Kamber Shahdadkot Rain Flood Disaster

Kamber Shahdadkot Rain Flood Disaster

Rain Flood 2022 kamber Shahdadkot


 Jagerta

Jagerta Newsletter

September 04, 2022



Kamber Shahdadkot Rain Flood Disaster

Affected people: 900,000

Displaced: 30,000

Died: 34

Injured: 461

Perished Animals: 800



According to SRSO

34 Casualties

 22 Injured 

200 villages are submerged in water 

362,88 Population is affected. 

604,8 Households 

1110 livestock death 

232,00 acres of crop damaged 

80% of Crops are damaged 

50% population migrated to camps and roads



Disease: 

diarrhea, cholera, dengue, malaria, eye infections, respiratory tract infections, and skin disease



Government Response:

Relief Camps: 100

Facts n Figures shared by Mr. Javed Nabi Khoso DC Kamber Shahdadkot and Published on Tribune on 25-Aug-2022Pakistan Flood Situation


Country Wide Situation

Since mid-June, when seasonal rains began, more than 1,200 people have been killed, including 416 children, and at least 6,000 others have been injured. More than 1.1 million houses have been washed away or damaged, and 33 million residents in 80 hardest-hit districts will require some form of assistance, according to Pakistani officials.

Nearly 500,000 people are in relief camps, while many more are displaced and hosted by other households.

The U.N. Population Fund says at least 650,000 pregnant women and girls, 73,000 of whom are expected to deliver in the next month, are among the victims. It says many of the women lack access to health care facilities and the support they need to deliver their children safely.

"Most births in Pakistan happen at home, and with almost 1 million homes destroyed, many women don't know where they will deliver their babies," Human Rights Watch said Friday.

"Pakistan's disastrous floods highlight not only how the effects of the climate crisis are unevenly shared geographically, but also the disproportionate impact on women and girls," the group said.

Monsoon rains and floods have damaged and destroyed nearly 2,000 public and private health facilities. 

Abdullah Fadil, the Pakistan representative of the U.N. Children's Fund (UNICEF), said Friday that at least 18,000 schools had been damaged or destroyed in the floods, affecting an estimated 16 million children, including 3.4 million who need humanitarian support.

"Many children are now at heightened risk, without a home, school or even safe drinking water," Fadil said. "There is therefore a risk of many more child deaths. And the situation will only continue to deteriorate as winter is just eight weeks away in some parts of the country."

More than 90,000 diarrhea cases were reported from one of the worst-hit provinces, Sindh, in the past 24 hours, according to a report released by the health officials.

Infrastructure:



More than 5,000 kilometers of roads and 243 bridges had been damaged or destroyed by floodwaters. 

U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres will arrive in Pakistan on September 9 to visit flood-hit areas.

"The Pakistani people are facing a monsoon on steroids," Guterres said while speaking at the launch of the U.N. flash funding appeal on Tuesday.

"Let's stop sleepwalking towards the destruction of our planet by climate change. Today, it's Pakistan. Tomorrow, it could be your country," he warned.

 

Note: The Data is updating on daily basis Still Survey is continued


Need on Emergency Response !

drinking water; hygiene kits; medicines; water purification tablets; vaccines; therapeutic food for children, pregnant and lactating women; and mosquito nets.

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by Dad Muhammad Shaikh

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© Jagerta Shahdadkot 

Jarwar House, Lakhpati Road, near Keenjhar School, Shahdadkot 


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