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Foreign countries pouring aid to Flood victims . 2022

The amount of financial aid received is tiny relative to the damage incurred - and this is reflective of the fact that no one expects the money to be received by the people that need to it as the PDM goverment is full of criminals and crooks who will launder it and of course Bajwa/Senior leadership of the Pakistan Army as always is looking to take its cut ...

Most aid - is in the form of physical aid that is more difficult to "launder" than cash would be... or countries/agencies are looking to deliver it themselves.

Tells you alot about the damage the Pakistan Army continues to cause on Pakistan and the people of Pakistan through its meddling and propping up of the PDM regime..
These materials will end up elsewhere, not with the intended people….those ppl will not even know what to do with these material supplies anyways

Sab kuch raste mei he ghaib hojaiga…..even the usaid……our ppl r experts at that

Sindh has recieved nothing from federal or privencial most hit by floods
Many planes landed at karachi airport…..but obviously ghareeb awam k liyay nai, bulke feudals k liyay aya ha bhai
 
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Got a text msg on my phone from “PAF” asking for flood relief donations

Yeah no thanks neutrals.
 
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Culpable for injustice

Zeba Sathar Published September 10, 2022 Updated about 16 hours ago




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The writer is Country Director, Population Council.

The writer is Country Director, Population Council.
1x1.2x1.5x
PAKISTAN is widely branded as the seventh country most affected by climate change. We call attention to our negligible contribution to global warming compared to other parts of the world.
Yet, on our 75th anniversary, nature’s wrath has exposed how callous we too have been as a nation in ignoring warning signals of the looming threats of climate change and rampant population growth — with dire consequences.
It is no coincidence that the hundreds of harrowing stories emerging from this calamity focus on the predicament of poor and pregnant women with more than five children. Already severely disadvantaged, the floods have only exacerbated their situation and the media is transmitting images of those who are most powerless and most affected by the devastation. These women must now deliver babies and nurse them in precarious circumstances unfit even for animals.
A large part of this was avoidable.





















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We have neglected the reproductive health of the millions of women and children already lacking family planning, delivery and maternal care services. Much alarm has been expressed that close to a million women in the most severely affected areas are currently pregnant. But it should come as no surprise that those regions most adversely affected by the floods are the ones with the highest fertility, maternal and child mortality rates.
These areas are largely deprived of family planning services and essential information, for instance, most rural women in Sindh and Balochistan still deliver in unsafe conditions remote from any health facilities. In contrast, most pregnant women in urban Pakistan deliver in institutions.
In a catastrophe of the kind, unseen anywhere in the world, we — the educated — are culpable for many injustices because this was a tragedy foretold. We lament that national and international relief are only reaching a fraction of the millions whose lives and livelihoods were swept away last month. But these were the same populations who were living in makeshift housing and who eked out a living far from major roadways and with no access to services.
Living on the edge with their multiple vulnerabilities and now displaced under open skies, they desperately await our help. The saddest part is that most want to return to their wretched conditions, resigned to their fate of toiling in the fields and tending livestock under the scorching sun. We prefer to look away from living conditions we ourselves would never endure.
We have neglected the health of millions of women and children.
For a study on Impacts of Climate Change in Vulnerable Communities in Sindh, Pakistan, in 2021, the Population Council conducted interviews in poor communities in two districts most prone to climate risk — Umerkot and Thatta. We confirmed that climate change was already a known reality in these communities. Unseasonable weather patterns leading to droughts followed by floods were already posing threats to health and livelihoods.
A man from Kambhar Badha, Umerkot, said: “If the family must evacuate, then women suffer the most, they must face difficulties during and after the move. Men can live anywhere but women suffer [more] on account of insecurity and [lack of] privacy.”
Many focused on women’s suffering from multiple hazards: “Our villages are submerged in water. We have no safe place to live. We don’t even have a place to keep our livestock and there is no fodder available for them when heavy rains hit. During heavy rainfall, no one can reach our village and many pregnant women are likely to die,” said a woman from Izzat Khan Lashari, Thatta.
For a decade or more, thousands have been forced to migrate annually from their homes devastated by droughts, forest fires and floods. Year after year, they must give up everything and start again. Despite their poverty and illiteracy, many living in the climate vulnerable zones know that their best chance for survival is to move to an urban area. Only a few fortunate enough to own land or have an education make it to the urbanised districts which are more resilient to climate change. Yet even there, the glaringly obvious exponential increase in urban populations that puts a strain on existing resources goes unaddressed.
Read: Disaster orthodoxy in Pakistan — floods aren't God's fury, we're the culprits and inaction is our sin
Elsewhere, climate change strategies ignore the mushrooming of fragile structures being built for shelter that encroach upon river and canal beds.
The important point is that from Gilgit-Baltistan to Sindh, climate and population pressures were manifesting even before the deadly floods. This has led to shortages in food because of the negative impact on our ecology and biodiversity as well as livelihoods, thereby exacerbating regional inequalities.
Most apparent are the contrasts between better-off regions like the irrigated plains of Punjab and wet mountains and plains of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa versus the sandy desert of southern Punjab, the southern irrigated plains of Sindh and the western dry plateau of Balochistan.
According to the Council’s research, the former areas with lower temperatures were able to build considerable resilience through migration, remittances, and investments in infrastructure. The latter, where temperature rises are most pronounced, had no adaptation strategies. These areas rely mainly on agriculture and livestock, now destroyed by the floods.
The tragedy facing Pakistan is sounding a loud alarm for our collective conscience. Sustainable solutions to climate change must take an honest look at the circumstances and explanations of this tragedy. We must focus on our own injustices, find our own solutions, rather than clamouring for and depending on international assistance.
Obvious recommendations are building resilience through adaptation in agriculture, dams for water storage and energy usage, and infrastructure development. However, the underlying deeper problems which face our nation in its 75th year of existence, need to be tackled with greater urgency.
Have we consciously neglected the escalation of inequalities and rising swathes of poverty over the last two decades?
Could the scale of the tragedy have been mitigated, had we been more vigilant about rebuilding outdated crumbling infrastructure, focused on the agricultural sector and, above all, prioritised health services and education in agro-climatic regions prone to climate risk?
And finally, had we addressed rapid population growth as a national priority, would we have avoided the shocking numbers severely affected by this catastrophe?
The writer is Country Director, Population Council.
Published in Dawn, September 10th, 2022
 
