Gulf News

PM calls for global aid for flood victims

AS WINTER SETS IN, FLOOD-AFFECTED AND DISPLACED PAKISTANIS ARE IN A RACE TO FIND RELIEF

- ISLAMABAD

Pakistan’s prime minister yesterday urged the internatio­nal community to give his country desperatel­y needed aid to help 20 million flood victims survive the harsh winter, as the country struggles to cope with the humanitari­an aftermath of vast floods earlier in the year.

Prime Minister Shahbaz Sharif made the emotional appeal for help in arranging food, tents and other essential items for the millions of people the deadly floods had displaced ahead of an internatio­nal donors conference in Geneva on January 9, 2023.

“Even today, 20 million victims of the floods need urgent humanitari­an assistance,” Sharif said in televised comments during a visit to Kot Diji in the southern province of Sindh, an area widely devastated by the inundation­s.

Country submerged

Cash-strapped Pakistan was already facing a serious financial crisis before the heavy monsoon rains hit in mid-June. The rains triggered unpreceden­ted floods that at one point submerged a third of the country’s territory.

Sharif said Pakistan was suffering from climate change induced floods, despite having a negligible share in global carbon emissions.

The United Nations (UN) in Geneva will co-host the Internatio­nal Conference on Climate Resilient Pakistan to raise much-needed funds for the victims of last summer’s widerangin­g floods that killed 1,739 people, destroyed 2.2 million homes and affected 33 million Pakistanis.

Sharif said he plans to travel to Switzerlan­d to lay out for the world community the ordeal of the flood victims, tens of thousands of whom are still living in open areas.

Sharif said nine million children are among those flood survivors who were “desperatel­y waiting for help.” His government was trying to help flood victims with its limited resources, he said.

Sharif added that snow has started falling in some of the flood-hit areas in the northwest and southweste­rn Baluchista­n province, adding more misery to the plight of flood survivors.

Looking to the sky for aid

“People living in such areas are looking toward the sky for help. They are waiting for tents and aid,” he said.

Sharif claimed Pakistan’s government was using all its resources to ensure that flood victims return to normal life by rebuilding destroyed homes and communitie­s. In recent weeks, many of the flood survivors have returned to their villages.

The floods also destroyed much of the country’s crops. Pakistan says the inundation­s caused up to $40 billion (Dh146 billion) in damages to its economy.

 ?? AP ?? Residents of flood-hit areas use a makeshift barge to carry hay for cattle, in Jaffarabad. This year’s rains triggered unpreceden­ted floods that at one point submerged a third of the country.
AP Residents of flood-hit areas use a makeshift barge to carry hay for cattle, in Jaffarabad. This year’s rains triggered unpreceden­ted floods that at one point submerged a third of the country.

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