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Update (11): Action Alert | Sindh Pakistan Floods 2011 | A humanitarian disaster the world is just waking up to

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Last Updated: October 05, 2011

 

The floods that hit Pakistan in 2010 were the worst in the history of the country, submerging nearly a fifth of the country under water, affecting 20 million people, rendering over 400,000 homeless, killing around 2000 people, and ruining over 1.6 million acres of crops!

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Relief agencies and private individuals in Pakistan and all over the world scrambled to provide aid to the affected. Newspapers were filled with photographs of the flood and its hapless victims, prompting people to do more.

Snap back one year later to the present, as the citizens had yet to return to some sense of normalcy, putting behind the haunting memories of the past year, the skies opened up again and the province of Sindh, specifically the central part of it (in the areas of Thatta, Badin, Tando Muhammad Khan, Tando Allahyar, Mirpurkhas, Tharparkar and Benazirabad) started being deluged once again. As rains continue the area being affected has widened.

 

Image courtesy United Nations

Map of the flood affected area courtesy United Nations

 

Table of contents

The Eid that got washed away

Springing into action

Some Facts

On ground videos

Pictures

Medical Teams

How may I help?

Related Articles

 

The Eid that got washed away

As Muslims world over celebrated the end of Ramadan with a festive Eid celebration and buffets of food, the citizens of these areas left their homes and watched their belongings drown as the skies continued to pour torrents on them. Unfortunately, for them though, the world took time to wake up to their plight.

The ineffective and red-tape ridden government, as usual, was slow to respond and like the year before the responsibility for welfare and support of the affected was left to relief efforts by private agencies and individuals as had been the case the year before.

Springing into action

In the second half of Ramadan, I was contacted by fellow Bloggers Dr Awab Alvi and Faisal Kapadia asking for me to join in the fund raising efforts to support the people of Badin and surrounding areas where the rains had already started to cause damage. Members of PkRelief (a joint effort of Offroad Pakistan and SA Relief) had once again sprung into action and were gearing up for relief efforts. The initial plan was to adopt 3 camps in Badin with the support of Nishat Welfare Organization, an NGO already working in the area, to feed and house 1000 IDPs (internally displaced persons) and to eventually rehabilitate them once they move back after the rains. While the initial response to fund requests was great, as the scope of this disaster grows, the requirement for funds has grown huge. As the scale of this calamity grows, the response from the world and the news organization is slowly increasing.

The United Nations has launched an appeal to raise USD 357 million to provide food, water, sanitation services, healthcare and emergency shelter to the worst-hit families for six months.

Some facts

  • 8,920,631 people have been affected due to the rains and floods (that’s the population of New York City or the population of Chicago, Los Angeles, & Houston combined!)
  • 1,524,841 homes have been devastated
  • 37,498 villages affected
  • 6,791,067 acres (10,611 sq miles) of land has been damaged (that’s an area bigger than the states of Connecticut, Delaware and Rhode Island combined)
  • 2,166,623 acres (3,385 sq miles) of crops has been wiped out
  • 550,186 people have been provided space make-shift camps – the remaining remain in the open without a roof
  • 450 people have lost their lives, 756 people have been injured

(Source: National Disaster Management Authority, 10 October 2011)

 

A food hamper (distributed by PkRelief) costs USD 15

and feeds a family of 04 for 08 days. It consists of:

  • 10 kg wheat flour
  • 10 kg rice
  • 2 kg dal (lentils)
  • 1 litre cooking oil
  • 1 kg dates

A Relief pack distributed by Indus Foundation Trust costs USD 23:

  • 10kg Flour
  • 5kg Rice
  • 2.5kg Ghee
  • 1kg Sugar
  • 1kg Channa Dal
  • 1Kg Moong Dal
  • 0.5Kg Milk Powder
  • 1 Packet Matchbox
  • 1 Packet Candles
  • 1 Packet Tea
  • 1 Packet Salt
  • Mix Masala
  • 2 soaps

On Ground Videos

The following documentary made by the team of PkRelief during their post-Eid trip to the affected area shows the devastation, the situation on the ground, and the efforts of the PkRelief team.

