'This is collective suicide': UN chief slams climate change 'insanity' on Pakistan visit

Pakistan says it will cost at least $14.6 billion to rebuild and repair the country after devastating floods, with United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres saying he hoped his visit would galvanise international help.

Climate UN Report Loss and Damage

Women carry belongings salvaged from their flooded home after monsoon rains, in the Qambar Shahdadkot district of Sindh Province, Pakistan, on 6 September 2022. Source: AAP / AP

United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres called the lack of global attention to climate change "insanity" on Friday as he visited Pakistan to mobilise help for millions of people affected by devastating monsoon floods.

Nearly 1,400 people have died in flooding that covers a third of the country — an area the size of the United Kingdom — wiping out crops and destroying homes, businesses, roads and bridges.

Pakistan says it will cost at least US$10 billion ($14.6 billion) to rebuild and repair — an impossible sum for the deeply indebted nation — but the priority is food and shelter for 33 million people affected.
Mr Guterres said he hoped his visit would galvanise international help, noting Pakistan had always shown generosity towards others, hosting millions of refugees for decades from neighbouring Afghanistan at enormous cost.

Pakistan receives heavy — often destructive — rains during its annual monsoon season, which are crucial for agriculture and water supplies.
PAKISTAN FLOOD
People affected by floods receive food in Bajara Sehwan, Sindh province, Pakistan, on 9 September 2022. Source: AAP / EPA
But downpours as intense as this year's have not been seen for decades, and Pakistan officials blame climate change, which is increasing the frequency and intensity of extreme weather around the world.

"This is insanity, this is collective suicide," Mr Guterres told a press conference in the capital, lamenting the lack of attention the world gave to climate change — particularly the industrialised nations that scientists blame.

Pakistan is responsible for less than one per cent of global greenhouse gas emissions but is eighth on a list compiled by the NGO Germanwatch of countries most vulnerable to extreme weather caused by climate change.
Mr Guterres plans to tour flood-hit parts of the south on Saturday and also visit Mohenjo-Daro, a centuries-old UNESCO-designated world heritage site threatened by the deluge.

Tents and tarpaulins needed

"If he comes and sees us, Allah will bless him," Rozina Solangi, a 30-year-old housewife from a flooded village near Sukkur, told AFP Friday.

"All the children, men and women are roasting in this scorching heat. We have nothing to eat, there is no roof on our heads. So he must do something for us poor."

A flood relief plan compiled by the Pakistan government and UN calls for an immediate US$160 million ($233.6 million) in international funding, and aid is already arriving.
On Thursday, a US Air Force C-17 landed — the first American military plane in Pakistan for years — bringing desperately needed tents and tarpaulins for temporary shelter.

While Washington is a key supplier of military hardware to Islamabad, relations have been fractious as a result of conflicting interests in neighbouring Afghanistan — especially since the Taliban returned to power in August last year.

The meteorological office says Pakistan received five times more rain than normal in 2022. Padidan, a small town in Sindh province, has been drenched by more than 1.8 metres since the monsoon began in June.
epaselect PAKISTAN FLOOD
People affected by floods live in temporary shelters in Bajara Sehwan, Sindh province, Pakistan, on 9 September 2022. Source: AAP / EPA
The effect of the rains has been twofold — flash floods in rivers in the mountainous north that washed away roads, bridges and buildings in minutes, and a slow accumulation of water in the southern plains that have submerged hundreds of thousands of square kilometres of land.

In the Jaffarabad district of Balochistan on Thursday, villagers were fleeing their homes on makeshift rafts made from upturned wooden "charpoy" beds.

Thousands of temporary campsites have mushroomed on slivers of dry land in the south and west — often, roads and railway tracks are the only ground in a landscape of water.

With people and livestock cramped together, the camps are ripe for outbreaks of disease, with many cases of mosquito-borne dengue reported, as well as scabies.

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4 min read
Published 10 September 2022 12:55pm
Source: AFP, SBS

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