Coalition of the willing

Author: Agencies

Pakistan and United Nations jointly launched a flash appeal to seek more assistance and aid for the population affected by the cataclysmic floods that hit the country in June and still keep thousands of acres inundated after 16 weeks.

Addressing the forum in Geneva to launch the second Humanitarian Appeal with the UN Office for the victims of the devastating floods in Pakistan, Federal Minister for Climate Change Sherry Rehman demanded the world community to establish a coalition of the willing to support flood relief efforts in Pakistan caused due to gigantic natural catastrophe. “We have been working round the clock, flat out through the aftershocks and still continue but just to pick up the pieces honestly we will literally need a new coalition of the willing as it can be done for the wars so it can be done to save lives.”

The minister underlined that in the monstrous downpour that inundated more than one third of her country approximately 1,700 people had lost their lives that was still rising, adding, “and close to 13,000 are injured, 7.9 million still displaced whereas women and children make up 70% of the total 33 million affected population.” She mentioned that one third of all recorded deaths and injuries were children, however, the country was still in the longest rescue, relief and lifesaving phase crossing 16 nightmarish weeks.

She said it was no ordinary disaster monsoon and floods as the nation was used to all of them. “But this is Climate Change making landfall in a country with almost no carbon footprint and as you saw we are responsible for less than one percent global greenhouse gas emissions.” “As the magnitude of the tragedy unfolded because it took much longer than any other disaster we have experienced, it is becoming clear to all that it was the meta climate of the century crossing all records for the whole world not just for Pakistan.” She added that no evidence was found highlighting such massive population and area affected in any climate event in the world history.

The minister pointed out that most of the videos presented the later parts of which showed inundated swathes of land were from the southern part of the country. “If you find ground in the South which is a dryland then it is hard to find means for shelter, to get shelter to many areas let alone food, health and hygiene because there are so many in the stress from the trauma of displacement, death and now of course disease.” While comparing the scale of devastation of floods, she said 33 million people were affected that were seven million more than the entire population of Australia.

“Imagine rescuing, feeding, sheltering and resettling. It is beyond the available resources in many ways for any of us.”

She added that the damage was colossal as this was principally because of three different types of flooding including flash flooding, hill torrents and the monster monsoon. They had all clustered in one defining climate disaster to create new records of extreme weather and water volumes, volatility and unpredictability, she added.

Almost, 34 districts were still crisis affected with 46,000 square kilometers 16 weeks later in fluid conditions, no pun on water with just again for perspective was more than Switzerland’s entire physical area. “The affected population in these districts is again more than the size of Portugal and Switzerland’s population combined.” “These are not statistics you saw that these are real people on the ground whose eyes are still wakened from the shock that they have faced because overnight they have been turned into poster children of extreme vulnerability with futures that are entirely precarious and particularly for women who are layered with another burden of compounded social fragility.” She added that with 11 districts still under water it was quite surreal to see Pakistan Navy deployed in inland terrain to service those who have survived. We have never had the Navy inside the country but it has to.”

She told the forum that many still were seeking in land hubs for clean water, food, medical assistance and tragically even dry land in the South in Sindh province to bury their dead. “There wasn’t room or time or space to bury their dead.” She added that the inundation had increased the risk exposure of millions pushed into fresh perils by the health emergency which was now mincing the country. “We are urgently in the need of life saving medicines among other things that is all part of your appeal document. And I am sure you can see what else can be sent to the ground.”

The Minister highlighted that for the government of Pakistan and its people it was a real race against time as winter was also approaching. “Left to the mercy of open sky, shelters have been made available for some 598,000 masses while over 7.9 million are still scrambling for the dryland as you saw many of them were inundated which we desperately need as cold weather is very near.”

Sherry Rehman noted that some four million people were living in the areas where temperatures reach sub zero and even in the warmest affected areas mercury typically falls below 10 degrees Celsius.

The Minister also said that winter was approaching and goods for winter to have the affected survive to another bit of winter was the really need of the hour. She said with FAO survey suggesting 9.4 million acres standing crops damaged but even more acres of standing crops were inundated and affected. “This will directly put at risk 14.6 million who live and work very close to nature in the line of a food sector and agriculture crisis.

She added that livelihoods would continue to face severe aftershocks as the cattle etc. were all drowned and 15.4 million more people would be pushed into hard scrabbled poverty and there were already many people. The minister informed that the relief efforts were also slowed down as the fury of the floods had whipped out over 13,000 kilometers of roads and torn down 440 bridges all over the country. Moreover, the railway lines were still not fully restored in the affected areas.

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