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i think the only solution to corruption like this is that every transaction, down to the street vendor, is digitized and made traceable and cash in hand is declared illegal. but that in itself will be a revolution on the same scale as making the sharifs and zardaris of pakistan eat a halal meal for once in their life.

Okay I gave family X in village Y food for a month. How the hell will you digitize it ?
 
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15.6 metric tons of cholera kits arrive as WHO airlifts medical supplies to Pakistan


Amin Ahmed
September 10, 2022



<p>Makeshift arrangements made by communities to connect villages with markets in flood-affected areas. — Photo by WHO/Twitter</p>


Makeshift arrangements made by communities to connect villages with markets in flood-affected areas. — Photo by WHO/Twitter
Two shipments from the United Nations carrying emergency medical supplies and flood relief equipment for victims of the catastrophic floods across Pakistan have arrived at the Jinnah International Airport in Karachi.

“The shipments contain 15.6 metric tons of cholera kits, water and multipurpose tents that can be used as medical tents,” a WHO press release said on Friday.
According to the organisation, the supplies — estimated at a total value of $174,816 — were delivered to Pakistan with the support of the government of Dubai and the International Humanitarian City.

The Dubai government and the International Humanitarian City, it said, have established an air-bridge linking UAE and Pakistan, which is now fully operational with several rotations having already arrived in the country to deliver critical humanitarian supplies in response to the recent flooding.

“The floods have severely impacted the lives of millions in Pakistan. We are currently working with the national authorities to ensure access to health care and medical supplies, mitigate the risk of disease outbreak, coordinate the response to ensure critical gaps are met, and prepare for any worsening of the situation over the coming weeks,” Dr Palitha Mahipala, WHO Representative in Pakistan, said.

“ […] This critical shipment is arriving at an opportune time and will be immensely useful in helping to strengthen essential health services and control the spread of disease, especially in displaced persons’ camps lacking safe water and sanitary conditions,“ he added.

The WHO noted that the scale of the humanitarian crisis in the flood-hit areas of Pakistan was unprecedented, with more than 33 million people affected, over a million houses damaged or destroyed, over 600,000 persons internally displaced in camps and over 1,460 health facilities damaged.

The health threats were enormous, leaving the most vulnerable, including women and children, at increased risk of diseases such as diarrhoea, cholera, malaria, dengue fever, acute respiratory infections and typhoid — already reported in flood-affected areas, it said.

“In close coordination with the ministry of national health services regulations and coordination and national institute of health and partners, WHO is playing a leading role in the health response, providing guidance and health interventions on all fronts, focusing on the current health impact of the floods, while scaling up preparedness for the additional health risks expected to emerge,” WHO added.
 
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.,..,.,,.

