The UN High Commissioner for Refugees said that it had 2,000 tones of relief goods at the moment whereas more was dispatched to the quake-hit Pakistan.
The UNHCR spokesperson Ms Jennifer said that the UN Commission was trying hard to distribute relief items particularly tents among quake victims before the advent of winter in the region.
"We want distribution of the relief goods among the victims in the affected areas soon after it reached Pakistan by plane. That is why, some members of our Pakistani staff including drivers are willing to work throughout the Eid holidays", Jennifer pointed out.
The said that in fact it was a race against time and if we fail in the race, the quake victims would face more difficulties than they had already experienced.
According to the UN estimate, more than 200,000 quake victims in far flung northern areas are still without aid.
Relief organisations said that round about 2.3 million people would need food. The World Food Programme spokesman Simon said that his organisation had so far planned to provide food to one million quake victims.
Simon further said that they have to make arrangements for inaccessible areas where we have to airlift food items for 200,000 quake victims.
The report added WFP is trying to get 30 helicopters so that food supplies are airlifted to the remote areas in the next two months without halt. But, the task was very costly and WFP so far received only 16 percent of the monetary aid it needed for the purpose. The UN said that it had so far received only 24 percent of the $550 million it appealed to the world community last month.