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_l5WV6hgawg&feature=player_embedded[/youtube]

While the documentary is in English, the testimonials are in Sindhi and Urdu. The first man in the line is being asked how many times a day they are fed. He responds twice a day but no medicines. He says there is no government presence. The second man in the village of Khoski says his Eid salat was performed in the rain. He works in the sugar mill on a salary of Rs 6000 (less than USD 70) per month. In addition, his family had crops on 5 acres of land which was completely wiped out. People who come from other areas are sitting on the sides of the road, their houses destroyed. There is no presence of any government, or the local landlords nor is there much presence of big name NGOs. Says most of them distribute in Badin and leave and never reach Khoski. He praises the Falah-i-Insaniyat Foundation (the welfare arm of the militant Lashkar-e-Tayyiba) which is the only organization actively working in Khoski at the moment ( incidentally FIF or Jamat-ud-Dawa as it was known earlier was prominent in the rescue efforts during the Earthquake in 2005, the Swat IDP crisis and last year’s floods).

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BaE2-gJKsMc&feature=player_embedded[/youtube]

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T4VrXlFoUyw&feature=player_embedded[/youtube]

Pictures

The pictures have been provided by Faisal Kapadia and Fursid Photography.

More Pictures

The Atlantic

Sanghar Medical And Relief Camp

SA Relief

Young Doctors Association Relief Camp

Young Doctors Association Relief Camp 2

SA Relief Mission to Moro

 

 

Medical Teams

I spoke to Dr Faraz Chaudhary, who is General Secretary of the Young Doctors Association of Rahim Yar Khan, and currently working as part of the Relief team from Young Doctors Association of Rahim Yar Khan. Their base is Kot Ghulam Muhammad about 40km from Mirpurkhas with 03 teams of 06 doctors each in different localities trying to provide medical relief.  Faraz told me

“I worked in the Bhong region last year and my team managed 07 camps and treated about 41000 patients but conditions here are 100 times worse.”

Based on last year’s experience Faraz gave a list of necssary medicines that would be required to carry out the relief efforts.

  1. Ciprofloxacin
  2. Levofloxacin
  3. Eye drops for conjunctivitis which will soon become epidemic
  4. Loads of Oral Rehydration Salts (ORS)
  5. Flagyl
  6. Ranitidine
  7. Pain killers
  8. Anti malarial medicines
  9. Polyfax skin ointment
  10. Pyodene and bandages
  11. Surgical blades and gloves
  12. Septran (not the first choice but is cheap and very effective)
  13. Anti histamines
  14. Oral hypoglycemics
  15. Augmentin
  16. Inhalors
  17. Ventolin

It is recommended for donors outside Pakistan to send cash rather than kind while those in Pakistan may donate medicines in kind (depending on the relief agency they are donating to)

How may I help?

  • Donate your money: See the information below for the organizations working below and help them by donating generously.
  • Donate your time: start fund raising efforts among your friends and co-workers. Send it to one of the organizations listed below.
  • Share this article: Press Like on Facebook, Tweet it out, post it on Google, e -mail it to your friends.

 

PkRelief / SA Relief

For further information please email Dr Awab Alvi, Faisal Kapadia, Abdulrahman Rafiq, or Sabahat Ashraf at pkfloods@sarelief.com.

Funds are being collected by Paksef (Pakistan Science and Engineering Foundation) which is a 501(c)(3) tax-deductible non-profit Corporation in California. SA Relief operates under Paksef.

Local Pakistan residents can donate via our local Bank:

Bank: Bank Al Habib

Account Title: Abdul Rahim

Account#: 1078-0081-001670-01-4

Branch Code: 1078

Contact Person: Email Faisal Kapadia at pkfloods@sarelief.com

 

Karachi Relief Trust

Donation through cheques can be made in favor of Karachi Relief Trust

You can also deposit donations directly to our account:

Title: Karachi Relief Trust

AC#: 0786-79007283-03

Bank: Habib Bank Ltd.

Address: Corporate Center, 2 HBL Plaza, I I Chundrigar Road, Karachi.

