PAKISTAN: Shelter most pressing issue in flood-affected area
Source: IRIN
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QAMBER, 30 August 2007 (IRIN) - Two
months after floods caused by heavy tropical rains displaced hundreds of thousands of people in Pakistan's Sindh and Balochistan provinces, shelter is the most urgent issue in the affected area, flood
victims and aid workers say. "Our lives have been ruined," Zarina, a flood victim, said. "We have nothing, not even clothes. It gets unbearably hot here and we don't have
electricity most of the time. My little son is suffering and he can't get any medical attention." Zarina is one of over 300 people who have been forced to seek shelter in a high school in
the small town of Qamber in rural Sindh after floodwaters inundated their village destroying mud-houses and carrying away livestock in late June. Almost 400 people were estimated to have been killed
then, with over 2.5 million affected and close to 400,000 displaced by the floods. According to an initial estimate by the National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA), over 35,000 people who were
displaced by the floods now live in camps or makeshift shelters across the flood-affected region. However, with more rain having fallen, locals in both provinces say the number of people living in
temporary shelters is much higher than the number quoted by the NDMA. Most houses destroyed Asif Khan, a regional social mobilisation specialist with the UN Human Settlements Programme (UN
HABITAT) who toured the flood-affected districts in Balochistan soon after the deluge, told IRIN that nearly all the houses in the region had been destroyed by the floods. "According to what we
saw, nearly 80 to 90 percent of mostly mud-houses had been destroyed and, according to our estimate, nearly 50 percent of their livestock also perished. Agriculture is their main staple so they keep
seeds stored for next year and so on, but even their storage facilities were inundated so they lost practically everything they had: houses, livestock, everything," Khan said. Conditions "worse
than expected" In Balochistan's sub-district of Kona Tamba, people living in tents or simply sleeping out in the open on charpoys (local beds) - on higher ground alongside swamped fields - stared
listlessly at an aid vehicle making its bumpy way across a dirt-track. "We did a damage needs assessment soon after the disaster and we reported that the people here are facing very bad living
conditions," Haji Imran, a field assistant with the Relief International non-governmental organisation (NGO), said. "But the ground reality is that conditions for flood-refugees are even
worse than we expected. They don't have enough tents, they don't have enough medication, they don't have clean drinking water and the heat makes it even tougher for them. They're
really up against it," Imran said. "Nothing to protect us from mosquitoes" A few hundred miles away, in the Sindhi sub-district of K.N. Shah, an old woman struggled to balance a tent on her
shoulder as she lagged behind two other women carrying similar burdens. A few men strode more briskly into the distance with more tents balanced on their shoulders. The tents were distributed by Sujag
Sansar Organisation, a local NGO. "My entire family has been living out in the open for the past two months. We have been sleeping along the road with nothing to protect us from mosquitoes. Now
we have a tent but only my sons' children and my sick daughter will be able to sleep in it - the rest of us will have to make do as we have been doing," the old woman, who refused to give
her name, told IRIN. Roads washed away Problems for a population already under strain are compounded further by a badly hit road infrastructure: most roads in areas where the water still runs six
to seven feet deep were ripped out of their foundations by rushing flood-waters. Now, locals say, villages situated further away from the main roads in Sindh's Dadu District, one of the most badly
affected areas, have been completely cut off for the past two months - and a lack of access for aid agencies and other NGOs means that essential food items and medical supplies cannot reach stranded
villagers. "I don't know if we'll be able to survive till the end of the year," a woman called Bushra said, as she prepared to climb aboard a boat that would take her across a
30-foot gap where a road had once been. "Our village hasn't received any help and people are dying. There are snakes everywhere and our village is surrounded by water." as/at/ar/cb© IRIN. All rights reserved. More humanitarian news and analysis: http://www.irinnews.org










