How to help the survivors of the Floods in Pakistan

How to help the survivors of the Floods in Pakistan

Pakistan has been hit by massive floods that have been ongoing since the beginning of August.

Current estimates are that over 15 million people have been directly affected.

One -fifth of the country is underwater and the threat of further flooding continues.

Humanitarian organizations are providing basics including clean water, medicine and shelter to those that can be reached.

If you wish to donate, please scroll down to see a list of organizations responding to this crisis.

212-967-7800

Action Against Hunger

247 W 37th Street 10th Floor

New York, NY, 10018

United States

Action Against Hunger | ACF International’s first priority is to contain the spread of water-borne illnesses. It will provide access to clean water through water trucking, repair water points, disinfect contaminated sources, and distribute purification tablets. The response will also include constructing emergency latrines and public sanitation facilities, distributing thousands of hygiene kits, organizing hygiene promotion campaigns, and helping communities clear the streets of rubble and debris. ACF is also planning “cash-for-work” programs to help families regain their livelihoods and will distribute household items. ACF will also provide vouchers to purchase basic necessities and micro-grants for restarting small businesses.
1-800-957-1768

ActionAid USA

1420 K Street NW Suite 900

Washington, DC, 20005

United States

ActionAid Pakistan works in many of the flood-affected areas. We will provide immediate support in terms of food, non-food items, water, sanitation, hygiene and construction of shelters in Upper Swat (union councils Matta, Kalam, Madian and Bahran). Our emergency response will also be targeted at flood affected communities of the Khyber Pakhtoonkhwa (KPK) province who have suffered damage to life, property and livelihood due to the heavy flash floods. We will attempt to support as many families as possible with special emphasis on women, children, people with disabilities and elderly people. Special attention will also be given to people living with HIV and AIDS and religious minorities in the area.
18004242372

ADRA International

12501 Old Columbia Pike

Silver Spring, MD, 20904

United States

ADRA is assessing the situation and the needs of those affected by the recent flooding in Pakistan. As part of the response, ADRA expects to distribute aid such as shelters, blankets, hygiene kits, food, and water. ADRA is accepting donations online at www.adra.org or by phone at 1-800-424-2372 (ADRA).
800-423-7972

Focus Humanitarian Assistance

1700 First Colony Blvd Suite 300

Sugar Land, TX, 77479

United States

The agencies of the Aga Khan Development Network, led by member organization Focus Humanitarian Assistance, are responding to the flooding by providing food, temporary shelter, education materials for children, medicines and clean water to affected people. In addition, mobile medical teams have are providing emergency health care. Focus’s efforts are targeted to reach 130,500 people in Gilgit-Baltistan, Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa, Punjab and Sindh provinces.
2126876200

American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee

711 Third Avenue, 10th Floor

New York, NY, 10017

United States
http://jdc.org

JDC, the world’s leading Jewish humanitarian assistance organization, has opened an emergency relief fund and is collecting donations to directly assist the floods victims on a non-sectarian basis. Damage and immediate needs are currently being assessed by JDC’s network of partners on the ground. JDC has previously provided relief to the Pakistani people in the wake of the disastrous 2005 and 2008 earthquakes.
212-792-2900

American Jewish World Service

45 West 36th Street, 11th Fl

New York, NY, 10018

United States

AJWS has been working in Pakistan since the 2005 earthquake. With five trusted grantee partners on the ground we are well-positioned to respond to this latest crisis. AJWS grantee partners in Pakistan are saving lives by mobilizing emergency support for victims of the flooding and helping to prevent the spread of disease. They are erecting temporary shelters for those whose homes have been destroyed, facilitating access to clean drinking water in government relief camps and working with local and national government authorities to expedite the relief process. As a result of the 2005 earthquake, these organizations already have extensive experience in responding to disasters.
1-800-HELP-NOW

Disaster Fund

2025 E Street NW

Washington, DC, 20006

United States

The American Red Cross is helping people affected by flooding in Pakistan through a $1,000,000 commitment to the response that provides financial support and relief supplies for the coordinated Red Cross and Red Crescent response. To meet the immediate humanitarian needs from the flooding, the global Red Cross and Red Crescent network, including the Pakistan Red Crescent Society, is providing food, relief items, shelter, water and sanitation services and emergency healthcare. As needs are identified, the American Red Cross is prepared to mobilize additional support, including additional supplies and financial assistance.
612-607-6480

