In the six months since Pakistan suffered the worst flooding in the country's history we have delivered vital aid to 124,000 people.
At the end of July last year torrential monsoon rains inundated huge swathes of Pakistan, leaving one fifth of the country under water. Almost 2,000 people were killed and more than 18 million were affected by the floods.
Your amazing response has enabled us to deliver aid to 124,000 people. But there is still an enormous amount of work to do and the next phase of our relief efforts will reach another 75,000 people in the coming months.
The worst disaster I have ever seen
Robert Cruickshank, our senior emergency response officer, said: "This is the worst disaster I have ever seen - not because the death toll is higher than others - but because the flooding has devastated Pakistan's roads and villages across huge areas and with them have gone the crops that feed communities and the local and national economies.
Read how we helped one family rebuild their home
"Many of the affected areas and people have been very difficult to reach because roads and bridges were swept away when the floods were at their worst. It will take many, many years to put back what the floods took away in only days."
Building again
Despite the challenges, we were able to use the money you so generously donated to deliver shelters, hygiene kits, blankets, food, safe water and health care. And with your support we will continue to help people affected by the floods rebuild their lives.
In the next phase of relief work, we will reach an additional 40,000 people by improving their access to clean water. We will help thousands of families to find work building irrigation canals and schools or provide them with seeds, tools and livestock to replace those that were lost in the floods. And we will work with local communities to help them prepare for future disasters .
Please keep the people of Pakistan in your thoughts and your prayers .
Your money has provided:
Emergency shelter kits and hygiene training for nearly 49,000 people in Khyber Pukhtunkhwa province (KPK) in northern Pakistan
Food, safe water and hygiene kits for 24,000 people in KPK
Emergency and primary health care for 41,000 people in Shangla district in KPK, one of the poorest districts of Pakistan
Transitional shelters for almost 10,000 people in Sindh and Balochistan provinces.