The emergency operation helping tsunami victims in Asia was making
extraordinary progress but also faced extraordinary problems, the UN
humanitarian chief said Tuesday, calling for more long-term aid.
"We are making extraordinary progress in reaching the majority of the people
affected in the majority of the areas," Emergency Relief Coordinator Jan Egeland
told a news briefing in New York.
"We are also experiencing extraordinary obstacles in many, manyareas and
nowhere do we have bigger problems again than in northern Sumatra and the Aceh
region," he added. "We still have logistical bottlenecks although that's part of
the extraordinary progress that we have been solving many more of the
bottlenecks earlier than we've done in similar disasters before."
The disaster had killed more than 150,000 people, injured 500,000 more and
left up to 5 million lacking basic services, according to the world body.
Egeland warned that diseases were worsening by the day in areasthat the
massive relief operation was not reaching due to lack of transportation.
He said the top priority "on his wish list" were C-17 transportplanes to fly
in heavy earth moving equipment to increase the capacity of the airport in Banda
Aceh, Indonesia, which registeredthe worst devastation among the dozen countries
hit by the tsunami.
"We still need more trucks, we still need more helicopters, we still need
more aircraft, we still need more landing crafts and boats, we still need more
base camps with staff support, we need more fuel stores and handling units, we
need more water treatment units, we need more generators and deployment kits for
personnel. But in all of these areas we are making progress," he noted.
Egeland said aid pledged so far has topped 2 billion US dollarsbut he
emphasized that it must be long-term and that donors must come up with the money
they have pledged, which has not always happened in the past.