430 Oak Grove Street Suite 204

Minneapolis, MN, 55403

United States

The American Refugee Committee’s Pakistan office responded to the crisis in a matter of hours. In coordination with line ministries and local authorities, ARC has deployed mobile health teams to Baluchistan in Sibi district to provide health assistance. In Swat, mobile health teams have been deployed by boat to reach areas made inaccessible by washed out roads and collapsed bridges. ARC Pakistan’s maternal child health center in Swat remains operational and ARC’s team is distributing non-food items to patients and offering health and hygiene sessions, emphasizing education around contaminated water. The team is also distributing essential medicines.
800-486-4357

AmeriCares

88 Hamilton Avenue

Stamford, CT, 06902

United States

AmeriCares is mounting disaster relief efforts in response to the flooding in Pakistan. We are delivering and distributing lifesaving medical assistance and emergency aid to flood-impacted communities. AmeriCares has been providing critical medicines, medical supplies, nutritional support and humanitarian aid to Pakistan since 1982. In 2009, we delivered urgent medical aid to the Swat Valley to help populations displaced by intense fighting and in 2005; we built and equipped a transitional field hospital with medicines, medical equipment and supplies in the aftermath of the deadly earthquake in northern Pakistan. For more information, visit www.AmeriCares.org.
703-790-8980

Baptist World Alliance

405 N. Washington Street

Falls Church, VA, 22046

United States

Baptist World Aid, the relief and development arm of the Baptist World Alliance, is sending funds for medical, food and shelter needs following the devastating floods being experienced in Pakistan. The assistance given will be given to all, irrespective of color, creed, race or religion.
212 808 5615

11 East 44th Street, Suite 1600

New York, NY, 10017

United States

BRAC has temporarily halted its normal operations in Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa to provide relief work. Due to the acute food shortage, BRAC Pakisan has begun to deliver food packets containing such items at rice, lentils, flour and water purification tables. In the immediate future, the team will also be distributing Oral Rehydration Salts (ORS) and sending out a medical team to begin assessing health needs. BRAC seeks to bring the people of Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa their years of experience in flood relief work in Bangladesh, a flood-prone country.
412-321-3160

1200 Galveston Avenue

Pittsburgh, PA, 15233

United States

BBF working with Life for Relief and Development plans to send requested donated pharmaceuticals and medical supplies.
1-800-422-7385

CARE

151 Ellis Street

Atlanta, GA, 30303

United States

CARE is supporting health teams, mobile clinics and the distribution of emergency supplies in the wake of flooding that has taken hundreds of lives in Pakistan and devastated wide swaths of the country. A convoy of eleven trucks has brought tents, shawls and other emergency supplies, providing shelter initially for around 1,800 people. Supplies also include mosquito nets, plastic floor mats, water purification tabs, hygiene kits and kitchen sets. As efforts continue, and based on initial assessment of the flood affected areas, CARE will provide nearly 100,000 individuals with relief efforts that will provide shelter and essential items, and assist with rebuilding.
1-800-736-3467

Catholic Relief Services

P.O. Box 17090

Baltimore, MD, 21203-7090

United States
http://crs.org

CRS is organizing shipments of humanitarian aid to KPK (Swat, Shangla and Kohistan), Balochistan and Sindh. The aid packages include water purification tablets, soap, cookware, jerry cans, mosquito nets and more. CRS has existing programming in Swat, Shangla and Kohistan with fully staffed offices since the 2005 earthquake, which enabled us to immediately deploy teams to the most affected areas to distribute shelter and hygiene kits to over 2,500 households and to initiate work on repairing water systems and other community infrastructure projects using cash-for-work. In Sindh and Balochistan Provinces in the South, CRS has experienced partners with whom we are distributing aid.
1-800-55-CRWRC

CRWRC

2850 Kalamazoo Avenue SE

Grand Rapids, MI, 49560-0600

United States

CRWRC is responding to extensive rain and flooding in Northwest Pakistan with immediate intervention that includes tents, mosquito nets, hygiene kits, and trauma counseling. CRWRC will also provide emergency food assistance to 64,000 individuals displaced by the disaster in hard-hit Nowshera and Charsadda Districts of Khyber Paktunkhwa Province. CRWRC will work with Pakistani partner Interfaith League Against Poverty (I-Lap) to provide 8,000 families with a one-month food supply including flour, salt, sugar, oil, beans, and spices. CRWRC has significant experience in the Northwest Provinces of Pakistan and is seeking donations to fund its response.
1-800-297-1516

