Caregivers are embracing new mobile-health apps that are steadily reaching the market to help them take care of loved ones, according to researchers. – Each year,
caregivers provide an estimated $375 billion worth of uncompensated aid to
family members, according to The National Alliance for Caregiving. Mobile applications
such as those that monitor medication compliance and track locations using GPS
could make this job easier, and caregivers a…
Posts Tagged ‘aid’
Family Caregivers Embrace Mobile Technology to Aid Loved Ones
U.S. embassy provides aid to Kraljevo
U.S. Ambassador to Serbia Mary Warlick visited Kraljevo on Thursday and delivered to the Red Cross of Serbia a USD 365,000 worth assistance. The town was struck by a strong earthquake three months ago.
Putin promises aid for bomb survivors
Prime Minister Vladimir Putin has promised to do everything in his power to find those responsible for the airport attack and ensure they pay for their crime.
Speaking to his Health and Social Development minister he insisted on the necessity to help those injured as much as possible, and provide material assistance to those who had lost members of their families.
US sending new aid package
WASHINGTON – US Vice-President Joe Biden is set to take a message to Pakistan that the United States is prepared to supply more military, intelligence and economic aid its government wants, according to a report published in a leading American newspaper Saturday.
President Barack ObamaÂ’s administration is planning to send more help to Pakistan amid complaints from government officials there that the United States doesnÂ’t understand their security priorities or offer enough help.
According to the plan, decided on in last monthÂ’s White House Afghanistan war review, the US will offer more military, intelligence and economic support to Pakistan. The Obama administration also plans to intensify efforts to forge a regional peace.
Biden will travel to Islamabad next week for meetings with Army Chief General Ashfaq Parvez Kayani and top government leaders, The Washington Post said. “Biden will challenge the Pakistanis to articulate their long-term strategy for the region and indicate exactly what assistance is needed for them to move against Taliban sanctuaries in areas bordering Afghanistan,” the newspaper said. Pakistani officials have complained that US military aid is both inadequate and late to arrive. The report on Obama’s Afghanistan policy review said unspecified ‘adjustments’ were needed for Pakistan.
One senior official told the Post the review concluded the United States must “make sure that our sizeable military assistance programmes are properly tailored to what the Pakistanis need and are targeted on units that will generate the most benefit.”
The official said other parts of the strategy include easing Pakistani fears that India is becoming a force in Afghanistan and working toward a political solution. “We think there’s a lot of room for improvement on that front,” the senior official said.
He said Pakistan is vital to efforts to negotiate with the Taliban. The Post report came a day after it made a strong case for strengthening President Asif ZardariÂ’s government.
The Post said some US military commanders and intelligence officers had proposed allowing US ground forces to launch targeted raids against insurgent stronghold, but Obama and his top national security aides rejected those suggestions. They concluded that the United States cannot afford to threaten or further alienate a precarious, nuclear-armed country whose cooperation is essential to the administration on several fronts.
The classified review pledged to ‘look hard’ at issues of economic stability, the Post said. It also directed administration and Pentagon officials to “make sure that our sizeable military assistance programmes are properly tailored to what the Pakistanis need and are targeted on units that will generate the most benefit” for US goals, said one senior administration official who participated in the review and was authorised to discuss it with the newspaper on condition of anonymity.
Beginning with Biden’s visit, according to the dispatch, the time may be ripe for a frank exchange of views and priorities between the two sides, another administration official said. The Pakistanis “understand that Afghanistan-Pakistan has become the single most important foreign policy issue to the United States, and their cachet has gone up.” But they also realise that they may have reached the point of maximum leverage, the official said, “and things about their region are going to change one way or the other” in the near future, as Congress and the American public grow increasingly disillusioned with the war and a timeline for military withdrawal is set.
“Something is going to give,” he was quoted as saying. “There is going to be an end-game scenario and they’re trying to guess where we’re heading.”
On intelligence, the administration plans to address PakistanÂ’s complaints that the Americans have not established enough outposts on the Afghan side of the border to stop insurgent infiltration, while pressing the Pakistanis to allow US and Afghan officials to staff border coordination centres inside Pakistan itself.
