World Vision Australia

 

13 32 40

 
Donate Now
World Vision
 

Crisis in Pakistan

Between May to July 2009, intense fighting between militant groups and the Pakistani Forces in and around the Swat Valley drove some 2.5 million people from their homes. World Vision responded to a call by Pakistani authorities to join a relief effort to assist the internally displaced people affected by the fighting.

Donate: Emergency & Preparedness Fund Subscribe to Action News Online
  1. In the Pakistan village Tootallay, children wait for food to be distributed.
  2. Hungry children wait patiently in line at a food distribution point in Jalala camp in Mardan, Pakistan.
  3. A Pakistani child giving her fingerprints in order to receive distribution of non-food items. She will collect items on behalf of her family.
  4. Pakistani children bring their registration and ID-cards to receive distribution of urgently needed non-food items.
  5. Pakistani children, according to cultural tradition, represent their family in absence of their fathers.
  6. World Vision has begun a targeted distribution of much needed items to villages and at homes where internally displaced families are staying.
  7. In Pakistan, these children and their grandmother have travelled 35km on mountain paths to flee the fighting.
  8. Thousands of children, just like this little boy, are living with host villages in Pakistan, having fled fighting near their homes.
  9. Children in the village Tootallay, Pakistan. Tootallay has become host to thousands of Internally Displaced Persons since the Pakistan crisis began.
  10. In the Chota Lahore camp in Pakistan this boy’s mother is fretting for the health of all her 9 children. Having lost their appetites they’re growing weaker every day.

Related Stories

Background

Map of Pakistan, showing capital Islamabad and Swat Valley

On 6 May 2009, the ongoing low-level conflict between the Pakistani Military and the Taliban in and around the Swat valley expanded into open war, causing hundreds of thousands of civilians to flee. It is estimated that more than 2.5 million people were internally displaced, including the almost 600,000 registered displaced persons who have fled the area in recent years, most of whom are women and children.

The conflict between government forces and Taliban militants not only caused an unprecedented people movement but also destroyed homes, infrastructure and livelihoods. The District Department of Education in Pakistan reported that 60 per cent of schools in the Swat district were completely destroyed.

On 11 July 2009, the Pakistani government formally announced a plan for people to return home following the cessation of fighting in areas around the Swat Valley. The return of some 2 million people displaced by fighting relieved the burden on host communities (friends, relatives, government shelters and the displacement camps).

World Vision’s response

World Vision was able to provide relief to some of the neediest families displaced by the fighting, including:

  • The provision of non-food items such as mattresses, pots and pans, utensils and other basic items to more than 3,500 internally displaced people
  • Food for more than 150,000 people in the North West Province
  • Water purifiers and 6 month cash support for particularly vulnerable families
  • Psychosocial support for children by setting up 2 Child Friendly Spaces in Buner

Following the return of the displaced to their homes, World Vision worked to ensure the immediate needs of families were met, while continuing to address the longer-term issue of livelihood recovery.

Ongoing activities

World Vision has been working in Pakistan since 1992, focusing on emergency relief and response, child protection, HIV and AIDS awareness, and sustainable economic development. World Vision also provided extensive assistance to people in Northwest Frontier Province immediately after the 2005 earthquake.

You can discover more about this earthquake, and World Vision's response to it, on the Pakistan page in our Past Emergencies section.

Let's talk about it

Your vision

Rachel
Mar 15, 2010

"What an evil and senseless attack on those working to make the World a better place for those less fortunate than us. My prayers are with the families of the dead ..."

View article

Nancy Lee
Mar 12, 2010

"Dear Team, Please pass on my condolence to the families who lost their loved ones."

View article

Felicity D'Rozario and John Parker
Mar 12, 2010

"Dear WV, This tragic attack has left us feeling so sad. Please forward our love and prayers to your staff in Pakistan, and let them know that our support for WV r..."

View article

Melinda Stanners
Mar 11, 2010

"Dear WV, I just wanted to express how sorry I am to hear about the tragic attack on your staff. My heart goes out to their families and friends, and I fervently ho..."

View article