Church World Service

P.O.Box 968

Elkhart, IN, 46515

United States

CWS in Pakistan is working in Swat, Kohistan, D.I. Khan, Shangla and Mansehra districts of Khyber Pakhtoonkwa Province; Sibbi district of Balochistan Province; and Khairpur district of Sindh Province. Assistance includes food and non-food relief items, emergency shelter and basic health services. The core of the response: providing direct assistance to nearly 100,000 people in the following allotments: Food and non-food items to 55,500 people; shelter kits to 17,500 people; health care to 26,500 people. In addition to the distributions of food and kits, CWS is providing emergency health assistance through its mobile health units.
212 557 8000

104 East 40th Street, Room 903

New York, NY, 10016

United States

With a 50-plus staff on the ground in Pakistan, where it has been active since 2001, Concern has begun rapid assessments and has launched an emergency response in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KPK) Province, including the Swat, Noswhera and Charsadda districts. Concern is prioritizing the distribution of: clean water, food, shelter, emergency medical assistance, mosquito nets, and basic hygiene and kitchen items. Concern is assessing the impact of the crisis in Punjab and Sindh Provinces, where we also have staff and local partners. Concern is currently reaching 63,000 people, but aims to scale up in the coming weeks.
1-800-248-6437

Food for the Hungry

1224 E Washington St

Phoenix, AZ, 85034

United States

FH is working through a local partner, Interfaith League Against Poverty (I-LAP), who is responding in Nowshara and Charsaada Districts in KPK through the distribution of food, NFIs, tents and hygiene kits for 8,000 families. Additionally as the flooding moves south FH is assessing and proposing to respond to the critical immediate needs of 5,000 families living in Rahim Yar Khan (RYK) and Sadiqabad Tehsils, RYK District, by addressing needs in water and sanitation and through the distribution of non-food items, including tents to serve as temporary shelters, hygiene kits, mosquito nets, jerry cans, kitchen sets and cooking stoves.
1 202 341 6365

Friends of ACTED

1400 16th Street, NW Suite 210

Washington, DC, 20036

United States

Following the July 2010 disastrous floods in Pakistan, ACTED has been preparing a large scale emergency response in the districts of Swat, Lower Dir and Upper Dir, for 10,000 crisis affected families. The organization is planning to respond to the most pressing needs in terms of essential non-food items, water & sanitation, cash for work, emergency shelter and rehabilitation of basic infrastructure, in coordination with the UN, governmental authorities and NGOs. ACTED has more than 200 staff in Swat and Dir areas since 2009 following the last IDP crisis. More information and mapping of the current emergency assessment of the situation is available on: www.acted.org/en/floods-north-west-pakistan-over-2-million-affected-people.
714-523-4454

Giving Children Hope

8332 Commonwealth Ave.

Buena Park, CA, 90621

United States

Giving Children Hope is responding to the flooding in Pakistan. Along with relief supplies such as tents, food and blankets, Giving Children Hope will be sending medical supplies to help those displaced by the flood. Monetary donations are currently being accepted at www.gchope.org to ship disaster relief items. All monetary and disaster relief donations can be sent to 8332 Commonwealth Ave. Buena Park, CA 90621.
202-331-9003

1101 14th Street, NW Suite 420

Washington, DC, 20005

United States

The Global Fund for Children is providing emergency support to our grassroots grantee partners in regions affected by the floods in Pakistan to help meet their communities’ immediate needs. We also provide long-term support to our grantees to help them rebuild their communities and continue their work to improve the lives of vulnerable children around the world as Pakistan emerges from this disaster.
202-714-1119

HelpAge USA

4750 41st Street, NW Suite 410

Washington, DC, 20016

United States

HelpAge USA is rapidly responding to the needs of older people affected by the floods in Pakistan. HelpAge has partnered with medical aid agency, Merlin International, to provide targeted emergency care to the most vulnerable older people and their families in the Nowshera district in Northwest Pakistan. Preliminary efforts include distributing mobility and hearing aids, emergency health assessment kits, as well as household items such as food, flashlights, bedding, and water containers. HelpAge and Merlin’s collaborative efforts have successfully established 17 health centers in conflict zones in Pakistan and have provided 24-hour medical care services to over 200,000 people, with a special emphasis on the unique needs of older people.
+1 202 541 3389

ICMC Inc.

