UNICEF Geneva Palais briefing note on the impact of the Pakistan floods on children and families and UNICEF’s response
Dr. Jassim Taqui
DG Al-Bab
Institute for Strategic Studies
Islamabad, September 3, , 2022: “Over the past few weeks,
torrential monsoon rains have broken a century-long record and dumped more than
five times the 30-year average for rainfall in some provinces, killing more
than 1200 people, including about 400 children, while washing away or damaging
over 1.1 million houses and destroying vital infrastructure children rely on to
access essential services, such as schools and hospitals. At least 18,000
schools have been damaged or destroyed across the country due to the floods. We
estimate that 16 million children are impacted and 3.4 million of these
children are in need of humanitarian support.
“Exacerbating this horrendous
situation, many of the 72 hardest-hit districts were already amongst the most
vulnerable ones in Pakistan. 40 per cent of children were already suffering
from stunting before the floods hit. Many children are now at heightened risk,
without a home, school, or even safe drinking water.
“There is therefore a risk of many
more child deaths. And the situation will only continue to deteriorate as
winter is just 8 weeks away in some parts of the country.
“There is now a high risk of
water-borne, deadly diseases spreading rapidly -- diarrhoea, cholera, dengue,
malaria. Without adequate sanitation, communities are increasingly having to
resort to open defecation, putting them at high risk of contracting diseases.
“Relief and rescue operations are
still extremely hard to carry-out - around 160 bridges and
5,000 kilometres (3,200 miles) of roads have been destroyed or
damaged, 3.5 million acres of crops affected and about 800,000 livestock lost.
Yet lifesaving rescue and relief efforts are indispensable, and UNICEF is
distributing humanitarian supplies in all affected provinces.
“In terms of UNICEF’s response, we have
already delivered immediate emergency services and supplies worth over USD $2
million, including drinking water, water purification tablets, hygiene kits,
medicines, vaccines, therapeutic food for children, pregnant and lactating
women, and mosquito nets.
“In the coming days and weeks, we
aim to reach children and families first with lifesaving medical equipment,
essential medicines, vaccines and safe delivery kits, safe drinking water and
water-treating tablets, and sanitation supplies, nutrition supplies, mosquito nets. We
also want to help children resume learning and will support the Government to
reestablish critical services for children as soon as possible.
“Additional life-saving emergency
medical and WASH supplies are expected to reach Pakistan from our hub in
Copenhagen within days. But many more airlifts will be needed.
“In order to be able to achieve
this, as part of the UN flash appeal of $160 million to support the
flood response led by the Government of Pakistan, UNICEF is appealing for US$37
million to reach approximately 3.4 million children in need of life-saving
support. UNICEF has launched flash appeals globally and members of the
public and the private sector can make donations via the Pakistan appeals page
of the UNICEF global https://www.unicef.org/
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