NEW DELHI: Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi appealed to the  international community to provide more and immediate aid to cope with  the humanitarian crisis due to the floods. 
  
Moreover, Pakistan has decided to accept flood aid from its neighbour  India, saying the offer was a “very welcome initiative” as both  countries look to improve their tense relations.
Foreign Minister Qureshi told India's NDTV television in an interview  broadcast Friday that Islamabad would take India's offer of five  million dollars which was made last Friday.
“I can share with you that the government of Pakistan has agreed to  accept the Indian offer,” Qureshi said from New York, where he addressed  a special session of the UN General Assembly called to boost aid for  flood victims.
“I think this initiative of India is a very welcome initiative.”
India and Pakistan have made major efforts in recent months to build  confidence in their relations, which were badly strained by the Mumbai  2008 terror attacks, which Indian blamed on militants from Pakistan.
The United States urged Pakistan earlier this week to accept the  Indian offer and not let rivalry stand in the way of helping its  citizens in flood-ravaged regions.
Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh rang his Pakistani counterpart  Yousuf Raza Gilani on Thursday “to express his sense of sorrow and to  condole the deaths resulting from the huge floods,” Singh's office said.
The catastrophic floods in Pakistan have claimed nearly 1,500 lives and affected 20 million people. – AFP


 
 
No comments:
Post a Comment