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UNICEF assesses unprecedented scale of Pakistan flooding

Raabya Amjab, UNICEF

Pakistan-sukkur-camp

© UNICEF/2010/Pakistan/Dsouza

A father holds his child outside a relief camp in Sukkur, a city in Pakistan's Sindh province.

SUKKUR, Pakistan, August 23, 2010 – The extent of the misery and devastation caused by Pakistan's recent flooding is unprecedented, said UNICEF Regional Director for South Asia Daniel Toole after visiting the area last week. The country is facing its worst disaster in more than 30 years.

The magnitude of the catastrophe is the worst he has seen in the last 15 years of his experience, he added.

Pakistan-toole-camp

© UNICEF/2010/Pakistan/Dsouza

UNICEF Regional Director for South Asia Daniel Toole visits a relief camp in Sindh province, Pakistan.

Assessing the flood damage

After conducting an aerial survey of the flood-ravaged areas of Sindh province, Mr. Toole addressed a joint news conference alongside UNICEF Representative and United Nations Humanitarian Coordinator in Pakistan Martin Mogwanja, the Director General of the Provincial Disaster Management Authority and the Flood Relief Commissioner. He held additional meetings with the Governor of Sindh province and the Sindh Chief Minister, where participants jointly reviewed the flood relief efforts and the current funding gaps.

Mr. Toole also visited with families in relief camps in Sindh's Sukkur city.

After reviewing the organization's support for women and children in camps across Sukkur, Mr. Toole noted that UNICEF is currently providing clean drinking water and sanitation facilities but that "millions more need the same services."

"We urgently need to scale up the distribution of water," he said. "Otherwise, water-borne diseases such as cholera, diarrhoea and dysentery will spread and begin killing affected populations, especially children, already weak and vulnerable to disease and malnutrition."

Need to scale-up disaster relief

Pakistan-women-IDPcamp

© UNICEF/2010/Pakistan/Dsouza

Displaced women and children gather around a water pump in flood-ravaged Sindh province, Pakistan.

According to government reports, the emergency has affected some 4 million people in Sindh province alone and up to 20 million across the country.

UNICEF is one of several agencies that have been delivering much needed emergency relief in the flood zone. Teams of aid workers are providing safe drinking water – installing  hand water pumps,  bladder tanks and sanitation facilities – and distributing hygiene kits and critical medical supplies such as oral rehydration salts. Water purification tablets and vaccines are also reaching those in need, thanks largely to mobile medical teams. UNICEF is also disseminating messages on safe drinking water, hygiene, immunization, breastfeeding and safe motherhood, and is implementing education and child protection activities in the flood zone.

Mr. Toole visited safe learning and recreational spaces established for children between 3 and 12 years of age in the government-supported relief camps. In these spaces, UNICEF has trained teachers and provided students with reading and writing materials, as well as recreation kits.

"We are here for the long haul," said Mr. Toole. "It is pertinent that UNICEF and other aid agencies map out the needs and plan up for recovery, rehabilitation and safe return of the affected communities to their places of origin."

He further urged the international community to turn their commitments and donation pledges into concrete funds, ensuring that the most vulnerable victims receive the support they urgently need.

 

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WHAT YOUR MONEY CAN BUY

$20 can provide 480 High Energy Protein Biscuits to provide children nutrition in the wake of a disaster.

$140 can provide a Basic Family Water Kit to provide clean drinking water to 10 families.

$256 can provide a School-in-a-box kit to set up a temporary school for 40 students during an emergency–containing a chalk board, notebooks, pencils, erasers, scissors and even multi-band radio.

 

 

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