Posted: August 13th, 2013
The United Nations Children’s Fund. Pakistan Floods. Early Recovery Framework – OCHA Pakistan, 2012. PDF file.
2.2 Response to date
2.2.1 Government of Pakistan response
The Government, under the leadership of the National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA), and
enlisting the logistical capacity of the Armed Forces, spearheaded the initial response to the disaster
with the deployment of rescue and relief operations. District-level authorities supported by the
Provincial Disaster Management Authorities (PDMAs) of Sindh and Balochistan and NDMA initiated
an immediate response in the first days of the floods.
The Government initial response included search and rescue activities for people trapped by the
floods, and relocation of populations living in vulnerable areas where possible. Utilizing the
preparations made through the contingency planning process, locations for hosting people who had to
leave their homes had been identified, search and rescue capacities reinforced and humanitarian
communication systems devised. Mechanisms developed during the contingency planning process
were activated to alert the population of potential flooding and thus enable them to move to temporary
settlements in advance of the floods.
During the floods and in their immediate aftermath, the Governmentof Pakistan response, through
both the NDMA and PDMA, focused on life-saving activities, providing shelter, food and non-food
items (NFIs) and addressing hygiene and sanitation constraints for the affected communities.
As of 12 December 2011, the NDMA has provided an estimated 125,000 emergency shelters (tents
and shelter kits), over 2.42 million food rations, more than 9.5 million water purification tabs and 1
million hygiene and sanitation tablets. Other items distributed include blankets, mosquito nets, water
purification units and plastic sheets. The NDMA also established 33 health camps and 22 field mobile
health units that treated more than 1.53 million patients. Mosquito fumigation was also carried out in
affected areas.
2.2.2 Humanitarian community response
On 8 September, the Government of Pakistan requested the United Nations for international
assistance to respond to the emergency caused by floods in Sindh and Balochistan. In response to
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the request, the humanitarian community developed a Rapid Response Plan based on the joint rapid
needs assessment undertaken on 11 and 12 September. The plan complemented the Government’s
provision of relief to affected populations and was launched on 18 September 2011.
Through the Cluster approach, UN organizations and NGOs have been providing life-saving
emergency assistance to flood-affected communities. Accordingly, the following clusters were
activated: Food Security, Health, Shelter/NFI, WASH, and Logistics. Other sectors, Education,
Protection, Nutrition and Early Recovery were integrated as part of life-saving interventions into the
existing clusters.
Kronstadt, K. Alan, Pervaze A. Sheikh, and Bruce Vaughn. Flooding in Pakistan: Overview and Issues for Congress, 2010. Print. PDF file.
Implications of Flooding on Selected Sectors
of Pakistan
The floods are expected to have a long-term negative effect on the development prospects for
Pakistan. There is considerable damage to infrastructure and agriculture, among other sectors.
The United Nations, World Bank, and Asian Development Bank are conducting a needs
assessment for Pakistan. Initial reports state that the need for recovery and reconstruction could
reach $9.7 billion. This section discusses some potential implications of the flooding on selected
sectors in Pakistan including energy and infrastructure, the economy, and security.
Implications on Energy and Infrastructure
Rebuilding challenges include reconstruction of destroyed or damaged housing and infrastructure,
including electrical generation and distribution, roads, bridges, rail lines, levees, dams/barrages,
and irrigation works. Damage estimates include more than 5,000 miles of primary and secondary
roads, 400 bridges, 400 miles of railways, 11,000 schools, and 200 health facilities, with damage
being particularly severe in northern regions like the Swat Valley.35 The difficulty, time, and
expense of rebuilding this lost infrastructure is likely to be substantial. For example, the World
Bank and Asian Development Bank jointly estimate that the floods caused $9.7 billion of
damages.36 That figure includes damage across several sectors, including loss of physical
infrastructure and other economic losses. The full study has not yet been released, but researchers
have commented that agriculture and roads were particularly hard hit.37 Two U.S. university
researchers using primarily data on the flood characteristics and pre-flood economic data
estimated damages between $5.1 billion and $7.1 billion to building and transportation
infrastructure and $2.12 billion in losses from the disruption of trade.38
Implications for Agriculture
Agriculture is one of the primary mainstays of Pakistan’s economy. It accounts for approximately
23% of GDP, employs about 43% of the labor force and provides about 60% of the country’s
export earnings.47 Arable crops, livestock, and fishing and forestry represent 65%, 31%, and 4%
of Pakistan’s agricultural GDP, respectively. Pakistan typically has two major growing seasons,
Rabi (winter crop, spring harvest) and Kharif (summer crop, fall harvest).48 The Kharif crop is
also called the summer or monsoon crop because it is grown during the time of the southwest
monsoons, which typically occur from July to October. During the Kharif season, agricultural
activities take place in rain-fed and irrigated areas.