The administration also plans “redouble our efforts to look for political approaches” to ending the war, including a recognition that Pakistan “must play an important role” if not a dominant one, in reconciliation talks with the Taliban, the official said.
An intelligence estimate prepared for the review concluded that the war in Afghanistan could not be won unless the insurgent sanctuaries were wiped out, and that there was no real indication Pakistan planned to undertake the effort.
But the White House concluded that while Taliban safe havens were ‘a factor’, they were “not the only thing that stands between us and success in Afghanistan,” the senior official said. “We understand the general view a lot of people espouse” in calling for direct US ground attacks, he said of the intelligence estimate. But while the administration’s goal is still a Pakistani offensive, the review questioned whether ‘classic clear, hold and build’ operations were the only way to deny the insurgents free access to the borderlands, and asked whether “a range of political, military, counterterrorism and intelligence operations” could achieve the same result.
“That view represents a significant shift in administration thinking, perhaps making a virtue of necessity given Pakistani refusal thus far to launch the kind of full-scale ground offensive the United States has sought in North Waziristan,” the dispatch said.
“The challenge is that when you talk about safe havens in Pakistan, you imagine some traditional military clearing operation that then settles the issue,” the official said. While the Pakistani military has cleared insurgents from most of the tribal areas, it remains heavily deployed in those areas, where little building has taken place.
Vatican sends aid to quake town
Officials of the Vatican and the Caritas humanitarian organization delivered EUR 70,000 to the central Serbian town of Kraljevo today.
The town hit by a strong earthquake in early November, that left two people dead and destroyed or damaged thousands of homes and other facilities.
Direct Relief Enlists Esri, Google, SAP to Create Online Medical Aid Map
Nonprofit organization Direct Relief has unveiled its Online Medical Aid Distribution Map with help from Esri’s ArcGIS, Google Earth and SAP applications to keep the flow of aid transparent. – Humanitarian
organization Direct Relief International has launched an online aid-tracking portal
called the Online Medical
Aid Distribution Map. Announced on Dec. 16, the Web tool provides
pharmaceutical and medical manufacturers with precise data on where their aid
packages have been shipped t…
Third Man Records to Release Singles by First Aid Kit & Dungen
JACK WHITE-PRODUCED SINGLES OUT ON THIRD MAN IN JANUARY 2011
![]() Dungen |
Rising Swedish folk-pop duo First Aid
Kit and renowned psych-rockers Dungen are the latest artists to take part in Third Man Records’ Blue Series of releases.
The special series of 7-inch records, produced by Jack White and recorded at his own Third Man Studios in
Nashville, has featured releases from Wanda Jackson, Laura Marling and Secret Sisters, amongst
others.
Dungen recorded two brand new tracks for the label: a mesmeric psych-pop odyssey “Oga Nasa Mum” (which
translates into English as “Eye Nose Mouth”) and a haunting instrumental titled “Highway Wolf”. Since 2004 Dungen
have released a string of critically lauded albums. Their impressive sixth full length Skit i allt
(Subliminal Sounds/ Mexican Summer) was released earlier this year.
For their Blue Series release, First Aid Kit recorded spine-tingling covers of Buffy Sainte-Marie‘s “Universal
Soldier” (made famous in 1965 by Donovan) and classic blues standard “It Hurts Me Too”, a song much loved by fans
of Karen Dalton‘s 1969 folk-blues version. First Aid Kit is comprised of 17 and 20-year old sisters
Klara and Johanna Söderberg. They won international acclaim this year for their stunning debut
album The Big Black And The Blue (Wichita Recordings).
Dungen – Released on January 11th 2011
Side A) “Oga Nasa Mum”
Side B) “Highway Wolf”
First Aid Kit – Released on January 18th 2011
Side A) “Universal Soldier”
Side B) “It Hurts Me Too”
The Third Man’s Blue Series is available on iTunes and on 7-inch vinyl by mail order and from the label’s Nashville
store at 623 7th Ave S, Nashville, TN 37203.
Daily: No aid for Kosovo due to IMF deal violation
Kosovo will lose EUR 20mn of the European Union aid for its non-compliance with an agreement PriÅ¡tina has with the IMF, say reports. Albanian language daily Koha Ditore writes today that the withdrawal of aid also comes due to “big pre-election promises”.
