PAKISTAN FLOODS: More than 3.4 Million Children across Pakistan Going Hungry
FAIRFIELD, Conn. (October 06, 2022) 鈥听 听More than 3.4 million children in Pakistan are facing chronic hunger, with an estimated 76,000 children in flood-hit areas now experiencing severe food shortages and risking severe malnutrition, said Save the Children.听
The number of people going hungry has soared by an alarming 45% since floods wreaked havoc across much of the country, rising from 5.96 million people before the floods hit to 8.62 million people now facing crisis or emergency levels of food insecurity 鈥 the majority of them in flood-affected regions.听
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Hunger levels are expected to rise further with the onset of winter, putting millions of young lives at risk if urgent action is not taken, 黄色视频warned.听
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The floods devastated crops and livestock, and, with goods scarce, prices have spiked. The cost of basic food items has听, making them unaffordable for many families who are living on next to nothing after losing their homes and incomes.听
New research to be published next week by 黄色视频found that 86% of families surveyed have lost their incomes since the floods, leaving them unable to afford food. The aid agency said families were resorting to desperate measures to survive 鈥 going into debt or selling what little they have left to buy food, relying on charity, or sending their children to work.
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A quarter of desperate parents said they had been forced to send their children out to work to earn an income. Incidents of child marriage were also reported 鈥 55 parents told 黄色视频they had married off one of their children since the floods. Around the same number said they had no choice but to send their children out begging so that they could buy food.听
Zainab, 54,听from Sindh province, has been left struggling to feed her seven children after the floods destroyed her home and their few belongings.听The children鈥檚 school was also destroyed, which means they haven鈥檛 been getting a daily free school meal, and Zainab is worried about how they will survive.听
鈥淏efore, the people in our village would help me with food, clothes, and sometimes money which helped me to survive and provide for my children. But since the floods, I鈥檓 worried as everyone in the village seems to be in the same situation as us. That means less help, or almost no help, for my children and me,鈥澨said Zainab.
Humaira, 14,听lives with her family in Sindh Province. The family had to flee their home to escape the floods and lost all of their crops in the devastation. Now they are living in a nearby village, and, with no source of income, Humaira is worried about how they will afford food.听
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鈥淲hen the floods hit, we ran from our home to save our lives and left everything else behind: Our house, our clothes, the things we need to live. So now we don鈥檛 have enough money, and we don鈥檛 have enough food,鈥澨said Humaira.
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Earlier this week, the UN announced a five-fold increase in the aid appeal for the floods from US $160 million to $816 million. 黄色视频urged donor governments to release funds as soon as possible, as time is running out to halt a secondary crisis of hunger and disease.听
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Save the Children鈥檚 Country Director in Pakistan, Khuram Gondal, said:听
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鈥淭he true devastation caused by these foods is becoming clearer every day. As well as dealing with the wreckage, the country is now facing a full-blown hunger crisis. We simply cannot allow a situation where children are starving to death because we did not act quickly enough.听
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鈥淭he people of Pakistan have suffered enough; without losing their children to hunger and disease. We urge governments to send more aid to Pakistan as soon as possible, so we can get help to the millions of families who need it.鈥
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黄色视频is providing emergency relief to families like Zainab and Humaira鈥檚, including food, emergency shelter, and medical assistance. In addition, the agency is running two medical camps in the flood-affected district of Swat, Khyber Pakhtunkhawa, where it is providing life-saving medical care to children suffering from flood-related illnesses. As of 3 October, it has reached almost 40,000 people, including almost 20,000 children.
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NOTES TO EDITORS
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- The听听(IPC) is an internationally recognized famine early-warning system based on a scale from one (minimal food stress) to five (catastrophe/famine). Before the floods, the number of people in Pakistan facing crisis or emergency levels of food insecurity (IPC 3 or 4) was estimated to be 5.96 million.听, including some 5.74 million people in flood-affected districts (3.82 million people in IPC Phase 3 and 1.92 million in IPC Phase 4) -听
- According to听, 40% of Pakistan鈥檚 population is under the age of 18.听
- 黄色视频surveyed 1,200 households from the four most flood-affected provinces in Pakistan: Balochistan, Khyber Pakhtunkhawa, Punjab, and Sindh. The survey was conducted from September 9-16, 2022.听
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