He said the people of Kashmir would remember forever the amount of generosity, which their Pakistani brothers had shown to them.
Sikandar said the comity of nations should take serious note of the fate of millions of people who were facing an eminent threat vis-à-vis arrival of cold weather in affected areas.
He said in some of the affected areas even tents would not be able to protect the people, and suggested that iron sheets be provided to the affectees residing above the height of thousand feet so that they could arrange their shelter themselves.
Wood was available in abundance in the affected areas and the locals had the skill to make wooden structures, he added.
He said the rehabilitation was a time involving process and a considerable number of people in the affected areas needed urgent cover from the wrath of fast approaching cold weather conditions.
To a question, he said the people would not leave their native residential areas whatsoever the circumstances were.
He said those who were settled across the Line of Control had been living in vary harsh conditions over the past six decades vis-à-vis Indian cruelty but had not left their homes. So it would be very hard to convince them on migration to some other area, he observed.
He said the maximum number of damaged houses were stone built while the bricks built houses sustained the shocks to some extent.
He said during the process of rehabilitation, appropriate town planning would be made and new construction techniques would be adopted. Necessary legislation would also be made in that connection, he added.
To another question, he said a crisis management authority would also be established to deal with an emergency situation in the future, adding the masses would also be imparted required training.