UN agency warns over half a million Pakistani women need maternal services in flood-hit regions

Displaced people prepare for breakfast in their tents at a makeshift camp after fleeing from their flood hit homes following heavy monsoon rains in Charsadda district of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa on August 29, 2022. (AFP)
Short Url
Updated 31 August 2022
Follow

UN agency warns over half a million Pakistani women need maternal services in flood-hit regions

  • The United Nations Population Fund says nearly 73,000 women are likely to deliver next month, need skilled attendants
  • A top UN official says ‘pregnancies and childbirth cannot wait for emergencies or natural disasters to be over’

ISLAMABAD: The United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) has estimated that nearly 650,000 pregnant women require maternal health services in Pakistan’s flood-affected areas, adding that about 73,000 of them are expected to deliver in the coming month and will need skilled birth attendants, newborn care, and support.

Pakistan has witnessed torrential rains and floods since the beginning of monsoon in June that have affected about 33 million people, according to official estimates.

UNFPA says that 6.4 million people in the country require humanitarian assistance following the monsoon rains, floods, and landslides in Pakistan, and more than 1.6 million of them are women of childbearing age.

“Pregnancies and childbirth can’t wait for emergencies or natural disasters to be over,” the UN agency’s Pakistan representative Dr. Bakhtior Kadirov said in a statement released by his office. “This is when a woman and baby are vulnerable and need the most care.”

He said UNFPA was trying to ensure that pregnant women and new mothers continued to receive life-saving services even under the most challenging conditions.

According to the statement, UNFPA has scaled up its emergency response to provide life-saving reproductive health services and commodities, including dignity kits, for women and girls.

It has, so far, procured 8,311 dignity kits, 7,411 Newborn Baby Kits, and 6,412 Clean Delivery Kits for immediate distribution in Sindh, Balochistan, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, and Punjab provinces.

“We will continue supporting health facilities with the equipment and human resources to be fully operational despite the challenging humanitarian conditions,” Kadirov informed.

The UN agency is also prioritizing gender-based violence (GBV) prevention and response services, including medical and psychosocial support to GBV survivors.


Karachi mayor says city focused on rescue, identification after mall fire kills 67 

Updated 5 sec ago
Follow

Karachi mayor says city focused on rescue, identification after mall fire kills 67 

  • Blaze broke out on Jan. 17 at Gul Plaza, trapping workers and shoppers inside and burning for more than 24 hours 
  • Authorities say identification has been significantly slowed by the condition of the bodies recovered from the site

ISLAMABAD: Authorities in Karachi are focused on ongoing rescue operations and the identification of victims and handover of remains to families, the city’s mayor said on Friday, after a deadly fire at a shopping plaza killed at least 67 people this month.

The blaze broke out on Jan. 17 at Gul Plaza, a densely packed commercial building in the heart of the city, trapping workers and shoppers inside and burning for more than 24 hours before being brought under control. Recovery operations are still underway as teams sift through unstable debris at the site.

Karachi Mayor Murtaza Wahab said in a statement the city administration remained focused on retrieving remains and returning them to families as quickly as possible. His remarks came after he visited the homes of several victims, according to a statement from his office.

“Rescue personnel of the Karachi Metropolitan Corporation are still engaged in the rescue operation, while the administration is making every effort to hand over [remains] of the victims, loved ones to their families at the earliest,” Wahab was quoted as saying.

Identification has been complicated by the condition of the remains, Karachi Police Surgeon Dr. Summaiya Syed told reporters.

Most of the bodies recovered so far were discovered in fragments, she said, making forensic identification extremely difficult and prolonging the process for families waiting for confirmation.

Relatives of more than a dozen missing persons have remained near the destroyed plaza and at hospitals even after submitting DNA samples for testing. Some families have voiced frustration over the pace of recovery and identification efforts.

Wahab said the provincial government stood with affected families and had committed to long-term support.

“The Sindh government would also not sit back until the victims are fully rehabilitated and that all possible support would be provided [to them],” he said.

Authorities have yet to determine the cause of the fire. Police have said preliminary indications point to a possible electrical short circuit in the plaza which houses over 1,200 shops, though officials stress that conclusions will only be drawn after investigations are completed.

Deadly fires are a recurring problem in Karachi, a city of more than 20 million people, where overcrowded markets, aging infrastructure, illegal construction and weak enforcement of safety regulations frequently contribute to disasters. 

Officials say a blaze of this scale is rare.

The Sindh government has announced compensation of Rs10 million ($35,720) for each person killed in the fire and said all affected shopkeepers would also be compensated.