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Pakistan flood crisis as bad as African famines, UN says

 

Declan Walsh in Islamabad
The Guardian
January 27, 2011 ET

A "human­itar­ian cri­sis of epic proportions" is unfolding in flood-hit ar­eas of south­ern Pakistan where malnu­trition rates rival those of African countries af­fected by fam­ine, accord­ing to the United Nations.

In Sindh province, where some villages are still under wa­ter six months af­ter the floods, almost one quar­ter of chil­dren under five are malnour­ished while 6% are severely under­fed, a Floods As­sess­ment Needs sur­vey has found.

"I haven't seen malnu­trition this bad since the worst of the fam­ine in Ethiopia, Darfur and Chad. It's shockingly bad," said Karen Allen, deputy head of Unicef in Pakistan.

The sur­vey reflects the con­tin­u­ing impact of the massive Au­gust floods, which af­fected 20 million people across an area the size of Eng­land, sweeping away 2.2m hectares of farm­land.

The fig­ures were alarm­ing, Neva Khan, of Oxfam, said.

"Emergency aid right af­ter the floods saved many lives, but, as these fig­ures show, millions are at se­rious risk," she said.

Kris­ten Elsby, a Unicef of­ficial, called it a "human­itar­ian cri­sis of epic proportions".

But the fig­ures high­light a broad­er truth: that Sindh, a ragged province where poor peas­ants toil under powerful lan­dlords, has long had some of the worst poverty lev­els in South Asia.

"This sort of thing doesn't hap­pen overnight. It indicates deep, slow-grinding poverty," said Dorothy Blane, of Concern.

The most re­cent nu­trition sur­vey across Pakistan in 2002 found a national malnu­trition rate of 13.2%. The sur­vey of 786 house­holds, jointly carried out by the UN, aid agencies and the govern­ment, recorded glob­al malnu­trition rates of 23.1% in north­ern Sindh and 21.2% in the south­ern part of the province.

The sur­vey was done in early November but Pakistan's govern­ment, re­luc­tant to pub­lish the fig­ures, delayed their publication, accord­ing to sev­eral aid of­ficials. Fig­ures for south­ern Punjab, which was also badly hit, have yet to be finalised.

Sindh is Pakistan's third largest province and home to some of the country's deepest inequalities. Karachi is a bustling busi­ness hub of more than 16 million people. But in the country­side, feudal tra­ditions are strong, illit­eracy is rife and govern­ment ser­vices are of­ten non-exis­tent.

Health workers in refugee camps host­ing flood victims from rural Sindh reported that some expec­tant moth­ers had nev­er seen a doctor.

Across Pakistan, most of the 14 million people who fled their homes in Au­gust are rebuilding their lives. Accord­ing to the UNHCR some 166,000 people are living in 240 camps and road­side settle­ments, down from 3.3 million in October.

Much west­ern aid has been pumped into a scheme to give flood victims di­rect financial aid, starting with a pay­ment of £150. Some aid workers say it is prone to corruption.

The UK do­nated £114m which funded shelter for 1.3 million people and clean wa­ter for 2.5 million.

But more mon­ey is urgently needed. A UN appeal for $2bn to help people survive until this summer has only 56% of the funding.

Before the floods the west­ern aid effort in Pakistan focused on the north-west, where an earth­quake struck in 2005 and military op­erations against the Tal­iban have displaced millions.

Af­ter the floods, aid workers admit to be­ing caught off­guard by the prob­lem in Sindh. "It was a re­al wake-up call," said one.

Some villages in north­ern Sindh re­main under wa­ter, and where the wa­ter has cleared, ir­rigation systems lie de­stroyed, rais­ing concerns for the next har­vest this summer.

And some things will take more than food or shelter to solve. A major­ity of chil­dren in flood-af­fected ar­eas suffer from anxiety, de­pres­sion and phobias, accord­ing to a study by Save the Chil­dren.

Of the chil­dren sur­veyed, 70% ex­pressed fear of "people, wa­ter, open places and dark­ness", it found.

Source: The Guardian
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Pakistan flood crisis as bad as African famines, UN says
Declan Walsh in Islamabad
credit: Declan Walsh/Guardian
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Pakistanis wave to an army helicopter dropping food aid to a village in Sindh after the floods. A survey found 6% of people in the province are severely underfed. Photograph: Declan Walsh for the Guardian
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