Wed 22 March 2023:
About six months after catastrophic floods in Pakistan, more than 10 million people still lack access to safe drinking water in areas affected by the record-breaking rains, according to a United Nations report.
Families living in flood-hit areas have “no alternative but to drink and use potentially disease-ridden water”, the UN children’s agency, or UNICEF, said in the report on Tuesday.
Pakistan’s worst floods began in June due to heavy rains. They killed at least 1,739 people, including 647 children, and affected 33 million people.
At their peak, the floods – caused by a “monsoon on steroids”, as described by UN chief Antonio Guterres – submerged more than one-third of the country.
According to UNICEF’s report, a majority of the country’s population did not have access to clean drinking water even before the floods. The disaster then caused damage to most of the water systems in affected areas and forced more than 5.4 million people, including 2.5 million children to “solely rely on contaminated water from ponds and wells”.
INFECTIOUS DISEASES IN PAKISTAN THREATEN TO CLAIM FAR MORE LIVES THAN THE FLOODS, UN CHIEF WARNS
“Open defecation has increased by more than 14 percent in the flood-affected regions,” the report said. “The lack of proper toilets is disproportionally affecting children, adolescent girls and women who are at added risk of shame and harm when defecating outdoors.”
The agency said less than half of its $173m appeal for aid has been met so far.
But it is also in the midst of economic turmoil as it waits for $1.1bn from the International Monetary Fund.
“We need the continued support of our donors to provide safe water, build toilets and deliver vital sanitation services to these children and families who need them the most,” Fadil said.
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