Russia sends aid to Serbian quake town
Russia today delivered 38.5 tons of aid for the central Serbian town of Kraljevo, hit by a 5.6 Richter earthquake last month. Head of the Serbian Interior Ministry (MUP) Emergency Sector Predrag Marić took over the shipment aid at the Niš Airport on Thursday.
Macedonia sends aid to quake town
The government of Macedonia, the city of Skopje and municipality of Gjorce Petrov have decided to send aid to the Serbian town of Kraljevo. The town, hit by an earthquake in early November, will receive EUR 61.000 worth of aid, the Macedonian embassy in Belgrade released.
Rehman Malik denies flood aid corruption
Pakistan”s Interior Minister Rehman Malik has defended the way his country’s government has distributed millions of dollars of flood relief. Rubbishing allegations of corruption from flood-affected people, Malik told the BBC that the government has launched a huge compensation scheme under which people can withdraw cash aid from local banks using special electronic cards. Malik [...]
Companies send aid to quake town
Economy Minister MlaÄ‘an Dinkić said that his ministry’s call resulted in several Serbian companies’ dispatching aid to the central Serbian town of Kraljevo.
He pointed out that a total of 18 aid trucks loaded with construction material to be used in the repairs of houses in Kaljevo, which was recently hit by a severe earthquake, was dispatched.
Tadić announces aid for quake town
President Boris Tadić announced on Wednesday a series of measures that would aid the economy of Kraljevo. The town in central Serbia that was hit by an earthquake early this month.
UN to provide aid to earthquake-hit town
Representatives of the UN Delegation to Serbia have promised to provide help to Kraljevo which was hit by a strong earthquake on November 3.
The UN Delegation to Serbia, consisting of UN Resident Coordinator in Serbia William Infante, representatives of the World Health Organization (WHO), UN Development Program and the United States Agency for International Development (USAID), visited Kraljevo, central Serbia, on Friday.
MoD to get USD 1mn American aid
Serbian Defense Ministry will next year get USD 1mn aid from the US, Serbian Defense Minister Dragan Å utanovac said Monday in Washington. In addition, the ministry can count on USD 900,000 more for a program of training officers, he said.
Fed to buy US$600b in treasuries to aid growth
The Federal Reserve will buy an additional US$600 billion ($771 billion) of Treasuries through June, expanding record stimulus and risking its credibility in a bid to reduce unemployment and avert deflation.
Policy makers, setting a pace of about US$75 billion of purchases a month, “will adjust the program as needed,” the Fed’s Open Market Committee said today in a statement in Washington. The central bank left unchanged its pledge to keep interest rates low for an “extended period” after Chairman Ben S. Bernanke said it could be modified in some way.
5-year time span eclipses conditional US mly aid offer
WASHINGTON – On the final day of US-Pakistan Strategic Dialogue Friday, the Obama administration announced a $2 billion, multiyear security assistance package to help Pakistan fight extremists taking refuge in safe havens along its border with Afghanistan.
The pledge came at the concluding plenary session at which Pakistan Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi said his government will give “no space” to terrorists on its soil.
The aid pledge, which is subject to Congressional approval, was announced by Secretary of State Hillary Clinton. It provides a long-term US security commitment along the lines of the five-year, $7.5 billion civilian aid package for Pakistan approved by Congress last year.
The five-year package would pay for military hardware and equipment Pakistan needs for the counterinsurgency fight, Clinton said.
“The United States has no stronger partner when it comes to counter terrorism efforts against the extremists who threaten us both than Pakistan,” Clinton said.
The aid would extend from 2012 to 2017. It comes on the heels of a White House report sent to Congress earlier this month that used unusually tough language suggesting Pakistan is not doing nearly enough to confront the Taliban and al Qaeda, despite repeated Obama administration statements that Pakistan is working hard to crack down on militants.
Qureshi said the United States should not dismiss PakistanÂ’s contributions, and insisted that suggestions that PakistanÂ’s efforts in the war on terror are half-hearted are unfounded.
