The Arizona Republic

Aid for flood victims arrives in Pakistan

US operation that began last week will continue

- Zarar Khan

KARACHI, Pakistan – Two more U.S. military planes loaded with tons of aid for Pakistanis affected by flooding from deadly monsoon rains landed Sunday in southern Sindh province, one of the worst-affected regions in the impoverish­ed country.

Saif Ullah, spokesman for the country’s Civil Aviation Authority, said each plane was loaded with about 35 tons of relief aid that would be distribute­d in the province by the World Food Program. The aircraft landed at Sukkur Airport in Sindh and Ullah said the U.S. operation that began Thursday would continue until Sept. 16.

Pakistan has suffered under extremely heavy monsoon rains that started early this year – in mid-June. Multiple officials and experts have blamed the rains and resulting floodwater­s on climate change. U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres last week called on the world to stop “sleepwalki­ng” through the dangerous environmen­tal crisis. He has called repeatedly on the internatio­nal community to send massive amounts of aid to Pakistan.

Ullah said Sunday that two more flights bringing relief goods from the United Arab Emirates landed at Karachi airport. So far, U.N. agencies and several countries have sent multiple planeloads of aid, and authoritie­s say the UAE has been one of the most generous contributo­rs.

Near 1,400 people have been killed, 13,000 injured and millions left homeless by the heavy flooding since midJune. The waters also destroyed road and communicat­ions infrastruc­ture.

In the worst-hit Sindh province, 621 people, including 270 children, were killed and 8,400 people left injured.

Miles of cotton and sugarcane crops, banana orchards and vegetable fields could be seen submerged in floodwater­s. Thousands of mud and brick homes caved in under the deluge leaving people homeless and sheltering in tents alongside damaged roads.

According to the latest report from authoritie­s, the unpreceden­ted monsoon rains and flood destroyed more than 1.5 million houses, 63 bridges, 2,688 kilometers of roads and near half a million animals drowned in the flood water across the Sindh province, leaving over 30 million homeless.

Pakistan’s military chief Gen. Qamar Javed Bajwa toured the badly affected district of Dadu in Sindh and its surroundin­gs on Saturday. Dadu could suffer further flooding from the rising waters of the Indus River.

He said constructi­ng dams would help produce electricit­y, curb pollution and decrease global warming and that army engineers have been asked to conduct an initial study.

Bajwa said working on alternate energy sources is essential and called for the gradual reduction of oil and coal as energy sources to minimal levels.

Since June, heavy rains and flooding have added a new level of grief to cashstrapp­ed Pakistan and highlighte­d the disproport­ionate effect of climate change on impoverish­ed population­s.

 ?? ARSHAD BUTT/AP ?? Victims of heavy flooding wait to receive relief aid Sunday in Quetta, Pakistan.
ARSHAD BUTT/AP Victims of heavy flooding wait to receive relief aid Sunday in Quetta, Pakistan.

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