Pakistan has not slept more hungry than it does today. The torrential rains are over, the level of water in flood-hit areas has decreased, but the disaster is not history just yet. Its impact is still too strong, its traces too fresh on sickly faces of Sindh’s children.
The province’s worst-affected district, Badin, is still a haunting place. It cries of hunger. In a village of 300 households in union council Muhammad Khan Bhurgri there are 200 children under the age of five suffering from malnutrition. Pakistan’s next generation is being crippled.
Save the Children has set up mobile health centres in three union councils of Badin to monitor the problem. Health workers set weight targets and depending on the level of malnutrition, provide medication and energy biscuits and perform weekly and fortnightly check-ups for children under five.
Villagers say they are surviving on one meal a day. “Energy biscuits have helped, but we still need food,” a woman says.
While the emergency standard for malnutrition is 15 per cent, successive natural disasters have led to critical levels of malnutrition, up to 21 to 23 per cent, in the southern part of the province, according to the National Nutrition Survey 2011. The current percentage “is the worst condition of malnutrition in the world over the years,” the survey says.
“This is the highest percentage of malnutrition ever seen in Pakistan,” says a senior nutritionist from Save the Children, who requested not to be named because the organisation only allows its media adviser to officially speak to journalists.
Training sessions on breastfeeding are also held at the health centre. Some mothers here look as young as 13. “It is most essential to counsel mothers on breastfeeding to prevent malnutrition in children,” an official says.
Pakistan, India and Bangladesh have half of the world’s child population suffering from malnutrition, according to a report published by Save the Children.
But the primary concern of most people remains the standing water. “I have water up to my forehead,” says Khattu, a mother of seven pointing to her house at a distance. “Many children are ill here. When they are sick, they vomit in the water surrounding their house and it all stays there.” In some areas of the village there is up to four feet of water.
Other women join the conversation, nodding as Khattu, acting as a spokesperson, tells their story. “There are no employment opportunities here. Before the rains we had crops and a means of livelihood, but now it’s all gone,” she says.
She talks about the vicious cycle that now follows. “Since the crops are gone and the livestock has drowned, we have nothing to pay our debts. Our debts are mounting.”
The unprecedented torrential rains in Sindh broke a 60-year record last year, leaving three million people homeless and two million people food insecure. Last week, the United Nations and Pakistan appealed for an additional $440 million for flood-affected areas in Sindh and Balochistan.
“Even if it does not rain for the next five years, we will not be able to recover from the disaster,” says Janu, another woman from the village. After knowing that her story will be told in a newspaper, she says, “Just tell them about the water.”
With another monsoon season barely four months away, the standing water is a frightening sight. Last week, National Assembly Speaker Fehmida Mirza visited Badin for her son’s election campaign. Fehimda and her son Hasnain Mirza’s pictures adorned the streets of the city, looking down at their people from high billboards.
Published in The Express Tribune, March 2nd, 2012.
COMMENTS (14)
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In recent survey April 2012 by health department Government of Sindh the work of save the children look little bit good than other organization.One thing which is very alarming that they found many malnourish child in different location of district never attended by organizations now we have question mark here .all organization which are international recommended still working here doing such mistakes.thish district is very backword and poor highly affected.field work is very poor for malnourish child .
We need to remember the crisis and do something!!
Zulfiqar Mirza should be more worried about his constituency instead of wasting his "valuable" time patronising Lyaris criminals .
it's good change in the evironment of health mind development in flood affected areas of sind. and children. All the humanitarian development is source of the development in the flood affected areas and support to the poor community. and still need of the development to bright the future.
So close to Karachi, the city of lights.Saddening.
Criticising is not solution... Everyone should come out...with out waiting so called leaders... Because the people who facing these critical conditions....they are Our Muslims & Pakistani brothers & sisters.
We should try to help them at every cost government should set account to collect money or other political parties come forward and help theses people iam far away from badin and want to do some thing for them. What party we belong we must pressurise them to save little children of badin.
It's Zulfiqar Mirza's district. I just feel terrible Is there anyway we can help these people?
@Anum: just pray
How can we help?
And They still Voted for PPP in the By-elections. Shame.