Over 90,000 people treated for infections, water-borne diseases in single day in Sindh as floods toll mounts

The death toll from catastrophic floods crossed 1,500 on Friday as thousands of displaced citizens in Sindh — where floodwaters and hill torrents have converged after wreaking havoc elsewhere in the country — were treated from infectious and water-borne diseases.

In a report issued on Friday, the Sindh Directorate General Health Services said 92,797 citizens were treated on September 15 (Thursday). Of these, 588 were confirmed to have malaria with another 10,604 cases.


  • Dadu DC says markets in Mehar city have opened partially, citizens have started returning
  • River Indus witnessing medium-level flood on Friday afternoon
  • Tent village set up at 500-kilowatt grid station in Dadu
  • UN official says “situation beyond bleak”

The report said that 17,977 cases of diarrhoea and 20,064 skin disease cases were reported on Thursday, alongside 28 cases of dengue. A total of 2.3 million patients have been treated since July 1 in the field and mobile hospitals set up in the flooded region.

Further, the National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA) said 22 flood-related deaths were reported over the last 24 hours. Since June 14, 1,508 people have died.

In its daily situation report, the NDMA also said nine individuals were injured in flood-related incidents during the last 24 hours, taking the total to 12,758.

Recent floods, brought by record monsoon rains and glacial melt in northern mountains, have also swept away homes, vehicles, crops and livestock in damage estimated at $30 billion.

The government and the United Nations have blamed climate change for the surging waters in the wake of record-breaking summer temperatures, with Pakistan receiving 391mm of rain, or nearly 190 per cent more than the 30-year average, in July and August. That climbed to 466pc for Sindh, one of the worst-affected areas.

website showed that the River Indus was witnessing a medium-level flood at Kotri on Friday afternoon.

Hundreds of thousands of people have been made homeless by flooding in the southern Sindh province, with many sleeping by the side of elevated highways to protect themselves from the water.

“We have been buying tents from all the manufacturers available in Pakistan,” Sindh’s chief minister Syed Murad Ali Shah said in a statement on Thursday.

Still, one-third of the homeless in Sindh don’t even have a tent to protect them from the elements, he said.

Over the last few weeks, authorities have built barriers to keep the flood waters out of key structures such as power stations and homes, while farmers who stayed to try and save their cattle have faced a new threat as fodder has begun to run out.

Meanwhile, the authorities set up a “tent village” at a 500-kilowatt grid station in Dadu to house families and individuals displaced by floods.

Children, who became displaced, play as their families take refuge in a camp, following rains and floods during the monsoon season in Sehwan, September 15, 2022.—Reuters/Akhtar Soomro

According to the grid station’s superintendent engineer, Zulfiqar Solangi, 100 tents have been put up at the site so far, and 900 more are being set up.

Energy Minister Khurram Dastgir also confirmed the setting up of the tent village, saying that the Pakistan Army and officials from other departments had worked together to raise a protective dyke to protect the grid station from floodwaters.

“The 500-kilowatt grid station supplies electricity to the [entire] country, which is why it was important to protect it,” he said.