Berliner Boersenzeitung - After the floods, a wave of disease plagues Pakistan

EUR -
AED 3.872937
AFN 71.98406
ALL 98.091906
AMD 410.866096
ANG 1.906143
AOA 961.670003
ARS 1051.538529
AUD 1.632272
AWG 1.892761
AZN 1.78688
BAM 1.955639
BBD 2.135524
BDT 126.389571
BGN 1.958719
BHD 0.396967
BIF 3123.442259
BMD 1.054463
BND 1.417883
BOB 7.308397
BRL 6.112669
BSD 1.057613
BTN 88.859967
BWP 14.458807
BYN 3.461214
BYR 20667.474556
BZD 2.131924
CAD 1.484525
CDF 3021.036182
CHF 0.936298
CLF 0.037463
CLP 1028.385139
CNY 7.626404
CNH 7.630569
COP 4744.108524
CRC 538.255584
CUC 1.054463
CUP 27.943269
CVE 110.255902
CZK 25.282231
DJF 188.334459
DKK 7.463506
DOP 63.724742
DZD 140.438411
EGP 51.981711
ERN 15.816945
ETB 128.080731
FJD 2.399905
FKP 0.832306
GBP 0.835682
GEL 2.883942
GGP 0.832306
GHS 16.895606
GIP 0.832306
GMD 74.866655
GNF 9114.247908
GTQ 8.168326
GYD 221.171749
HKD 8.209524
HNL 26.709796
HRK 7.521758
HTG 139.038527
HUF 408.190532
IDR 16764.168915
ILS 3.953497
IMP 0.832306
INR 89.07866
IQD 1385.485672
IRR 44384.985073
ISK 145.146573
JEP 0.832306
JMD 167.96614
JOD 0.747716
JPY 162.719462
KES 136.968698
KGS 91.207793
KHR 4272.647429
KMF 491.986057
KPW 949.016289
KRW 1471.951203
KWD 0.32429
KYD 0.881427
KZT 525.596629
LAK 23240.082269
LBP 94711.484574
LKR 308.984503
LRD 194.603942
LSL 19.241512
LTL 3.113555
LVL 0.637834
LYD 5.165574
MAD 10.54413
MDL 19.217414
MGA 4919.594044
MKD 61.604916
MMK 3424.854651
MNT 3583.065175
MOP 8.4808
MRU 42.220516
MUR 49.78149
MVR 16.291279
MWK 1833.948666
MXN 21.467818
MYR 4.713979
MZN 67.379471
NAD 19.241512
NGN 1756.545804
NIO 38.916789
NOK 11.711847
NPR 142.176268
NZD 1.823933
OMR 0.405467
PAB 1.057613
PEN 4.015069
PGK 4.252649
PHP 61.93019
PKR 293.653068
PLN 4.333585
PYG 8252.319033
QAR 3.855582
RON 4.981188
RSD 116.987346
RUB 105.31201
RWF 1452.580136
SAR 3.960705
SBD 8.847386
SCR 14.594236
SDG 634.269903
SEK 11.58238
SGD 1.416884
SHP 0.832306
SLE 23.836999
SLL 22111.566612
SOS 604.450122
SRD 37.238889
STD 21825.25489
SVC 9.254236
SYP 2649.369741
SZL 19.234413
THB 36.807116
TJS 11.27447
TMT 3.701165
TND 3.336825
TOP 2.469654
TRY 36.321315
TTD 7.181407
TWD 34.245582
TZS 2813.267854
UAH 43.686295
UGX 3881.679691
USD 1.054463
UYU 45.386255
UZS 13537.882878
VES 48.222819
VND 26772.815254
VUV 125.187965
WST 2.943629
XAF 655.902876
XAG 0.034868
XAU 0.000411
XCD 2.849739
XDR 0.796734
XOF 655.902876
XPF 119.331742
YER 263.483974
ZAR 19.180378
ZMK 9491.428612
ZMW 29.037604
ZWL 339.536652
  • BCC

    -0.2600

    140.09

    -0.19%

  • SCS

    -0.0400

    13.23

    -0.3%

  • NGG

    0.3800

    62.75

    +0.61%

  • RELX

    -1.5000

    44.45

    -3.37%

  • RBGPF

    61.8400

    61.84

    +100%

  • GSK

    -0.6509

    33.35

    -1.95%

  • RIO

    0.5500

    60.98

    +0.9%

  • JRI

    0.0235

    13.1

    +0.18%

  • CMSC

    0.0200

    24.57

    +0.08%

  • CMSD

    0.0822

    24.44

    +0.34%

  • BCE

    -0.0200

    26.82

    -0.07%

  • AZN

    -1.8100

    63.23

    -2.86%

  • VOD

    0.0900

    8.77

    +1.03%

  • BTI

    0.9000

    36.39

    +2.47%

  • RYCEF

    0.0400

    6.82

    +0.59%

  • BP

    -0.0700

    28.98

    -0.24%

After the floods, a wave of disease plagues Pakistan
After the floods, a wave of disease plagues Pakistan / Photo: Rizwan TABASSUM - AFP

After the floods, a wave of disease plagues Pakistan

His head haloed by a whirlwind of mosquitoes, Aamir Hussain stands on the roof of his home in southern Pakistan surveying the fetid floodwaters all around.

