UAE sends four more planeloads, first flight from US brings flood aid to Pakistan

Pakistani officials unload flood relief goods from the United Arab Emirates (UAE) to Pakistan in Karachi on September 9, 2022. (@uaeembassyisb/Twitter)
Short Url
Updated 09 September 2022
Follow

UAE sends four more planeloads, first flight from US brings flood aid to Pakistan

  • UNSG Antonio Guterres is also on a visit to Pakistan, where he will be travelling to flood-hit areas to assess damages
  • Deadly floods have so far killed 1,391 people in Pakistan, causing massive infrastructure damages since monsoon began

ISLAMABAD: Another four planes delivered flood relief goods from the United Arab Emirates (UAE) to Pakistan, while the South Asian country received the first planeload of aid from the United States (US) on Thursday, the Emirati embassy and a US official said, as the death toll from devastating rains and deluges neared 1,400. 

Unprecedented monsoon rains and melting glaciers in the north have triggered massive floods in Pakistan since mid-June, which have caused widespread death and destruction in the South Asian country. 

The floods have killed at least 1,391 people and affected more than 33 million as well as washed away roads, bridges and standing crops in the country, according to the National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA). The southern Sindh province is worst hit and accounts for 577 of these deaths. 

After the latest delivery on Thursday, the UAE embassy said, the number of relief flights operated by the UAE to Pakistan has reached 31. 

"Within the directives of UAE's wise leadership to operate flights to provide relief for floods & torrential rains affectees in Pakistan, 4 relief planes arrived in Karachi loaded with tons of food, medical supplies and shelters, bringing the number of planes to 31 till date," the embassy said on Twitter. 

On Thursday, Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif told an American diplomat, who was visiting Islamabad to assess the damages, the world must step up its fight against climate change to avoid more deadly flooding in the impoverished nation. 

"This is the first US military C-17 to land in Pakistan on the government of Pakistan's request," said Samantha Power, a United States Agency for International Development (USAID) official, in a video from an airport runway in southern Pakistan. 

"It has just offloaded equipment and the other logistic stock here in Sindh province." 

Power said the US military would be providing around 300,000 people in Sindh with shelter equipment, which was being transported from Dubai where USAID had it warehoused. 

USAID earlier requested the US Department of Defense to establish an air bridge to help it reach flood-affected communities in Pakistan. 

United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres was also visiting Pakistan on Friday to travel to flood-hit areas to witness the damages. 

Guterres less than two weeks ago issued an appeal for $160 million in emergency funding to help millions affected by record-breaking floods in Pakistan. 


Pakistan court orders full eye exam for jailed ex-PM Imran Khan, PTI party says 

Updated 5 sec ago
Follow

Pakistan court orders full eye exam for jailed ex-PM Imran Khan, PTI party says 

  • Party says directive supports concerns over medical access in custody
  • Lawyer earlier told reporters Khan’s health “is fine” after prison visit

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s opposition Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party said on Thursday the Supreme Court had ordered a full eye examination of jailed ex-premier Imran Khan to be completed before Feb. 16, escalating a dispute between the government and Khan’s family over his medical care in prison.

Concerns about Khan’s health have resurfaced in recent weeks after authorities confirmed he had been briefly taken from prison to a hospital in Islamabad for an eye procedure. The government said at the time his condition was stable, while PTI leaders and Khan’s family complained they had not been informed in advance and alleged he was being denied timely and independent medical access.

The issue was taken up by the Supreme Court earlier this week, which appointed senior lawyer Salman Safdar as a “friend of the court” to visit Khan at Rawalpindi’s Adiala prison and submit a written report on his living conditions.

In its statement on Thursday, PTI said the court had now directed that Khan undergo a comprehensive medical review of his eye condition.

“The Supreme Court’s order for a complete eye check-up of Imran Khan vindicates the party’s longstanding concerns about his deteriorating health and denial of timely, independent medical care in custody,” the party said, adding that he should be given “immediate” access to his personal physician.

Safdar, who met Khan in prison on Tuesday, had earlier sought to calm speculation about his condition.

“It is fine,” Safdar told reporters outside the prison when asked about Khan’s health, declining to provide further details. “I will speak about the rest in the report.”

According to a copy of an earlier court order seen by Arab News, the Supreme Court had tasked Safdar with submitting a written report regarding the “living conditions of the petitioner in jail,” noting that a previous report related to Khan’s detention at Attock jail in 2023 did not reflect his current circumstances.

In its latest statement, PTI framed the court’s directive as part of a broader legal principle.

“This is bigger than one medical test. It is about whether the rule of law applies to political opponents, or only to protect those in power,” the party said, demanding “immediate and transparent implementation of the Court’s order” and “unrestricted access to qualified specialists of his choice.”

Khan has been in jail since August 2023 in connection with multiple cases that he and his party say are politically motivated, an allegation the government denies. He was removed from the PM’s office in April 2022 through a parliamentary vote of no confidence.

There was no immediate response from the government on Thursday to PTI’s latest statement.