3211 4th Street NE Room 453, 4th floor, USCCB

Washington, DC, 20017

United States

ICMC has completed first assessments of the needs of flood affected communities in Charsadda District, including large numbers of Afghan refugees and conflict affected IDPs. Serving IDPs in Pakistan since 1998, ICMC’s emergency flood assistance is responding to their immediate medical and hygiene needs. Experienced ICMC medical staff are providing individualized consultations in UC Prango, distributing medications, while also developing referral protocols and coordinating primary health care response with government hospitals, health centres, private clinics and dispensaries. ICMC continues to asses needs in real time, and hopes to provide assistance through interventions in the areas of water, sanitation and non-food items.
800-481-4462

1919 Santa Monica Blvd Suite 400

Santa Monica, CA, 90404

United States

International Medical Corps, which has been operating in Pakistan since 1984, continues to support displaced people through mobile medical units serving the hardest hit areas of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Province in the northwest, treating cases of acute respiratory infection, acute diarrhea and skin disease. In addition we have deployed psychologists to address mental health needs, as well as hygiene promoters in the worst affected districts, including Peshawar, Charsadda, Nowshehra, and Swat. Teams are providing health education on hygiene & sanitation, and have distributed hygiene kits to 11,000 people. Psychosocial teams have identified people with depression, anxiety, and significant psychological distress.
1-866-595-1100

International Relief & Development

1621 N. Kent St.

Arlington , VA, 22209

United States

IRD targets 10,000 families in two districts of KPK Province (DI Khan and Tank), and three districts in Northern Sind (Kashmore, Jacobabad and Shikarpur). It provides safe drinking water, sanitation, household items, and emergency temporary shelter for 6,000 families. This program is funded by USAID/OFDA. IRD has also mobilized $2.25 million in private funds: $2 million for primary health care medicine from METAD to the MOH through WHO; $195,000 in quilts and baby layettes through Lutheran World Relief; $10,000 each for local relief supplies from HELP and WER-Netherlands; $40,000 for local relief supplies from the Church of Latter Day Saints; and $5,000 for local procurement from the Essef Foundation.
877-REFUGEE

International Rescue Committee

122 E. 42nd St.

New York, NY, 10168

United States

The International Rescue Committee is responding to the flooding that has left millions in need of emergency assistance in Pakistan by focusing efforts in the districts of Charsadda, Lower Dir, Noweshera, and Swat. The IRC is working to provide immediate relief through water, sanitation, and hygiene interventions which will focus on reducing and preventing the incidence of water and sanitation related diseases through the provision of safe drinking water, adequate sanitation coverage and hygiene promotion activities. In addition, IRC is providing shelter and distributing emergency non-food items (NFI) to those who have fled the rising waters.
8884794968

Islamic Relief USA

3655 Wheeler Ave

Alexandria, VA, 22304

United States

Islamic Relief USA has launched an emergency campaign to aid the victims of the floods that have affected more than 1 million people and claimed more than 1,100 lives thus far.In Noshara, which is 100 km north of Pakistan’s capital city Islamabad, Islamic Relief’s team is providing food and water for 700 families. Islamic Relief staff is also distributing tents and blankets throughout the flood-devastated region. Working with the United Nations World Food Program, Islamic Relief is also distributing food to 2,000 families in Bakhtiarabad. Islamic Relief workers on the ground are continuing needs assessments, and international staff-members are working hard to help raise funds and awareness.
1-800-827-3543 or 1-248-424-7493

Life for Relief and Development

17300 West 10 Mile Rd.

Southfield, MI, 48128

United States

Life for Relief and Development is providing tents, blankets, pillows, medicine and medical supplies, hygiene kits which include buckets, towels, soap, toothbrushes, toothpaste, laundry detergent and food baskets to feed a family of 7 for a month. The food basket consists of flour, rice, oil, dry beans/lentils, sugar, dates, canned meat and pasta to displaced families in Khyber-Pakhtoonkhwa (KPK), Punjab and Sindh. Our staff is working as quickly as possible to supply these urgently needed items to families that have been displaced due to the rapidly expanding floods throughout the country.
800-597-5972