15.6 metric tons of cholera kits arrive as WHO airlifts medical supplies to Pakistan


Amin Ahmed
September 10, 2022



<p>Makeshift arrangements made by communities to connect villages with markets in flood-affected areas. — Photo by WHO/Twitter</p>


Makeshift arrangements made by communities to connect villages with markets in flood-affected areas. — Photo by WHO/Twitter
Two shipments from the United Nations carrying emergency medical supplies and flood relief equipment for victims of the catastrophic floods across Pakistan have arrived at the Jinnah International Airport in Karachi.

“The shipments contain 15.6 metric tons of cholera kits, water and multipurpose tents that can be used as medical tents,” a WHO press release said on Friday.
According to the organisation, the supplies — estimated at a total value of $174,816 — were delivered to Pakistan with the support of the government of Dubai and the International Humanitarian City.

The Dubai government and the International Humanitarian City, it said, have established an air-bridge linking UAE and Pakistan, which is now fully operational with several rotations having already arrived in the country to deliver critical humanitarian supplies in response to the recent flooding.

“The floods have severely impacted the lives of millions in Pakistan. We are currently working with the national authorities to ensure access to health care and medical supplies, mitigate the risk of disease outbreak, coordinate the response to ensure critical gaps are met, and prepare for any worsening of the situation over the coming weeks,” Dr Palitha Mahipala, WHO Representative in Pakistan, said.

“ […] This critical shipment is arriving at an opportune time and will be immensely useful in helping to strengthen essential health services and control the spread of disease, especially in displaced persons’ camps lacking safe water and sanitary conditions,“ he added.

The WHO noted that the scale of the humanitarian crisis in the flood-hit areas of Pakistan was unprecedented, with more than 33 million people affected, over a million houses damaged or destroyed, over 600,000 persons internally displaced in camps and over 1,460 health facilities damaged.

The health threats were enormous, leaving the most vulnerable, including women and children, at increased risk of diseases such as diarrhoea, cholera, malaria, dengue fever, acute respiratory infections and typhoid — already reported in flood-affected areas, it said.

“In close coordination with the ministry of national health services regulations and coordination and national institute of health and partners, WHO is playing a leading role in the health response, providing guidance and health interventions on all fronts, focusing on the current health impact of the floods, while scaling up preparedness for the additional health risks expected to emerge,” WHO added.

China has great influence on the UN and WHO.

Pakistan is receiving all this big help Thanks to China


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Okay I gave family X in village Y food for a month. How the hell will you digitize it ?
You do know that in some places in china and elsewhere, even beggars have gone cashless.

Now, it's tell you how the hell we'll digitize it. The head Family X will have a CNIC/ID card (if he doesn't, he better get off his *** and get one). Villages already have names but we can assign ID's in a system. It's just a number. No big deal, the only technological challenge, if any, will be the massive scale of the system.

If you think it's too much of a hassle for you if you want to give someone food, you can give them personally if you want to stay out of the system. That's no problem as you aren't to going to cheat yourself and spend the money on crack and/or hookers, are you? This system is for vast majority of people who can't be on the ground and are donating to governments and organizations and are concerned about the proper distribution of their aid.

And before you say that this is too much of a hassle, please note that this is just my suggestion for an ideal solution. Not something that will be done overnight. Just like my analogy to sharifs and zardaris eating a halal meal for once in the life.
 
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You do know that in some places in china and elsewhere, even beggars have gone cashless.

Now, it's tell you how the hell we'll digitize it. The head Family X will have a CNIC/ID card (if he doesn't, he better get off his *** and get one). Villages already have names but we can assign ID's in a system. It's just a number. No big deal, the only technological challenge, if any, will be the massive scale of the system.

If you think it's too much of a hassle for you if you want to give someone food, you can give them personally if you want to stay out of the system. That's no problem as you aren't to going to cheat yourself and spend the money on crack and/or hookers, are you? This system is for vast majority of people who can't be on the ground and are donating to governments and organizations and are concerned about the proper distribution of their aid.

And before you say that this is too much of a hassle, please note that this is just my suggestion for an ideal solution. Not something that will be done overnight. Just like my analogy to sharifs and zardaris eating a halal meal for once in the life.
the devil is in the implementation
 
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the devil is in the implementation
You could say that about almost everything. It's either that or business as usual.
The problem is not the technological undertaking, but the social revolution and access to technology and literacy etc.
 
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You could say that about almost everything. It's either that or business as usual.
The problem is not the technological undertaking, but the social revolution and access to technology and literacy etc.

i may add a little sense of ethics
 
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i may add a little sense of ethics

When I said "social revolution" and "literacy", that's part of what I was implied.
Although, good luck depending on people to bring that about. No, you need danda (stick).
Also, this applied to the entire human race. The single biggest reason people in the west follow laws and are ethical, is because they know their system works (well enough) that they'll likely get a danda up their *** if they don't. Which is also what's lacking here.
 
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