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Local aid groups, the Pakistani and U.S. armies and international aid agencies have helped hundreds of thousands of people with food, shelter, water and medical care, but the distribution has been chaotic and has not come close to reaching everyone. Sabatinelli urged the world to extend generous financial assistance to Pakistan to ensure health facilities for survivors. He said the WHO had sought $56 million to fund health projects, but less than half has been pledged. However, he said the international response was now growing. "We are receiving some good pledges but we cannot buy drugs with pledges, and we need to convert them into cheques," he told a news conference in Islamabad. He said the WHO had provided drugs to 2 million survivors and it had the stocks to reach another 4 million people in the next three months. But "this is not enough," he said.
[Associated
Press;
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