700 Light St

Baltimore, MD, 21230

United States
http://lwr.org

LWR is supporting the ACT Alliance coordinated response in Pakistan: ACT members are working to reach flood survivors with emergency medical care and have delivered more than 70 tons of food to more than 500 households. They are planning to deliver 2,940 more tons of food items over the next two months. In addition ACT members will distribute shelter kits, jerry cans, plastic mats, hygiene kits and mosquito nets. LWR has also partnered with International Relief and Development to send 3,300 quilts, 13,000 health kits and 1,500 layettes to help families displaced by the floods and is assessing needs for future shipments.
912-280-6641

MAP International

4700 Glynco Parkway

Brunswick, GA, 31525

United States

MAP International continues to monitor the situation in Pakistan and is coordinating with in-country health institutions and programs for the delivery and dispensing of medicines and medical services. Current support is directed through partners in D.I. Khan District, however additional areas will be included following the receipt of further field reports.
202-449-6399

Merlin USA

1600 K Street NW Suite 450

Washington, DC, 20006

United States

Medical Emergency Relief International (Merlin) responded immediately to the floods in Pakistan and has scaled up existing operations in northern Pakistan where the worst flood in decades has caused widespread devastation. Merlin’s team of 600, including 300 medical experts responded immediately.4 million people have been affected and 1,500 people have died. Merlin teams working in the worst affected areas have treated over 4,000 patients in the last two days alone.Merlin has set up 28 health clinics and deployed 18 mobile teams. Merlin medics are running 24-hour clinics in Jalozai camp, home to over 100,000 vulnerable people, in response to a significant spike in diarrhea and other waterborne disease.
800.959.4325

14150 SW Milton Ct

Tigard, OR, 97224

United States

Medical Teams International is responding to the recent disastrous flooding in Pakistan. They have shipped three containers of medical supplies to partners on the ground in the flood-affected area of the country. The medicines and supplies are enough to help hundreds of thousands of people and are valued at nearly $2 million. Additional supplies will also be airlifted to their partner in Pakistan that will help 10,000 people for 3 months. Medical Teams is assessing needs for deployment of medical teams.
503.896.5000

Mercy Corps

45 Ankeny Street

Portland, OR, 97201

United States

Mercy Corps helps people in the world’s toughest places turn the crises of natural disaster, poverty and conflict into opportunities for progress. Driven by local needs and market conditions, our programs provide communities with the tools and support they need to transform their own lives. Our worldwide team of 3,700 professionals is improving the lives of 16.7 million people in more than 40 countries.
800-55-MERCY

Mercy-USA for Aid and Development

44450 Pinetree Drive Suite 201

Plymouth, MI, 48170

United States

Mercy-USA for Aid and Development, through its local partner Humanity Hope, is providing food, water and hygiene packages to families left homeless by severe flooding in the northwestern Khyber Pakthunkhwa Province. Each family package contains: 88 pounds of wheat flour, 11 lb. of rice, 6.6 lb. of pulses, 11 lb. of dates, 2.2 lb. of sugar, 1.1 lb. of dry milk, 2 liters of cooking oil, one portable gas stove, matches, one large water proof plastic sheet, one 10-liter jerry can, 5 liters of bottled water, water purification tablets, one towel, toothpaste, 3 toothbrushes, one fingernail clipper, 2 combs and 6 large bars of soap.
800-678-7255

Operation USA

3617 Hayden Avenue, Suite A

Culver City, CA, 90232

United States

Operation USA is an international relief agency that helps communities at home and abroad overcome the effects of disasters, disease and endemic poverty by providing privately-funded relief, reconstruction and development aid. Since 1979, the Los Angeles-based Operation USA has worked in 99 countries, delivering over $350 million for relief and development projects.
1-800-77-OXFAM

Oxfam America/Pakistan Flood Relief and Recovery

P.O. Box 1211

Albert Lea, MN, 56007-1211

United States

Oxfam and our partners have launched a rapid-relief effort to quickly reach 400,000 people in hard-hit areas of Punjab, Balochistan, and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa with essential aid. We are installing toilets and water-storage tanks and delivering clean water by truck to prevent deadly waterborne diseases from sweeping through communities of displaced people. Soon we and our partners will begin distribution of kits containing hygiene materials like soap, and we will start providing cooked meals for those in greatest need. Throughout the response, Oxfam will look for cash-for-work opportunities, in which we pay survivors to carry out essential service projects for their communities.
800-556-7918

