Relief efforts underway as parts of Dadu district inundated with ‘8-foot-high’ floods

Rescue and relief efforts continued in Sindh’s flood-hit Dadu district on Thursday, with water up to “eight to nine feet” high in several areas, according to an official, as Pakistanis brace for another spell of above-normal rains this month.

Abnormal heavy monsoon rains and melting glaciers triggered floods that have submerged a third of the country and killed at least 1,191 people, including 399 children since June 14, National Disaster Management Authority’s daily update showed. Twenty-seven more people died in the previous 24 hours.


Key developments

needed Rs860 billion to reconstruct collapsed houses, repair roads and revive agriculture destroyed by unrelenting heavy rains and subsequent flooding.

This aerial photograph taken on September 1, 2022 shows a flooded residential area after heavy monsoon rains in Dadu district of Sindh province. — AFP

As a result of the recent catastrophe, 24 districts with 102 talukas and 5,727 dehs have been declared calamity-hit in the province, Sindh Chief Minister Murad Ali Shah was told yesterday.

Meanwhile, the World Health Organisation (WHO) has warned of a brewing health crisis, reporting that at least 888 health facilities have been damaged in rain-induced floods that have affected 116 out of 154 districts across the country.

Over 33 million people were affected out of which 6.4 million people, including 421,000 people displaced by floods, were in dire need of humanitarian aid, the WHO said.

Situation in KP

approved a grant of $3m and more international aid came in the form of food and equipment, particularly from Turkiye and China, and the United Arab Emirates (UAE) arrived in the flood-hit country.

According to the state-run APP, as many as 16 consignments of relief goods and equipment were delivered.

In a related development, Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif tweeted on Thursday that the UAE had begun the delivery of the first tranche of relief goods worth $50m.

He added that he had held a telephone call with Emirati President Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed al-Nahyan last night during which the UAE president had assured him of continued assistance for flood victims.

In response to PM Shehbaz’s tweet, the UAE embassy in Pakistan said: “We affirm the commitment to stand by the people of Pakistan in the current challenges of floods, embodying the humanitarian role set by our founding father, Sheikh Zayed bin Sultan Al Nahyan, we thank the partners in Pakistan for their cooperation to deliver aid to the affectees.”

Later in the day, the United Kingdom announced further urgent life-saving support to Pakistan.

Humanitarian support totalling £15 million from the UK will help provide shelter and essential supplies to people across the country, Foreign Secretary Liz Truss said. The latest funding comes after the UK provided £1.5 million for the disaster affectees last weekend.

“We are seeing first-hand the tragic effects of climate change and the impact it is having on millions of people across the country,” Minister of State for South and Central Asia Lord Tariq Ahmad said in a statement today.

“The UK is working around the clock with the Pakistan authorities to determine what support is required in the short-term and longer-term,” he vowed.

Separately, the French Ministry for Europe and Foreign Affairs will ship a 50-meter-long Bailey-type bridge to Pakistan which will be able to be swiftly deployed in the affected areas in view of the widespread destruction of the country’s infrastructure.

In a statement issued today, the French Embassy said that the country was putting together an “extraordinary operation” to provide emergency relief.

Furthermore, it stated that a special charter aircraft leased by the Airbus Foundation will transport 83 very high-capacity water pumps, 200 family tents, and survival, hygiene and protective equipment to Pakistan.

The aircraft leaving France on Friday will also carry experts from civil security units, particularly doctors and nurses who will be deployed on the ground in consultation with the authorities.

In addition, France will provide financial assistance to several French NGOs and the Pakistani Red Crescent, which are providing relief to people affected by the floods, the statement added.

Norway too has pledged a 25 million krone grant assistance to Pakistan.

“Norway is channelling approximately 3 million krone through the UN Central Emergency Response Fund (CERF), and will, in addition, provide 7 million krone to Norwegian Church Aid and 5 million krone to the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies,” Norwegian Foreign Minister Anniken Huitfeldt said, adding that the country will also provide 10 million krone to the World Food Programme.

‘More rain but less intense’