“Nearly 7,000 of our valiant law enforcement officials have perished in this fight,” Qureshi said. “We do not know what greater evidence to offer than the blood of our people. Madam Secretary, we are determined to win this fight.”
Tensions between the United States and Pakistan rose in recent weeks after increased American drone attacks over the Afghan-Pakistani border, one of which killed two Pakistani border guards. Pakistan authorities responded by closing key coalition supply routes into Afghanistan.
The United States has since apologised for the incident, and the routes have reopened.
US officials acknowledge the Pakistani military is stretched thin since this summerÂ’s devastating floods, and has had to divert resources from the fight against extremists to conduct relief efforts. They hope the new security assistance will address the militaryÂ’s resource limitations so Pakistan can redouble efforts to go after militants.
In his comments, at the plenary meeting of the US-Pakistan Strategic Dialogue, Foreign Minister Qureshi expressed irritation over what he said are US insinuations that PakistanÂ’s effort against extremism is lacking.
Pakistan, he said, has sustained 30,000 civilian deaths in recent years in a “daily fare of suicide bombings” and other attacks. Seven thousand Pakistani soldiers and police have lost their lives in the struggle — more than combined NATO losses in Afghanistan, Qureshi added.
“Nonetheless, it unfortunately seems easy to dismiss Pakistan’s contributions and sacrifices. There are still tongue-in-cheek comments, even in this capital, about Pakistan’s heart not really being in this fight,” he said.
At the plenary session, Qureshi expressed gratitude for US flood relief efforts, support which Clinton said will continue as Pakistan moves toward long-term recovery. Clinton again urged Pakistan to reform its tax system to yield more funds for flood relief and other needs from its wealthy.
Israeli military boards aid boat
It is being reported that Israeli naval commandos have boarded a Jewish aid boat which is trying to break the naval blockade on Gaza. There are no reports so far of any violence.
WB asks Pakistan to prove ability to manage foreign aid
UNITED NATIONS – As several countries boosted their aid pledges for flood hit-Pakistan, the World Bank called on Pakistan to take steps to reassure donor countries that it is capable of using their funds responsibly and transparently and that it can enact reforms.
World Bank President Robert Zoellick made that call at a high-level meeting on PakistanÂ’s flood crisis in New York Sunday evening, attended by some 25 top diplomats from around the world as well as heads of international financial institutions.
The World Bank also stressed on Pakistani people to pay more taxes not only for rehabilitation and reconstruction of flood affectees but also for mobilising the world to pay for Pakistan.
The overall figure of fresh pledges made on Sunday was not immediately available.
Zoellick told the UN meeting, co-chaired by Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon and Foreign Minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi, that Pakistan would have to prove its ability to manage foreign aid ahead of an October meeting in Brussels to review a flood damage assessment report the World Bank and Asian Development Bank are preparing.
He also called on Pakistan to mobilise its resources for the task and implement economic reforms.
“Maybe we can turn the tragedy into an opportunity, but we’ll succeed only if the government truly takes ownership and is backed seriously by donors,” he said.
In order for Pakistan to effectively use aid funds and secure additional donations, “the government will need a reconstruction founded on transparency, accountability, flexibility backed by law,” said Zoellick. “We have to work through Pakistani institutions.”
Zoellick underlined Pakistan’s central role in sustaining relief and reconstruction efforts. “We’ve seen fantastic capabilities with the Pakistani rescue efforts. We need to continue these and broaden these to the civilian and political segments.”
“We’re going to need Pakistanis to pay for Pakistan if we’re going to be able to mobilise the world to pay for Pakistan,” he said.
“To make most effective use of the help and even to secure full donor support, the government will need a reconstruction founded on transparency, accountability, flexibility, backed by law,” Zoellick added.
“Senior Pakistani officials have told us that this is what they wish to do,” he said. “Yet experience from many countries warns that the machinery tends to slide back to business as usual.”
He added that the Pakistani government should “continue to take concrete steps by the October meeting, backed by law, so we have an opportunity to build Pakistani ownership, governance and capacity.”
US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton echoed Zoellick, saying that Pakistan must “lead by instituting the reforms that will pave the way to self-sufficiency.”
