Incident Reports

UN underlines need of restoring supplies within this month

2015-10-17

Bagmati, Kathmandu, Kathmandu

The United Nations Humanitarian Coordinator's Office here has said that the onset of winter in Nepal will likely have an adverse impact on earthquake-affected communities living in isolated areas in high-altitude. The humanitarian organisations in Nepal are facing a race against time to ensure delivery of urgently required supplies such as food and shelter materials to these high altitude areas that will soon be cut off with the onset of winter, Mr Jamie McGoldrick, the UN Humanitarian Coordinator for Nepal, stated in a press release today. "Only a small time window remains before the available land access trails become closed in the coming weeks. Due to limited ability to conduct deliveries by road and air during the recent monsoon season, a backlog of 1,200 MT of shelter and non-food item supplies is awaiting delivery to the earthquake-affected population. Eighty per cent of the supplies are warehoused in the districts, but acute shortages in fuel supplies continue to impede planned deliveries to affected villages and trailheads for onward transportation using mules and porters," read the release. It is of critical importance to delivering supplies to the trailheads by end of October as the passes in the Himalayas will be at increased risk of being blocked by snowfall, the Office said. It added that the humanitarian community is implementing contingencies to address the fuel shortages and to increase its capacity to deliver the supplies within an ever decreasing window of opportunity.

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