SEHWAN: Flood-affected women and girls queue up to receive handouts from a charitable trust at a makeshift camp in this flood-hit district on Tuesday. The Red Cross has warned that Pakistan, which was experiencing acute food insecurity before the floods, may see things worsen.—AFP
SEHWAN: Flood-affected women and girls queue up to receive handouts from a charitable trust at a makeshift camp in this flood-hit district on Tuesday. The Red Cross has warned that Pakistan, which was experiencing acute food insecurity before the floods, may see things worsen.—AFP

ISLAMABAD: International agencies have sounded the alarm over the acute food crisis expected to hit Pakistan in the wake of catastrophic floods as the UN chief declared that climate change impacts were “heading into uncharted territories of destruction”.

The International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC) and the International Commi­t­tee of the Red Cross (ICRC) warned on Tuesday that the number of acutely hungry people in Pakistan was expec­ted to rise substantially, since at least 43 per cent of the population was said to be food insecure even before the floods hit.

Some 21 million acres of crops were under water, and an estimated 65pc of the country’s food basket — crops like rice and wheat — had been destroyed, with over 733,000 livestock reportedly killed, the IFRC and ICRC said in Geneva on Tuesday.

Read: Our response to the flood catastrophe must not stop at rescue and relief efforts

Separately, at the launch of a multi-agency scientific report reviewing the latest research on climate change that warned that the world is “going in the wrong direction”, United Nations Secr­e­tary General Antonio Guterres, who recently concluded a visit to Pakistan’s flood-hit areas, noted: “Heatwaves in Europe. Colossal floods in Pakistan...There is nothing natural about the new scale of these disasters.”

With greenhouse gas concentrations continuing to rise in the atmosphere and world leaders failing to adopt strategies to hold global warming below 1.5 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial temperatures, the earth is inching closer to dangerous climate tipping points, the United in Science report says.

In the meantime, the director general of the UN’s Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO), Qu Dongyu, has affirmed that the organisation would continue its support to the government of Pakistan in addressing the effects of the floods on the agriculture sector.

Meanwhile, the World Health Organisation (WHO) opened an emergency operations centre in Swat on Tuesday and provided urgently needed essential medicines in the area.

Editorial: Looming shortages

The organisation has donated essential equipment such as operation theatre lights and anaesthesia machines and has set up an emergency operations centre to be the central hub for disseminating water purification tablets, vaccines and nutritional supplements.

Visiting the new emergency operations centre, WHO’s representative in Pakistan, Dr Palitha Mahipala, emphasised the importance of vaccinating children against preventable diseases.

During a meeting with Pakistan Ambassador to Rome Jauhar Saleem on Monday, the FAO chief explained that the organisation’s emergency response would target livestock vaccination, distribution of animal feed and the distribution of agricultural production inputs for the upcoming Rabi season, among other areas of support.

Amin Ahmed in Islamabad also contributed to this report

Published in Dawn, September 14th, 2022

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