“The international community will support Pakistan’s efforts at reform and reconstruction,” she said.
Foreign Minister Qureshi responded to ZoellickÂ’s call for Pakistan to take the lead in its emergency response plan, saying that every dollar it receives “will be utilised in the most efficient manner … and in the most transparent manner.”
He reassured donor countries that their money will be not be wasted, and also stressed that the country would use its own resources to better the lives of flood victims.
“I want to assure the international community that every dollar being contributed will be well spent in a transparent manner and we have today in place an oversight mechanism, which is comprising of people with a lot of eminence and integrity,” Qureshi said.
“We, the people of Pakistan, intend to mobilise our national resources to overcome this challenge,” he added. “We cannot expect the world to foot the entire bill. We don’t expect that.”
The reluctance of the international community to respond to the initial appeal of $459 million made by the UN has been attributed to the concerns that the government have about misuse of the aid. That appeals is still under-funded.
Replying to a reporter’s question, Qureshi stressed that concerns about an existing “trust deficit” should not be overblown. “Let’s not exaggerate the trust deficit.we owe it to every contributor national and international to make sure that the money that is being given to us is being utilised efficiently.”
Under the terms of $11 billion in loans the International Monetary Fund has made to Pakistan in recent years, Islamabad had agreed to implement a number of reforms, such as improving the energy sector, boosting tax revenues and fiscal improvements. But it has been slow to implement those reforms.
The United Nations asked member states on Friday for $2 billion to help Pakistan recover from massive floods that have displaced millions of people, the largest natural disaster appeal in UN history.
Qureshi was also asked by reporters if the amount of aid that Pakistan had received so far was sufficient. “We need a lot more than what has been pledged,” Qureshi said, though he added that Pakistan did not expect other countries to “foot the entire bill.”
General Nadeem Ahmed, Chairman of PakistanÂ’s National Disaster Management Authority, told the meeting that the country was 80 percent short of the food aid it needs for the 20 million people affected by the floods, 87 percent short on water and sanitation, and 82 percent short on shelter.
In the course of the meeting, the most notable announcement came from BritainÂ’s International Development Minister Andrew Mitchell who said his government would provide a further $110 million immediately towards the relief effort. London has previously given Islamabad $100 million and $80 million in private donations.
Mitchell said that the funding would be directed toward three areas – rebuilding the agriculture sector and schools, and assisting southern Pakistan, where flood waters have yet to recede and fears of a health emergency continue.
The meeting mainly provided an opportunity for countries to reiterate their current commitments to Pakistan, with assurances that they would stand behind the resilient people o Pakistan in these critical times.
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said the United States has provided about $345 million in governmental assistance to Pakistan. “This money has gone to relief and early recovery, along with in-kind contributions and the very important rescue work that our military has done in rescuing 15,000 people and providing (more than 3.1 million kilograms) of relief supplies,” she said.
Saudi Arabian Foreign Minister Saud al-Faisal said that his country also has contributed $345 million in aid.
The European Union has pledged $315 million, and its High Representative Catherine Ashton called for additional short, medium and long-term packages covering humanitarian and development assistance as well as ambitious trade measures to give boost to PakistanÂ’s economy.
Iran said that it had immediately responded to the emergency aid in “brotherly” Pakistan and had now set aside 100 million dollars. Norway and Spain said they have boosted their respective contributions to $$66 million and $20 million respectively.
China, which spoke of special relationship with Pakistan, said it has contributed $320 million plus a host of relief services it is providing in flood-affected areas costing a lot of money.
Germany said that it had contributed 460 million while Australia said it is increasing its aid to $75 million.
UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon told participants that this is one of the most complex natural disasters the United Nations has ever faced. “The flooding has affected an estimated 20 million people and 20 percent of Pakistan’s land. Eight to 12 million people need urgent humanitarian assistance,” he said.
Speaking to reporters after the meeting, the UN Secretary-General said that the gathering was intended to show the international communityÂ’s solidarity with the people of Pakistan.
“We are here to send a clear message that they are not alone,” he emphasised, adding “this will take much effort by all of us in the months and years to come.”




