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Pakistan floods are receding but more misery lies ahead – in Pakistan and across the world

Flood-stricken Pakistan

4 min read

As families pick through ruined homes in flood-stricken Pakistan, Islamic Relief CEO Waseem Ahmad highlights fears of more devastation to come

Just days ago, the surging River Kabul broke a protective embankment, flooding villages and hundreds of acres of farmland in Nowshera district, in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa. Islamic Relief had been trying to reach stranded families, but seven to eight feet of surging floodwaters held us back.

Alhamdulillah, since the waters have begun receding we have been able to get through, providing over 200 families with desperately needed food packs filled with staples such as flour, rice, cooking oil, pulses, sugar, tea and salt.

As I talked to Nowshera families about this "monster monsoon" season like no other, I felt heartsick at their suffering

But while the rains have stopped, many places remain submerged. Worse, new monsoons are expected this month. What new horrors lie ahead for those who have already suffered and lost so much?

Almost everywhere I looked in Nowshera, I saw devastation. In this area, floodwaters killed 10 people. Hundreds of houses were washed away in the torrent, leaving families with only the scant protection of makeshift tents perched on slivers of higher land. Some people managed to save charpoy beds, some had blankets, but most had little more than the clothes they wore.

Damaged buildings had begun emerging from the waters. Searching for something – anything – salvageable from their former lives, or perhaps simply trying to make sense of the destruction, some people clambered through their ruined houses. Watching them, I offered up a silent prayer for their safety: those damaged, unstable structures were liable to collapse at any moment.

The heart-breaking scenes in Nowshera echo throughout Pakistan, for this is a disaster on a scale that is difficult – perhaps impossible – to fully comprehend.

Triggered by a "monster monsoon" and a heatwave, glaciers burst, rivers surged, and one-third of the country sank beneath the water. The result has been unprecedented destruction across all of the country’s provinces: more than one million homes destroyed, 3.5 million acres of crops ruined, and 33 million people affected.

As I talked to Nowshera families about this "monster monsoon" season like no other, I felt heartsick at their suffering. They desperately needed food, water, shelter and hygiene kits. Left with nothing, they faced deadly diseases such as cholera and malaria, which are already on the rise in flood-affected areas.

Naz Shah MP helping with Islamic Relief food pack distribution in Nowshera, KP

Islamic Relief is working tirelessly to reach communities in dire need, but collapsed bridges and damaged roads make progress slow and sometimes perilous. We are doing all we can, and thanks to the generosity of our supporters we have been a lifeline for more than 20,000 people so far.

However, the needs here are huge. Humanitarian funding is falling disastrously short of the £136m for which the United Nations has called to support relief efforts like ours. Pakistan faces a staggering loss and damage bill of up to £20bn – a sum it is unable to pay on its own.

Somehow, in the weeks and months and even years ahead, the people of Pakistan must rebuild their lives and communities. And they do so in the certain knowledge that this disaster will not be the last. Already no stranger to flooding, the country is on the frontline of a climate breakdown that is nearing a point of no return.

Islamic Relief has been working with vulnerable communities in Pakistan for over 30 years, and will remain by their sides throughout this disaster and beyond. We will continue to provide life-saving aid. We will help communities rebuild and fortify themselves against the devastating effects of the changing climate.

And we will continue to demand that world leaders act, at last, right now, to tackle the climate emergency. To do otherwise promises more misery – not only for Pakistan, but for everyone, everywhere.

The Disasters Emergency Committee (DEC) has launched an urgent appeal to help millions across the country who are in need of immediate help to survive.  

The DEC brings together 15 leading aid agencies at times of crisis overseas. Among the DEC’s member charities, 11 – including Action Against Hunger, Islamic Relief and Save the Children – are responding either directly or through trusted local partners, but say that funds are vital to reach more of those affected with food, clean drinking water and shelter.

Waseem Ahmad is CEO of Islamic Relief Worldwide.


How to donate:       

  • Online: dec.org.uk  
  • Phone: 0330 678 1000. Standard geographic charges from landlines and mobiles will apply 
  • SMS: To donate £10 text SUPPORT to 70000. Texts cost £10 plus the standard network charge and the whole £10 goes to the DEC Pakistan Floods Appeal. You must be 16 or over and please ask the bill payer's permission. For full terms and conditions and more information go to dec.org.uk

Or donate over the counter at any high street bank or post office or send a cheque by post to DEC Pakistan Floods Humanitarian Appeal, PO Box 999, London EC3A 3AA.


 

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