the scale of the disaster. Believe me the misery and the pain is much much more. The aftermath of the floods will be far more devastating then the floods themselves. Today official figures claim 20 million displaced affected people, but this figure can take a severe climb. As I write this secondary flood warnings are flashing on all local news channels.

Tearful Stories of the Aftermath
I want you to know the story of Mehmood Dost Khan. A middle class businessman of Naushera, Mehmood took refuge on his double story house roof top. At night when the flood water exceeded his roof, in a blink of an eye his two year old son and 5 month old daughter along with his wife were swept away by the raging current into the darkness of the night. All night he screamed there names and cried. He has not seen them since. He remains in a state of denial. The bodies have not been found. Local army officers tell me the bodies could have traveled as far as 200 kilometers.

I want you to meet Tayyaba Bibi, who was found dangling by a tree. She is a 68 year old widow, who remembers that at sunset she climbed the roof of her house, with her son and pregnant daughter in law. Then in a flash they were dragged under water and she lost consciousness. She was rescued by the Pakistan Army, but to date there is no news of her family.

I want you to know 8 month old Ahmed, who died of hunger in his mother’s arms, waiting for rescue boats or helicopters that arrived at their location 6 days later. It was a group of 16 stranded on a small patch of
higher ground.

I want you to imagine the pain of those parents who are totally helpless sitting on road sides with their children. In their eyes there is pain, horror and most of all despair. They do not know where the next meal is going to come from, if at all. 

The Challenge We Face
Pakistan is faced by the most unbelievable task. These floods are a challenge to humanity.  I want you to understand that the real disaster starts now.

Visit any market in Pakistan and you will witness two things. The rise in prices of food items due to Ramadan, and a second escalation of food prices due to the floods. Yes there many who want to profit from this disaster.

Millions are displaced and awaiting food supplies while you read this email. They are desperate, vulnerable and hungry. They need food, they need shelter and they need medical attention.

Remember we all have to die and we are all answerable in the afterlife.  These men women and children are asking for help through their silent screams. You can choose to listen and do something about it, or delete this mail and forget about it.

Ask yourself one thing. Could this not happen to any of us?  Is Karachi, New York, London, Dubai protected from earthquakes, floods or other disasters? Truth is it can happen to anyone of us. It could have been you and me who could have lost a loved one in raging river waters. It could have been you or me standing in the middle of nowhere praying for a helicopter or boat to take us to safety. It could have been our child that died of hunger. Pause and think.

We have to rise again. All of us. The task this time is much bigger and deadlier than the 2005 earthquake.

We must build food cycles, so that a constant supply can be made to the hungry people. You, the overseas Pakistanis have to help us build food stocks so that there is no food shortage, and that the profiteers are not
allowed to escalate local food prices, which will burden the other 70 percent poor population of Pakistan.

Friends I am merely a human being like all of you. I am not perfect. I am not a very religious man. But I feel the pain and misery of others, and I am constantly haunted by the fear that this could have been us.

Plan of Action:
1. Build food cycles by sending food items to Pakistan.
2. Create shelter by sending all weather tents.
3. Set up medical patrol volunteer teams with plenty of medication. 

The rehabilitation, reconstruction is a far more daunting task, and it is best left to the government.

Step 1:
Get a carton box size 15 x 15 x 12. This size has been chosen because it gives us the optimum volume to weight ratio for our purpose.

Step 2:
Fill it with the following:

1. Two 1.5 liter bottles of water.
2. Two packs of sweet biscuits.
3. 12 packs of 200 ml to 250 ml juices.
4. 6 small packets of potato chips.
5. 2 bars of anti germ soap
6. 1 small bottle of insect repellant.
7. 1 box of dates.
8. 1 box of chocolates.
9. 1 sachet of glucose and vitamin energy mix ( ORS)
10. 1 liter carton of milk.

Step 3: 
Pack this with extreme love and care, and take this box to a PIA cargo office. All this cargo will be transported absolutely free of cost on priority by PIA. As soon as it arrives at an airport in Pakistan, it will
be cleared by customs as a priority and immediately handed over to the Pakistan Army and very relevant NGOS like the Red Cross and NCHD. Note the cargo, once on board a PIA flight will reach the affected recipient with 36 hours.

Remember the severity and the magnitude is so much that every box counts.  If we can build a cycle then nothing like it. But remember requirements will change in the next 30 to 40 days. However, the box size will remain the same.

Step 4:
Also please send as many all weather tents as you can.

Last Important Step: 
Finally please do not send used clothes. Do not send irrelevant donations.  Most of all NO MONEY. I have set up this system so that every little bit counts. Let’s make it happen. The logistics are there and you know what to do. You will see me on and off on various TV channels. I will update you all step by step. PIA is our back bone in this operation. If at any stage you have any complains with the PIA people please call or email the admins/officers or this site. All of your request will be forwarded hourly and daily basis.

Agey Barhein... Hum per Qarz hey Pakistan Ka...

Time to rise

Fakhr Alam & Team