Pakistan floods have affected more than 30 million
Historic monsoon rains and flooding in Pakistan have
affected more than 30 million people during the last few weeks, the
country’s climate change minister said on Thursday.
Pakistan has urged the international community to help with relief
efforts as it struggled to cope with the aftermath of torrential rains that
have triggered massive floods since last month, killing more than 900
people.
“Thirty-three million have been affected in different ways.
The final homeless figure is being assessed,” climate minister Sherry Rehman
said.
In a news conference on Thursday, Rehman described the floods as a
“humanitarian disaster of epic proportions” that had left thousands without
food and shelter.
“We need to ask not just the provinces and Islamabad, it is beyond
the capacity of any one administration or government to rehabilitate and even
manage the rescue and relief,” she added.
United Nations agency Office for the Coordination of
Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) said in an update on Thursday the monsoon rains had
affected some three million people in Pakistan, of which 184,000 have been
displaced to relief camps across the country.
Heavy rains have triggered flash floods and wreaked havoc across
much of Pakistan since mid-June, leaving 903 dead and about 50,000 people
homeless, the country’s disaster agency said on Wednesday.
Thousands whose homes were swept away now live in tents,
kilometres away from their inundated villages and towns, after being rescued by
soldiers, local disaster workers and volunteers.
The National Disaster Management Authority said so far 126 people
were killed in flood-related incidents in the past 48 hours, with most of the
victims being women and children. The flooding has further exacerbated
Pakistan’s economic crisis.
Prime Minister Shahbaz Sharif issued an appeal on Wednesday from
abroad, urging philanthropists to help flood-affected areas in Pakistan.
A vast majority of the damage is in the southern province
of Sindh.
“Brother, the rain has not stopped for the past three months … We
are living in a rickshaw with our children because the roof of our mud house is
leaking,” a woman who declined to be named said from Hyderabad, Sindh’s
second-largest city.
Rehman said Sindh had received “784 percent” more rain this
month than the monthly average in August.
OCHA also warned alerts had been issued for floods, river
overflows, and landslides in several areas of Pakistan, and heavy rainfall was
forecast for the next two days, too, over most of the country.
Seated with three of her children in the rickshaw she said,
“Where can we go? The gutters are overflowing, and our courtyard is filled up
with sewage. Our houses and alleys have turned into a floating garbage bin.”
Meanwhile, the southwest province of Balochistan received
496 percent rain above the 30-year average.
“This water is high now not only on both sides of the Indus in
southern Pakistan but has triggered a new flash flood phenomenon where it’s
raining in 7-8 unprecedented cycles, superflooding areas from a merciless sky,”
she said in a tweet.
References:
BBC News, CNN News, NDTV , The News, Al-Jazeera, CNBC, Economist, Times of India, Sky sports, New York Time, Sky News, Indianexpress
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