The Prague Post - 'Everything is destroyed': Pakistan flood survivors plead for aid

EUR -
AED 4.312016
AFN 77.684599
ALL 96.488132
AMD 447.103059
ANG 2.102176
AOA 1076.682324
ARS 1703.37
AUD 1.779074
AWG 2.116379
AZN 1.990413
BAM 1.956251
BBD 2.358843
BDT 143.122991
BGN 1.956333
BHD 0.442702
BIF 3462.265373
BMD 1.174136
BND 1.513491
BOB 8.092865
BRL 6.4817
BSD 1.17112
BTN 105.922416
BWP 15.467907
BYN 3.45825
BYR 23013.058617
BZD 2.355443
CAD 1.618498
CDF 2659.41717
CHF 0.93389
CLF 0.027473
CLP 1077.762282
CNY 8.269731
CNH 8.263344
COP 4538.621331
CRC 583.509653
CUC 1.174136
CUP 31.114595
CVE 110.290422
CZK 24.391509
DJF 208.549191
DKK 7.471571
DOP 73.713852
DZD 152.001258
EGP 55.889563
ERN 17.612035
ETB 182.06849
FJD 2.68202
FKP 0.87462
GBP 0.878189
GEL 3.16427
GGP 0.87462
GHS 13.49211
GIP 0.87462
GMD 86.298122
GNF 10238.9241
GTQ 8.970068
GYD 245.036482
HKD 9.135221
HNL 30.85593
HRK 7.535485
HTG 153.39948
HUF 389.092136
IDR 19632.722099
ILS 3.792335
IMP 0.87462
INR 106.131824
IQD 1534.194839
IRR 49442.851778
ISK 148.011713
JEP 0.87462
JMD 187.395215
JOD 0.832509
JPY 182.83934
KES 150.970705
KGS 102.678057
KHR 4690.901491
KMF 491.962753
KPW 1056.735479
KRW 1735.466849
KWD 0.360201
KYD 0.975992
KZT 602.388331
LAK 25367.875162
LBP 104876.455009
LKR 362.709705
LRD 207.297783
LSL 19.614269
LTL 3.466918
LVL 0.710223
LYD 6.350193
MAD 10.731974
MDL 19.762798
MGA 5290.994284
MKD 61.557393
MMK 2465.942472
MNT 4166.331894
MOP 9.384003
MRU 46.56475
MUR 54.068266
MVR 18.140622
MWK 2030.781625
MXN 21.152629
MYR 4.802801
MZN 75.029233
NAD 19.614353
NGN 1706.31281
NIO 43.098099
NOK 11.991113
NPR 169.469568
NZD 2.035969
OMR 0.451458
PAB 1.17117
PEN 3.945393
PGK 4.979936
PHP 68.825463
PKR 328.154867
PLN 4.213838
PYG 7866.47827
QAR 4.269584
RON 5.092932
RSD 117.394782
RUB 94.517089
RWF 1705.220445
SAR 4.404015
SBD 9.545976
SCR 15.801869
SDG 706.244405
SEK 10.918053
SGD 1.517054
SHP 0.880906
SLE 28.306656
SLL 24621.041684
SOS 668.125554
SRD 45.413153
STD 24302.237255
STN 24.504605
SVC 10.247969
SYP 12982.601373
SZL 19.609685
THB 36.982923
TJS 10.810092
TMT 4.109475
TND 3.418088
TOP 2.827037
TRY 50.174685
TTD 7.944561
TWD 37.045737
TZS 2898.883389
UAH 49.709341
UGX 4174.962348
USD 1.174136
UYU 45.630518
UZS 14177.724655
VES 324.332902
VND 30923.797517
VUV 142.455206
WST 3.277047
XAF 656.080291
XAG 0.017689
XAU 0.000271
XCD 3.17316
XCG 2.110706
XDR 0.815953
XOF 656.080291
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.855068
ZAR 19.700828
ZMK 10568.694103
ZMW 26.848045
ZWL 378.071198
  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • RBGPF

