But this largest district of Sindh in terms of land is as neglected as it is resource-rich. The sorry plight of the area is manifested in the deaths that not only come from lack of food and water, but also from man-made miseries resulting from poor healthcare facilities and lack of sanitation and waste management. Statistics corroborate the anecdotal evidence. A mammoth 87% of the population in Thar lives under the poverty line; less than half the population has access to drinking water; nearly 500 children die every year due to malnutrition and infections, according to media reports; and high maternal mortality rate in the district is evident from the fact that there are 121 male per 100 females as against the national level of 106 per 100 females.
And for years and years there has been no significant progress on social indictors in the drought-stricken region. Sindh Human Rights Commission chairperson Justice (retd) Majida Rizvi has — after a recent visit to the place — drawn attention towards the age-long miseries of Tharis that are now resulting in “increasing number of suicides by men, women, young girls, children and even couples”. When will the authorities wake up to the woes well-known!
Published in The Express Tribune, December 10th, 2019.
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