Text size:

Four months after the start of record monsoon rains linked to climate change, the standing water has curdled into a pestilent soup breeding malaria, cholera and dengue.

The UN has warned of a "second wave" of catastrophe, with the risk that deaths from water-borne disease and malnutrition will outstrip the 1,700 drowned and electrocuted in the initial cascade.

As dusk arrives in Hussain's submerged village in Dadu district of Sindh province, so do the bugs, and the gamble that they will infect his wife and two children.

"The mosquitoes bite a lot and we fall sick," said the 25-year-old, atop a brickwork compound framing a courtyard awash with putrid, sucking mud.

His brother, who shares this home, has already ventured off the roof to treat his sick children at hospital with borrowed cash.

"Some of our nets are torn now so we are worried," said Hussain, whose infant son has fallen ill.

Sindh has been worst-hit by the catastrophic flooding which put a third of Pakistan underwater, displaced eight million, destroyed or damaged two million homes, crippled 1,500 hospitals and clinics and caused an estimated $28 billion in damages.

- Cascading disaster -

Climate change minister Sherry Rehman said this week that more than 20 million people are still in need "with futures that are entirely precarious". Eight million of those require "urgent medical services", she said.

Zahida Mallah has already been tipped over the edge.

In a bleak camp south of Dadu, outside the city of Hyderabad, the 35 year-old explained she is in mourning for her twin two-month-old sons.

One died on the day AFP visited, the other around two weeks ago at a separate camp.

They were killed by "colds", she said, after sleeping out in the open. She was offered a tent only after it was too late.

"We just keep floundering," she lamented.

Nearby, the city of Johi is corralled by water, accessible via a ramshackle flotilla of canoes powered by greasy petrol engines.

Residents rallied to save the city as the rains lashed down, heaving sandbags into a snaking makeshift levee. But it cannot hold back the disease.

In a desperately rundown emergency clinic, a doctor treats unresponsive seven year-old Kashaf, a suspected malaria patient lying on dirty sheets with a clutch of pharmaceuticals at her feet.

"Perhaps it's a natural disaster, or perhaps we are being tested by God, but whatever it is we are the victims," said her father, 20 year-old Dildar Mastoi.

Under a black scarf his daughter's eyes have rolled back into her head. She no longer recognises her parents -- doctors say a fever has affected her brain.

Barely adults themselves, her mother and father fled rising waters twice before settling in a camp where they drink from a well they suspect is contaminated by flood water.

"From early evening until dawn, throughout the whole night, the mosquitoes are overwhelming," said Kashaf's mother, 19 year-old Bashiran Mastoi. "When the night approaches we start to worry."

"Life at the camp is immensely miserable," she said in a vigil on her child's sickbed.

Medic Manzoor Shahani said there has been a "surge" in malaria, gastro illnesses, and dengue while "most of the patients are children and pregnant women".

- 'The hidden fever' -

Before the floods southern Pakistan was already devastated by grinding poverty. Now aid only sporadically penetrates the patchwork swampland, while the true number of those in need has yet to even be discovered.

Doctors and officials offer contradicting figures, as they grapple to understand the scale. In Dadu the official death toll is just 23, but everyone privately agrees the real figure must be far higher.

"This is devastation beyond the government's approach," said provincial health monitor Faheem Soomro, as young doctors tally the day's fresh patients at a boardroom table.

Half of malaria tests are coming back positive and most homes have suspected cases.

Sindh has recorded 208,000 cases of malaria so far this year, a dramatic rise from 2021, when cases were reported.

Left untreated -- as it certainly is in the stranded swathes of Sindh -- malaria can quickly turn fatal. In a normal year there are 50,000 deaths from malaria in Pakistan.

Soomro describes it as "the hidden fever". It has vague flu-like symptoms -- as the mosquito-borne parasite enters the liver and bloodstream, in severe cases swelling the brain.

The healthcare disaster is most easily monitored in camps -- there are 19 in Dadu -- where the luckiest of the displaced live in row upon row of hundreds of simple A-frame tents.

In one of the "tent cities" home to around 5,000, residents clamour for treatment in a blustery gazebo where doctors test them for malnutrition and malaria, as others offer vaccinations and female health advice.

Soomro estimates 60 percent of the displaced once stayed in camps like this, but three quarters of those have scattered back to the sodden hinterlands to remake their lives, often out of reach of aid efforts.

Outside the camps the dispersed can be seen everywhere -- in tents and on daybeds clustered by highways and near scummy stagnant lakes.

- 'Unaware' victims -

The monsoon torrent came after Pakistan was seared by a spring heatwave, with pockets of Sindh sporadically suffering temperatures of 50C (122F).

Extreme weather events are increasing in severity as a result of climate change, scientists say.

Pakistan -- the world's fifth largest population -- is responsible for only 0.8 percent of global greenhouse emissions but it's one of the most vulnerable to extreme weather caused by global warming.

In Johi, community activist Ali Pervez laments how the worst affected Pakistanis are unable to advocate for climate justice.

"They are totally unaware," he said.

"There is not any quality education [so] that we can easily make aware, empower our people."

(O.Joost--BBZ)