155 Plan Way

Warwick, RI, 02886

United States

Plan is responding to the flooding in Pakistan. Emergency interventions, undertaken in six impacted districts of Punjab and Sindh provinces, are benefiting 90,000 to 100,000 people in 13,000 families. Immediate relief phase activities include the provision of tents, food and water, as well as health and hygiene kits in shelter camps. Plan is also working with local authorities to monitor and address possible disease outbreak. As the situation continues to develop, Plan will implement further response activities on the basis of assessed need. Once flood waters recede, Plan will provide returning families with shelter kits, dry food rations, and tool and household kits to assist them in rebuilding their homes and lives.
800-872-3283

P.O. Box 643700Pittsburgh, PA, 15264-3700

United States

Presbyterian Disaster Assistance (PDA) is working to provide food, shelter and medical assistance to people in Balochistan, Khyber Paktunkwa, Punjab and Sindh provinces. Shelter items and food packages have already reached about 200,000 people. PDA is responding in cooperation with our ecumenical partners Church World Service Pakistan and other members of the ACT Alliance.
800.573.3332

5455 Wilshire Blvd. Suite 1280

Los Angeles, CA, 90036

United States
http://ri.org

Relief International and our partners have launched a rapid-relief effort to quickly provide emergency aid to 100,000 flood-affected families in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KPK), Balochistan and Punjab. We have deployed emergency health units to ensure immediate access to primary care and medical supplies; are distributing Emergency Family Kits that include water purification tablets, clean water receptacles and temporary shelter materials; providing clean drinking water to communities suffering from water contamination and to those with no access to water at all. Our team is organizing the distribution of non-food-items (such as clean clothing, bedding and household items) to children to ensure their survival.
1-800-728-3843

54 Wilton Road

Westport, CT, 06880

United States

Save the Children, which has provided assistance to more than 50,800 children and adults, is fighting difficult conditions to reach families in need in Pakistan’s flood zone. Of particular concern is the health of the floods’ youngest survivors. The agency is providing emergency medical care and distributing tents, shelter kits, hygiene kits, food and supplies. Save the Children has mobile health teams working in flood zones and is supporting health clinics. The organization is distributing hygiene and “clean delivery” birth kits and conducting hygiene promotion to prevent the rise in waterborne diseases like acute watery diarrhea. Save the Children also has established a diarrhea center for flood-affected communities in Swat.
202-974-8316

Solidarity Center

888 16th Street, NW Suite 400

Washington, DC, 20006

United States

The Solidarity Center is on the ground in Pakistan, assessing flood damage in order to determine the most urgent needs. As in past humanitarian crises, the Solidarity Center’s union partners, including the Pakistan Workers’ Federation, will use relief fund contributions to distribute clothing, medicine, and non-perishable food to displaced workers and their families, build temporary shelters, and assist in providing needed counseling and health care.
800.554.8583

UMCOR

PO Box 9068 UMCOR Advance #982450

New York, NY, 10087

United States

The United Methodist Committee on Relief (UMCOR) is responding to the Pakistan floods in collaboration with its partners on the ground, including the Church of Pakistan, Church World Service, GlobalMedic, and Muslim Aid. Through these partnerships, UMCOR is providing clean drinking water, food, temporary shelter, and medical aid to tens of thousands of people affected by the crisis.
1-800-FOR-KIDS

US Fund for UNICEF

333 E. 38th St. 6th Floor

New York, NY, 10016

United States

UNICEF and partners have set up nine medical camps and are providing medicine, water treatment tablets, nutritional supplements, hygiene kits, and jerry cans. The agency is also supporting the local authorities by providing clean drinking water.
202-530-1694

1819 L Street, NW, Suite 900

Washington, DC, 20036

United States

WFP is now providing monthly food rations to flood‐affected communities in 24 districts, supported by nearly 30 NGO partners. Food stocks continue to be pre‐positioned at key operational hubs to service the highest need areas. This month, a limited food basket consisting of wheat, flour, oil and high energy biscuits is being distributed. Additional funding is urgently required to scale‐up the response as planned in September to reach up to 6 million beneficiaries with a complete 8‐commodity food basket. WFP is also providing logistics and emergency telecommunications support to the humanitarian community working in affected provinces, including coordinating the movement of relief cargo on government aircraft.
1.888.56.CHILD

34834 Weyerhaeuser Way South P.O. Box 9716

Federal Way, WA, 98063

United States

World Vision has begun distributing food and water to flood survivors, and and plans to provide medical assistance, shelter, hygiene kits and other basic relief items as soon as possible. World Vision has worked in Pakistan since 1992, and has more than 150 staff.

Author: Paola