    -1.7900

    80.22

    -2.23%

  • CMSD

    -0.1000

    23.28

    -0.43%

  • NGG

    1.3900

    77.16

    +1.8%

  • CMSC

    -0.0800

    23.26

    -0.34%

  • RELX

    -0.2600

    40.56

    -0.64%

  • GSK

    -0.0700

    48.71

    -0.14%

  • BCE

    -0.1800

    23.15

    -0.78%

  • RYCEF

    0.2200

    14.86

    +1.48%

  • AZN

    -1.4900

    89.86

    -1.66%

  • RIO

    1.2000

    77.19

    +1.55%

  • BTI

    -0.1200

    57.17

    -0.21%

  • BCC

    0.4500

    76.29

    +0.59%

  • JRI

    -0.0800

    13.43

    -0.6%

  • VOD

    0.1100

    12.81

    +0.86%

  • BP

    0.7100

    34.47

    +2.06%

'Everything is destroyed': Pakistan flood survivors plead for aid
'Everything is destroyed': Pakistan flood survivors plead for aid / Photo: Asif HASSAN - AFP

'Everything is destroyed': Pakistan flood survivors plead for aid

The smattering of homes in Panjal Sheikh started to collapse one by one, as torrential rain lashed the tiny southern Pakistani village and flooded the vast stretches of farmland around it.

Text size:

After nearly two weeks of incessant downpours this month, there was nothing left but damaged walls, debris and piles of people's belongings poking out among pools of brown floodwater and grey mud.

The residents of Panjal Sheikh are among the tens of millions hit across Pakistan by the worst monsoon floods in a decade, which have destroyed or damaged nearly a million homes and killed more than 1,000 people since the rains began in June.

"When it started raining, there was destruction in every direction," said Panjal Sheikh resident Mukhtiar Ahmed.

"As we rushed to try and save the children in a house that had just collapsed, another house fell, and then another," he told AFP on Sunday.

"The whole village has been erased."

Pakistan receives heavy -- often destructive -- rains during its annual monsoon season, which are crucial for agriculture and water supplies.

But the catastrophic damage from this year's downpours and flooding has not been seen for decades.

Pakistani officials blame climate change, which is increasing the frequency and intensity of extreme weather around the world.

- 'We are in deep pain' -

The relentlessness of the disaster was shocking, said Ghulam Rasool, the 80-year-old village head of Panjal Sheikh -- which lies less than 25 kilometres from the banks of the mighty Indus River.

"There was a loud sound suddenly, and we could not figure out what had happened," he told AFP.

He suspected that his son's small home on the family land had collapsed.

"We thought all the four had died," Rasool said, referring to his son, daughter-in-law and their two children.

As the family tried and failed to keep the floodwaters from rising on their land, Rasool's pregnant daughter went into labour.

"I felt the pain but I was scared to tell anyone," said Naheed Sheikh, 30. "I finally told my mother."

Through the driving rain, her family managed to get her to an unkempt hospital where her daughter was delivered via a caesarean section.

Her ordeal continued when she got home.

"I was half asleep in my room... when we felt that the room could collapse," she told AFP.

"I rushed out with my daughter in my arms and the walls fell as soon as we got out."

The rooms Rasool had built for his other sons and daughters also fell one after another.

At the end of the 13 days of rain, he surveyed what remained, stumbling through heaps of straw, personal belongings and the piles of firewood he would sell to make ends meet.

- Desperate for aid -

He said he pushed down the weak walls that remained so they do not fall on any passersby.

"Everything is destroyed. We can't even cook a meal for ourselves," Rasool said.

"We are in deep pain and waiting for someone to help us."

Many flood survivors from villages such as Panjal Sheikh have made their way to Sukkur, the largest city nearby, hoping for assistance.

Some sat along an elevated highway under tents fashioned from plastic sheets.

As two military trucks passed carrying food, sacks of wheat, tents and cooking pots, a crowd of people rushed towards them.

Some desperately tried to climb up the trucks, fighting each other to try and reach the aid items.

Soldiers shouted at them to form a queue, but few listened.

X.Kadlec--TPP