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Pakistan floods - North Sindh

Pakistan flood response is still “an emergency”

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  • More than six months since floods began devastating Pakistan, people’s basic needs in the worst affected areas are not being met.
  • The lack of adequate food, water and healthcare for devastated communities is resulting in high levels of malaria and malnutrition.
  • International and national organisations in Pakistan must scale up their response, providing food, water, sanitation, health care and shelter as a priority.

Sindh, Pakistan - Staff from Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) are seeing alarmingly high numbers of people with malaria and children with malnutrition among flood-affected communities in Sindh and eastern Balochistan provinces, Pakistan.

Catastrophic flooding began in the country in June, and the situation remains an emergency, with critical humanitarian needs. The current response is inadequate. People’s basic needs, including access to essential food assistance, healthcare and safe drinking water, in the worst flood-affected areas remain unmet.

“While the focus is shifting towards recovery and reconstruction, a scaled-up humanitarian response to meet people’s immediate needs is absent,” says Edward Taylor, MSF’s emergency coordinator in northern Sindh and eastern Balochistan. “Humanitarian organisations and government agencies involved in the response must not forget that the situation remains critical.”

“We are months into this response and our teams in Sindh and eastern Balochistan still see people living in tents and makeshift shelters,” says Taylor. “In these winter months, people are becoming more vulnerable.”

Pakistan floods - East Balochistan
A view of a flood-hit village where the families are sheltering in tents. Border of Eastern Balochistan and North Sindh provinces, Pakistan, October 2022.
Zahra Shoukat/MSF

In Sindh and eastern Balochistan, MSF teams are seeing high numbers of people needing treatment for malaria. Despite the colder season, when malaria rates would be expected to decline, we continued to see malaria rates of 50 per cent during December in people screened in our mobile medical clinics. Our teams have treated more than 42,000 patients for the disease since October.

In addition, the floods have destroyed extensive areas of crops and livestock, which represent the main source of livelihood for many communities. In northern Sindh and eastern Balochistan, our teams are already seeing alarming numbers of acute malnutrition. Since the start of our activities in these regions, we have screened a total of 28,313 children for malnutrition in our mobile medical clinics. Of those screened, 23 per cent (6,489) had severe acute malnutrition and 31 per cent (8,738) had moderate acute malnutrition, together comprising more than half of the children who arrived at our clinics.

MSF emergency teams are running mobile clinics and malaria teams that visit more than 50 locations per week in the Dadu, Jacobabad, and Shahadat Kot districts of Sindh and Jaffarabad, Naseerabad, Sohbatpur, Jhal Magsi, and Usta Mohammed districts in eastern Balochistan. So far, we have provided basic medical care to more than 92,000 people, mainly for skin diseases, malaria, respiratory tract infections, and diarrhoea.

Ensuring adequate food, water, sanitation, healthcare and shelter must be a priority for the international and national response to the catastrophic flooding in Pakistan. Edward Taylor, MSF emergency coordinator in Pakistan

Those returning to their villages are finding destroyed houses and land, still surrounded by stagnant water. The devastating loss of homes and belongings impacts people’s mental health, as well as their livelihoods. MSF teams are providing psychological first aid and group counselling sessions to support people during this extremely difficult time.

Meanwhile, those remaining in camps and informal shelters are faced with the encroaching threat of winter. MSF continues to tailor its distribution of non-food items for the season with additional blankets for winter; in the past two weeks, 6,000 households have received these relief packages.

“In the areas where we are working, water has yet to recede, and the emergency medical and humanitarian needs remain high,” says Taylor. “People urgently need access to food assistance, safe drinking water, healthcare and shelter. We are still very much in an emergency phase.”

Pakistan floods - East Balochistan
An MSF nurse conducts a rapid malaria test of the eldest daughter of Sher Dil. He brought his children to an MSF mobile clinic after they had had a fever for the previous few days. Manjoo Shori, Eastern Balochistan province, Pakistan, October 2022.
Zahra Shoukat/MSF

In Sindh and eastern Balochistan, many people whose villages are now accessible found that water sources are still contaminated and they must get drinking water from far away. Crops and food stores have been destroyed, livestock have died, and fields will not be ready for the next planting season, increasing the risk of further food insecurity.

MSF teams are continuing to provide safe drinking water to rural communities, with more than 20 million litres provided so far. The teams have also helped to distribute 15,973 hygiene kits to families of remote flood-affected areas.

“Ensuring adequate food, water, sanitation, healthcare and shelter must be a priority for the international and national response to the catastrophic flooding in Pakistan,” says Taylor. “Many people in affected areas have immediate, urgent needs that cannot wait.”

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