Department for International Development. Pakistan floods newsletter 3-gov.uk, 2010. PDF file.
‘THE WORST COULD BE YET TO COME BUT WE WILL STAND BY
PAKISTAN’ UK MINISTERS SEE FLOOD DEVASTATION
The Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg, Secretary of State for International
Development Andrew Mitchell and Minister Without Portfolio Baroness Warsi
have all recently travelled to Pakistan to see the effects of the devastation. DFID
has been leading the UK Government’s response to the worst Monsoon floods
in the history of Pakistan.
Speaking from Sukkur,
South Pakistan, the
region now worst
affected by the monsoon
floods. Nick Clegg
Deputy Prime Minister
said:
“It’s now one month since the
monsoon floods started, and
the disaster in Pakistan is
getting worse.
“The coming days and weeks
are critical; millions of people
in Punjab and Sindh in the
south of Pakistan have lost
their homes and are facing
hunger and illness unless they
get vital help right now.
“That’s why the UK will push
out more emergency aid over
the coming days in what is
now the worst affected area of
Pakistan, including safe
drinking water, toilets,
emergency shelter, water
pumps, and other lifesaving
items.”
Targeted aid in Punjab
and Sindh includes:
2,330 water pumps/points
to provide safe drinking
water for hundreds of
thousands of people;
1,150 private bathing
facilities, benefiting
thousands of people
particularly women;
Emergency shelter kits for
around 30,500 families –
provide shelter for more
than 152,000 people;
Hygiene kits for about
75,000 families
Chughtai, Shaheen and Cate Heinrich. Pakistan Floods Emergency: Lessons from a continuing crisis, 2012 .PDF file.
KEY STRATEGIC PRIORITIES OF THE EARLY RECOVERY FRAMEWORK
Improved access to an essential package of public health services for the affected and
returning population with a reasonable degree of contact (above 0.5 New
Cases/person/year) between the population in the catchment area and the public health
delivery system in each of the priority districts;
Conduct Mother and Child Week (MCW) to deliver a package of health information and
services to household. Conduct measles campaign to vaccinate 6 months to 13 years
children against measles, Provide Vitamin A supplementation to children 6-59 months
along with measles campaigns or polio campaigns;
Provide cold chain equipment, assist operational cost of vaccine logistics to ensure
availability of safe vaccine to children;
Essential health system service delivery to the affected population will be through still
functional health facilities, and community based health care providers of the Government
and civil society organisations, organisation and development of mobile medical teams
and ensuring effective referral support through outsourcing the provision of health care to
international and national non-governmental organizations that are currently engaged in
providing health services in the flood affected districts via the Cluster Coordination
Mechanism. Build capacity of civil society and authorities in exposed areas to respond to
health and nutrition needs in emergencies;
Prevention, control and provision of a public health response to communicable disease
outbreaks – priority health interventions need to be directed towards diseases that are
endemic and particularly those which can potentially cause excess numbers of mortality
and morbidity within a short span of time. A crucial initial step for a public health
emergency and early recovery response is to establish adequate disease surveillance
systems that take into account the inherent disruption of the public health infrastructure of
the affected country and to ensure that affected population have access to information
about prevention of key killer diseases;
Intuitional capacity building for the provision of specialized health services and medical
care for person with disabilities and older persons by training staff on appropriate
responses, by providing appropriate drugs, by referring individuals to rehabilitation
services and by providing specific equipment.
Conclusion
The floods are expected to have a long-term negative effect on the development prospects for
Pakistan. There is considerable damage to infrastructure and agriculture, among other sectors. Under the leadership of the National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA), and
enlisting the logistical capacity of the Armed Forces, the country responded to the disaster. During the floods and in their immediate aftermath, the Governmentof Pakistan response, through
both the NDMA and PDMA, focused on life-saving activities, providing shelter, food and non-food
items (NFIs) and addressing hygiene and sanitation constraints for the affected communities
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