Berliner Boersenzeitung - Flood-hit Pakistanis still waiting on promised rebuild

EUR -
AED 4.291906
AFN 74.188104
ALL 95.612363
AMD 433.156007
ANG 2.091768
AOA 1072.830672
ARS 1638.484029
AUD 1.630045
AWG 2.106512
AZN 2.010972
BAM 1.956061
BBD 2.354674
BDT 143.446706
BGN 1.949446
BHD 0.442057
BIF 3479.049841
BMD 1.168661
BND 1.492893
BOB 8.078044
BRL 5.785104
BSD 1.169136
BTN 111.336396
BWP 15.888054
BYN 3.309685
BYR 22905.757712
BZD 2.351274
CAD 1.590986
CDF 2706.619162
CHF 0.916447
CLF 0.027048
CLP 1064.499798
CNY 7.982247
CNH 7.98296
COP 4357.294507
CRC 531.861943
CUC 1.168661
CUP 30.969519
CVE 110.279259
CZK 24.381188
DJF 208.186919
DKK 7.472927
DOP 69.658113
DZD 154.76695
EGP 62.802792
ERN 17.529917
ETB 183.829569
FJD 2.568011
FKP 0.863475
GBP 0.863413
GEL 3.137805
GGP 0.863475
GHS 13.105695
GIP 0.863475
GMD 85.904498
GNF 10260.194951
GTQ 8.924039
GYD 244.591626
HKD 9.158166
HNL 31.077151
HRK 7.535554
HTG 153.00782
HUF 362.844148
IDR 20396.642314
ILS 3.43906
IMP 0.863475
INR 111.23761
IQD 1531.478363
IRR 1536789.356921
ISK 143.406371
JEP 0.863475
JMD 183.973001
JOD 0.828547
JPY 184.397214
KES 150.956306
KGS 102.16494
KHR 4689.606366
KMF 491.427992
KPW 1051.798729
KRW 1721.507961
KWD 0.360123
KYD 0.974226
KZT 543.250242
LAK 25673.319558
LBP 104693.036799
LKR 374.113571
LRD 214.527738
LSL 19.565079
LTL 3.450752
LVL 0.706912
LYD 7.416927
MAD 10.805343
MDL 20.178609
MGA 4869.629643
MKD 61.597109
MMK 2453.84549
MNT 4182.178877
MOP 9.43682
MRU 46.681437
MUR 54.868938
MVR 18.061679
MWK 2027.262125
MXN 20.373444
MYR 4.630822
MZN 74.689153
NAD 19.565414
NGN 1599.452824
NIO 43.025011
NOK 10.801864
NPR 178.138795
NZD 1.987606
OMR 0.449355
PAB 1.169151
PEN 4.098677
PGK 5.083679
PHP 72.064337
PKR 325.795044
PLN 4.2543
PYG 7083.91595
QAR 4.273153
RON 5.219126
RSD 117.37212
RUB 88.235831
RWF 1709.421028
SAR 4.385311
SBD 9.37952
SCR 15.61227
SDG 701.753321
SEK 10.839335
SGD 1.492357
SHP 0.872524
SLE 28.807603
SLL 24506.234619
SOS 668.186396
SRD 43.773389
STD 24188.925413
STN 24.502854
SVC 10.229191
SYP 129.17296
SZL 19.561613
THB 38.141008
TJS 10.931113
TMT 4.096157
TND 3.408455
TOP 2.813856
TRY 52.845214
TTD 7.924923
TWD 36.940799
TZS 3041.441932
UAH 51.378143
UGX 4413.514019
USD 1.168661
UYU 47.076288
UZS 14069.638616
VES 571.408376
VND 30762.66634
VUV 138.515007
WST 3.174003
XAF 656.041826
XAG 0.015872
XAU 0.000256
XCD 3.158365
XCG 2.106972
XDR 0.815298
XOF 656.041826
XPF 119.331742
YER 278.871774
ZAR 19.503961
ZMK 10519.353599
ZMW 22.066853
ZWL 376.3084
  • RBGPF

    1.6000

    64.7

    +2.47%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0200

    16.33

    -0.12%

  • CMSC

    -0.0202

    22.8499

    -0.09%

  • RIO

    1.4900

    100.12

    +1.49%

  • GSK

    -0.5700

    50.33

    -1.13%

  • JRI

    0.0300

    12.96

    +0.23%

  • BCC

    -0.3700

    73.96

    -0.5%

  • VOD

    -0.3000

    15.75

    -1.9%

  • NGG

    0.1900

    87.69

    +0.22%

  • BCE

    0.1900

    24.12

    +0.79%

  • BTI

    0.0800

    58.43

    +0.14%

  • AZN

    -2.2200

    181.24

    -1.22%

  • BP

    -0.4050

    46.535

    -0.87%

  • CMSD

    -0.0100

    23.24

    -0.04%

  • RELX

    -0.1850

    36.175

    -0.51%

Flood-hit Pakistanis still waiting on promised rebuild
Flood-hit Pakistanis still waiting on promised rebuild / Photo: Rizwan TABASSUM - AFP

Flood-hit Pakistanis still waiting on promised rebuild

Noor Bibi lost her mother, her daughter and the roof over her head in the catastrophic floods that drowned Pakistan last summer.

