• Published 14:02 16.08.10
  • Latest update 14:02 16.08.10

Pakistan floods leave millions stranded with no food or water

UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon urges foreign donors to speed up aid and warns of more destruction.

By Reuters Tags: Israel news Pakistan Ban Ki Moon UN

Pakistan authorities forecast on Monday a brief respite in rains that sparked the country's
worst floods in decades, but aid agencies warned help was too slow to arrive for millions without clean water, food and homes.

Water levels in the Indus River feeding Pakistan's plains have fallen in Punjab, the country's most populous and worst hit province, although flooding would stay high where
embankments were breached. In Sindh province, flooding could get worse.

Much damage has already been done and on Sunday, UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon urged foreign donors to speed up aid and warned of more destruction after floods that have
already disrupted lives of a tenth of its 170 million people.

"In Punjab, the water level in the river is falling and in the next 4-5 days ... there will be scattered rains, but they are not flood-producing," Qamar-uz-Zaman Chaudhry, Director
General, Meteorological department, told Reuters.

"Where there has been breaches, the water will continue to flow into the plain areas."

Hundreds of villages across Pakistan in an area roughly the size of Italy have been marooned, highways have been cut in half and thousands of homeless people have been forced to set up tarapaulin tents along the side of roads.

Up to 1,600 people have been killed, two million made homeless and public anger has grown, adding to risks of political instability and economic downturn for an unpopular
government that is already reeling from a militant insurgency

"The speed with which the situation is deteriorating is frightening," said Neva Khan, Oxfam's country director in Pakistan.

"Communities desperately need clean water, latrines and hygiene supplies, but the resources currently available cover only a fraction of what is required."


Only a quarter of the e459 million aid needed for initial relief has arrived, according to the United Nations. That contrasts with the United States giving at least e1 billion in
military aid last year to its regional ally to battle militants.

The UN has reported the first case of cholera amid fears that disease outbreaks.

"As humanitarians we certainly are on high alert because we have to be able to be prepared for any kind of development," said UN spokesman Maurizio Giuliano. "We don't know which way it's going to go. More flooding is certainly possible."

Pakistan's government has been accused of being too slow to respond to the crisis with victims relying mostly on the military -- the most powerful institution in Pakistan -- and
foreign aid agencies for help.

Analysts said a perception that Pakistan was corrupt coupled with President Asif Ali Zardari's visit to Europe at the time of the crisis had also done little to encourage
foreign donors.

Despite the government's perceived failure to tackle the crisis, a military coup is unlikely. The army's priority is fighting Taliban insurgents, and seizing power during a disaster would make no sense, analysts say.

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  • 6. 1 1
    Floods/Misery in Pakistan
    • sanjay M
    • 17.08.10
    • 21:27

    As an American of Indian decent, I feel for the Pakistanis going thru this misery. However the situation can be made better if their ignorant rulers could use some common sense. India the next door neighbour has offered to help them at their time of need with more money than most EU countries, however Pakisanis refuse to accept that aid. They rather go around the world with begging bowl than accpet unconditional relief from India. last year with large shortages of sugar , Pakistan was forced to imports large stocks to satisfy domestic needs at much higher prices than they could buy directly from India. Some time Ignorance is a bliss for Pakistani rulers. Pakistan could easily provide world class relief operations to it's affected people by removing troops amassed at the border with India and diverting some of the military budget geared primarily towards India. But a country proud and stupid as Pakistan is , they rather have 20 million people affected by the floods die than reduce it's unnecessary armed forces budget geared towards a Indian threat which is largely in their own minds. Pakistanis should be ashamed to have been ruled by a corrupt system for over 64 years.

  • 5. 1 2
    Well-laid trap
    • Bikku
    • 17.08.10
    • 19:50

    Nobody knows Pakistanis and Pakistan better than Indians and India. All this talk of less aid flow to Pakistan for the survivors of floods is just a trap. Innumerous floods and quakes have happened in Pakistan for the last 60 years and all the foreign aid that the world community has given all these years have been routed not to the poor, but to those Islamic terrorist organizations who have been hand and glove with Pakistani military establishment whose policy is spread of Islam through blood and blade with the destruction of nonbelievers of Islam i.e. Hindus, Jews, and Christians. The Pakistani govt takes humanitrian aid from the west and never stops mosques from airing hatred against the same west, only because they believe in a culture that is contrary to what Islam profess. Still the West does not learn this simple trap.

  • 4. 1 1
    Pakistan funds
    • Anna - Canada
    • 17.08.10
    • 09:55

    I'm not sure anyone really cares. There are problems closer to home. Do the Pakistani's help themselves at all - smaller families, not living in a flood plain. Some people will always end up victims. Small countries/small population tax base and large countries with small population small tax base can't support the whole world especially when that world doesn't control it's population numbers.

  • 3. 1 1
    WHY THE SNOT?
    • ANNA KEPPA
    • 16.08.10
    • 23:16

    Why the snot about the US giving money to battle militants/ aka Al Qaeda and the Taliban, who made war on us? Just which country was it that sent a flotilla of aircraft carriers and huge military cargo planes to aid the tsunami victims? How much aid do oil - rich Islamic nations contribute when such catastrophes befall their religious brethren?

  • 2. 6 7
    Saudi Arabia ,Kuweit ,UAE ...do they contribute ?
    • Absolute Sweden
    • 16.08.10
    • 18:43

    And US conducts drone raids amidst deluge ,killing Taleban leaders Not a penny for Pakistan from me .

    • 1 0
      SAUDIS AND KUWEITS!!!!
      • KEMAL
      • 17.08.10
      • 03:16

      THEY HAVE BIGGER CONCERNS THAN FEEDING THEIR FELLOW MUSLIM BROTHERS. SUCH AS BUILDING PALM WORLD TOWERS IN THE MIDDLE OF THE SEA OR HAVING THE BIGGEST BUILDING IN THE MIDDLE OF THE DESSERT.

  • 1. 5 3
    give money
    • justvisiting
    • 16.08.10
    • 16:26

    i note that readers haven't commented on this thread - probably because it's actually something you could help with!