For those making payments from abroad:

Swift: HABBPKKA

 

Rotary Club of Karachi

Rotary Club of Karachi Charitable Trust

Standard Chartered Bank NY USA

ABA No 026002561, SWIFT Code SCBLUS – 33XXX  for credit to

Bank Al Habib Ltd Account No: 3582035242001 for further credit to

BAHLPKKAKHI for ultimate credit to

Rotary Club of Karachi Charitable Trust

Account No: 1001-0081-168218-01-7

Note: Please send an email to rotarykhi@gmail.com with the donation details so we may check with the bank and send you a receipt / accounts / pictures for your record. We can also provide you a Certificate for Income Tax exemption for use in Pakistan.

Indus Foundation Trust

Please send your cheques to THE INDUS FOUNDATION TRUST, or if you have goods to deliver, please bring them to the collection point at 49 Old Clifton, Karachi. Phones 00 92 21 35834663/4   Fax: 00 92 21 35837201.

For those sending remittances from abroad please send to

FCY Acct Tameer Bank in HBM 20310-333-400598 for onward credit to

Acc no: 151006003997001 Habib Metropolitan Bank
Main Branch Swift Code MPBLPKKA001
USD Correspondent Habib American Bank
Swift Code HANYUS33

 

 

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Aly is an entrepreneur who was born and raised in Karachi, Pakistan where he currently resides. He has been associated with many diverse fields such as Textiles, Cement, Minerals & Ores, Feeds and Agri-Commodities. As a Life Coach, NLP Practitioner, and Hypnotist, he works with clients to reach the Next Level in their personal and professional lives, to breakthrough performance blocks, self-doubts, or habits that limit them from reaching their true potential. Send him a message to find out more. Known on Social Media as DiscoMaulvi, he serves in operational and advisory roles for LiveDeen and Azaan Institute. He is also a co-founder and trustee of Ihsaas Trust, a not-for-profit started in 2012 with a vision to improve social mobility for Karachi’s under-privileged. Our distinguishing factor is the efficient utilization of Sadaqah and Zakat for healthcare and rations and to provide micro-finance for Enterprise Facilitation. Aly joined the team of MM in 2011 as a blogger/writer and is currently the Team Lead for the Comments Team and a former member of the Executive Shurah. He is easily accessible via Twitter or through his Public Page on Facebook where you can learn more about him.

8 Comments

8 Comments

  1. Mehzabeen (iMuslim)

    September 15, 2011 at 9:51 AM

    SubhanAllah… I was wondering the state of Pakistan when I first heard that the Monsoon rains had returned. Is this level of flooding a regular occurrence, or is it something attributed to global warming or freak weather? If people have settled there, it makes me think it wasn’t a regular occurrence in the past… but might be in the future, a’authobillah? :(

    • Aly Balagamwala

      September 15, 2011 at 10:21 AM

      Mehzabeen, while Badin has suffered in the past due to rains, this phenomenon of flooding is increasing every year. May Allah (SWT) protect them.

  2. Bint Sadaqah

    September 15, 2011 at 9:57 AM

    I just donated 100 USD to the ChipIn Fund… May Allah accept it from me and ease the suffering of my brothers and sisters, ameen. Please MMers, donate now!

    • Aly Balagamwala

      September 15, 2011 at 10:22 AM

      Jazak’Allah Khairin Sister for this donation. May Allah (SWT) reward you and make it a source of Sadqa-e-Jariyah for you.

  3. Yasmin

    September 15, 2011 at 10:16 AM

    Since I don’t watch the news very often Jazakallah khair for this very informative update! May Allah (swt) have Mercy on the victims!

  4. Maryam

    September 16, 2011 at 5:36 PM

    JazakAllah khayr for spreading awareness. May Allah subhanahu wa ta’ala bless you with all good in both this world and the Hereafter ameen!

  5. Muslim Stranger

    September 23, 2011 at 4:08 AM

    Assalam-oAlaikum,

    Funds required.
    Visit link below also:

    http://www.download.farhathashmi.com/dn/Portals/0/welfare-dawah/Flood-Relief-2011/index.html

    Jazakallahu khair

  6. Pingback: Pakistan Floods 2011 | This is the ground reality | The Friday Times | MuslimMatters.org

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