Text size:

One year later she remains homeless, living with the remnants of her family in spartan tents marking where the village of Sohbat Khosa was gutted by the deluge in southern Sindh province.

Noor, a farm worker approaching her 60s, prays for "someone with righteous thoughts that will help us build some good houses in an elevated place".

"If it flooded again, we would not bear such big losses," she told AFP.

But government pledges to rebuild flood-ravaged swathes of Pakistan so they are resilient to future extreme weather have largely failed to materialise.

The monsoon deluges of last summer submerged a third of the country, killing 1,700 people and displacing eight million more.

Climate change is making those seasonal rains heavier and more unpredictable, scientists say, raising the urgency of flood-proofing the country.

A failure to do so will be most acutely felt by the poor, who tend to live in the most vulnerable areas.

- Absence of authorities -

Here in Dadu district, which was heavily flooded, no rehabilitation is visible. Rare pieces of public infrastructure remain in disrepair and housing reconstruction is left to locals or NGOs.

In January, Islamabad announced a "Resilient Recovery, Rehabilitation and Reconstruction Framework" valued at $16.3 billion, but it remains confined to paper.

International donors have also pledged $9 billion, but most of the cash will come in the form of loans.

Villagers' crops were swept away in the floods, depriving them of livelihoods that might have allowed them to pave their own way to recovery.

With pooled funds, the residents of Sohbat Khosa only raised enough for a toilet and water tank.

Their best hope is the Alkhidmat Foundation, a Pakistani NGO, which plans to build around 30 new homes.

"The government seems to not exist here, and if anything is done by the government, that is only corruption," said Ali Muhammad, a coordinator for Alkhidmat in Dadu.

Pakistan is currently mired in dual political and economic crises that have brought all public initiatives to a standstill.

But decades of entrenched corruption and mismanagement are also to blame.

"Building back better is expensive, and the amount of damage is colossal," Foreign Minister Bilawal Bhutto Zardari told AFP.

He said he "can't speak to what the federal government has done", but in Sindh province, controlled by his party, "we've started a couple of initiatives".

"One is the financing of the reconstruction of houses, through NGOs and charity organisations," he said.

However, Alkhidmat, like two other NGOs interviewed by AFP, has not received any public money and relies entirely on private funds.

- 'Where else could we go?' -

Thanks to Alkhidmat's efforts, a few dozen homes have been built in the district, but it's nowhere near the two million damaged or destroyed in the floods.

The village of Bari Baital, submerged until November, is expected to eventually host 80 houses built by the foundation -- far too few for its thousands of inhabitants.

To resist future rains they are raised on brick pillars, and built with reinforced roofs and water-resistant cement.

"People are completely unaware of climate change," said village teacher Imtiaz Ali Chandio.

All they know is that their village has been a "passage for floods for centuries", he said.

But moving is not an option, meaning the scenario will likely soon be repeated.

"Where else could we go?" asked Abdulrahim Brohi, who already weathered catastrophic floods in 2010. "Everything of ours is here."

"Somewhere else people won't accept us," added Brohi, who estimates his age to be between 50 and 60. "We don't have resources to rebuild our houses here, so how can we afford land somewhere else?"

- Repeating mistakes -

Prized by tourists for its scenic mountain vistas, the Swat Valley in northwest Pakistan was also hit hard by last year's floods.

Hundreds of hotels, restaurants, businesses and homes perched on the banks of the Swat river were swept away as ferocious waters were funnelled down the ravine.

To prevent a repeat of the disaster, authorities have "imposed a complete ban on the construction of any sort of building on the river", said Irfanullah Khan Wazir, Swat's deputy commissioner.

Nonetheless, in Bahrain, a small resort town once half underwater, the government's writ is so weak that builders are riding roughshod over the ban.

A number of shops, restaurants and hotels have been renovated or rebuilt just metres from the coursing water. Even the mosque has been rebuilt on the same spot where it was heavily damaged.

"People are doing illegal construction on weekend nights, but [authorities] are not paying any heed -- their silence is baffling," said hotel manager Zafar Ali.

His own property is under construction 20 metres (65 feet) from the river, in a zone he says is authorised.

It is now protected by a flood wall twice the height of the previous one. Economic considerations also prevented them from relocating away from their waterfront vantage.

"Tourists want to be able to open their windows and see the river outside," Ali said. "Those built further away struggle to cover their expenses."

Locals in Swat also condemned the inaction of authorities. The main road following the river has been reopened, but whole sections of tarmac remain torn away.

Compensation schemes have been limited to certain people who lost their homes. They are granted 400,000 rupees ($1,400), nowhere near enough to rebuild.

Muhammad Ishaq, a tailor in Bahrain, built his house near the river for easy access to the water. He watched as his home was swallowed by the floods, and has since been forced to move in with his father further up the mountainside.

Life there is harsher, he told AFP, but even if he manages to rebuild, he knows he "will have to stay away from the river".

(H.Schneide--BBZ)