Otago Daily Times

Financial help needed after floods — minister

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ISLAMABAD: Pakistan needs financial help to deal with ‘‘overwhelmi­ng’’ floods, its foreign minister said yesterday, adding that he hoped financial institutio­ns such as the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund would take the economic fallout into account.

Unusually heavy monsoon rains have caused devastatin­g floods in both the north and south of the country, affecting more than 30 million people and killing more than 1000.

‘‘I haven’t seen destructio­n of this scale, I find it very difficult to put into words . . . it is overwhelmi­ng,’’ Foreign Minister Bilawal BhuttoZard­ari said in an interview with Reuters, adding many crops that provided much of the population’s livelihood­s had been wiped out.

‘‘Obviously this will have an effect on the overall economic situation,’’ he said.

The nation was already in an economic crisis, facing high inflation, a depreciati­ng currency and a current account deficit.

The IMF will decide this week on whether to release $US1.2 billion ($NZ1.96 billion) as part of the seventh and eighth tranches of Pakistan’s bailout programme, which it entered in 2019.

BhuttoZard­ari said the board was expected to approve the release given an agreement between Pakistani officials and IMF staff had already been reached and he hoped in coming months the IMF would recognise the impact of the floods.

‘‘Going forward, I would expect not only the IMF, but the internatio­nal community and internatio­nal agencies to truly grasp the level of devastatio­n,’’ he said.

BhuttoZard­ari, the son of assassinat­ed former prime minister Benazir Bhutto, said the economic impact was still being assessed, but that some estimates had put it at $US4 billion.

Given the hit to infrastruc­ture and people’s livelihood­s, he expected the total figure would be much higher.

Pakistan would this week launch an appeal asking United Nations member states to contribute to relief efforts, BhuttoZard­ari said, and the country needed to look at how it would handle the longer term impacts of climate change.

‘‘In the next phase, when we look towards rehabilita­tion and reconstruc­tion, we will have conversati­ons not only with the IMF, but with the World Bank, the Asian Developmen­t Bank.’’

After relief efforts, the country would have to look at how to develop infrastruc­ture that was more resistant to both floods and droughts and address the huge changes faced by the agricultur­e sector, BhuttoZard­ari said.

‘‘Despite the fact that Pakistan contribute­s negligible amounts to the overall carbon footprint . . . we are devastated by climate disasters such as these time and time again, and we have to adapt within our limited resources, however we can, to live in this new environmen­t,’’ he said. — Reuters

 ?? PHOTO: REUTERS ?? Inundated . . . A man wades through floodwater­s carrying his granddaugh­ter on his back in Charsadda, Pakistan yesterday.
PHOTO: REUTERS Inundated . . . A man wades through floodwater­s carrying his granddaugh­ter on his back in Charsadda, Pakistan yesterday.

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