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Pakistan flood victims slam Zardari 'joy ride' in Europe

Pakistan mothers cry for children missing in floods
Khandar, Pakistan (AFP) Aug 3, 2010 - Bibi Gul sits in a makeshift camp in Pakistan feeding her seven-month-old son as the tears roll down her cheeks. When the monsoon downpour came, the waters swallowed up her house and two of her children. Without news of her son and daughter for days, she is distraught. "The flood water suddenly emerged and swept everything away. Nothing has been left," said Gul, from Malikabad, a village in Nowshera district. Her baby son Faraz is naked. Her husband, a carpenter, is out searching for their missing children, desperately scanning what land is not submerged. "I didn't have any time to bring clothes for my son," she said, holding a fan in her hands in a vain attempt to generate a breeze in the stifling heat.

Her other children, five-year-old daughter Fiza and six-year-old son Hasan, are with her in a camp hastily erected by local businessmen near Khandar village. "When the flood water hit our village, everybody tried to save his own life. I don't know how our two children went missing," she said. "When we came out of our mud house it collapsed and all our livestock were trapped in the gushing water and died." She spent the first night of the rain, last Thursday, on top of a hill close to her village. Three times they tried to get into a government camp but it was too crowded. By Friday they arrived in Khandar, desperate for some relief. Now she is tormented by the heat, complaining about mosquitoes, the lack of electricity, the lack of drinking water.

Mosquito bites pockmark the faces of her children. Hasan waddled up to her in the camp, holding out an empty water bottle. "Mother I feel thirsty, but there is no water in the camp," he said as Gul tried to lull his younger sister to sleep during an interview with AFP. Children were crying in the camp and Gul wondered what the future could hold when the family have lost everything they worked for. "My husband worked for years to build our house but now there is nothing left. We did not manage to salvage anything except some clothes," she said. Her 60-year-old mother Nasim Begum fears the worst. "I'm afraid when I see clouds in the sky that rain may start again." Hassan Jan, coordinator of another relief camp run by the military near Khandar, told AFP that about 30 people had visited the camp since Monday, searching for missing children and family members. Sitting in the same camp as Gul, near the northwestern town of Nowshehra, Bushra Begum cradled her youngest son in her lap. "He is one-year-old and ill," she said softly. She has not seen her other two children since the rain. "The water started entering our house late on Thursday night and by 6:00 am it was all under water and we climbed on the roof to save ourselves. "My two children went missing in the flooding and so far there is no trace of them," she told AFP.
by Staff Writers
Majuky Faqirabad, Pakistan (AFP) Aug 2, 2010
Pakistan's President Asif Ali Zadari came under renewed fire Tuesday for visiting France and Britain while up to 3.2 million of his people suffer from the worst floods in decades.

Devastating monsoon rains have killed up to 1,500 people and washed away entire villages in the northwest Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, submerging farmland, drowning livestock and now spreading across much of the country.

Zardari, who is widely unpopular at home and whose public engagements are often limited, came under flak for failing to scrap summits in Britain and Paris to confront the miseries at home.

"Why did Zardari embark on a visit to France and Britain when his own people are in great distress and shock?" asked Murad Khan in Majuky Faqirabad, one of the worst affected villages in the northwest.

"We are facing an awful situation and the president should not have left the country," said Murad.

Government assistance has yet to materialise in Murad's village, where witnesses said most of the homes had been destroyed and at least 100 people were missing.

Survivors are living in desperate conditions under open skies or sheltering from heavy rains in mosques without clean drinking water and food, as fears grow of a public health disaster.

"Two young girls in my immediate neighbourhood drowned in the flood waters," hit out 40-year-old Sher Khan, also in Majuky.

"Zardari should visit the flood-hit areas and take steps for welfare of the stranded people instead of taking joy rides to France and UK."

Zardari is not all-powerful in Pakistan, where the military still retains massive political influence and Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani has taken on more day-to-day authority over government affairs.

But initial opposition to his visit, over remarks from British Prime Minister David Cameron that elements within Pakistan export terrorism, has given way to outrage among flood victims as the crisis worsened.

"How can a man who wasn't even sincere to his wife think of our welfare?" said Maryam Jan, referring to former prime minister Benazir Bhutto, who was assassinated in Rawalpindi in 2007.

Zardari, who is frequently referred to by his nickname "Mr 10 Percent," a reference to the corruption allegations that have dogged his career, became president in 2008 after Bhutto's murder.

Zardari met French President Nicolas Sarkozy on Monday and on Tuesday was scheduled to visit a 16th century chateau owned by Zardari's family in Normandy before travelling to Britain for the more sensitive leg of his tour.

Relations between London and Islamabad soured last week when Cameron said Pakistan must not "look both ways" in secretly promoting violent extremism while pretending to seek regional stability.

Pakistan's foreign office summoned Britain's high commissioner to Islamabad for a dressing down over Cameron's remarks in arch-rival India, which aroused considerable criticism in the local media and among the public.

Aid officials said clean drinking water and sanitation were urgently needed in northwestern Pakistan to stop disease spreading after the country's worst floods in 80 years.

Pakistan's meteorological service forecast rain of up to 200 millimetres (eight inches) in the next weeks across the northwest, Pakistani-administered Kashmir, the central province of Punjab and Sindh in the south.

earlier related report
US flying army helicopters to Pakistan for flood relief
Washington (AFP) Aug 3, 2010 - The US military is sending American pilots and helicopters to Pakistan to help with rescue and relief efforts after devastating floods, the Pentagon said on Tuesday.

The pilots will fly four US Army CH-47 Chinook choppers and two UH-60 Blackhawks in flood-hit mountainous areas that are inaccessible by road, spokesman Colonel Dave Lapan told reporters.

"We intend to send CH-47s and UH-60s to go to Pakistan and assist in efforts associated with the floods there," Lapan said.

The military had hoped to have the helicopters, which are based in neighboring Afghanistan, already deployed to Pakistan but bad weather postponed the operation on Tuesday, he said.

The Pentagon earlier supplied Pakistan's interior ministry with several helicopters for rescue efforts, but the latest assistance would involve American pilots flying the aircraft.

In Pakistan, where Washington's policies enjoy little public support, the presence of any US military personnel is a politically sensitive subject. A small contingent of American special forces in the country that train Pakistani soldiers keeps a low public profile.

US-supplied helicopters already have rescued more than 700 people from flood-affected areas of Pakistan and delivered thousands of pounds of rations, officials said on Monday.

Drawing on stocks of humanitarian supplies in Afghanistan and the region, the US military has helped deliver 316,000 halal meals to Pakistan and planned to ferry another 110,000 meals later on Tuesday, Lapan said.

Pakistan issued new flood warnings Tuesday, as the country battled to cope with the worst floods in living memory affecting 3.2 million people and killing up to 1,500.



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Pakistan flooding death toll expected to rise
Peshawar, Pakistan (AFP) Aug 3, 2010
The death toll from Pakistan's devastating monsoon rains was expected to rise on Tuesday as fears grew of outbreaks of disease among the 2.5 million people affected by the floods. Up to 1,500 people have died in the country's northwest as floods and landslides triggered by unprecedented rain have destroyed homes and farmland in one of the country's most impoverished regions. Aid official ... read more







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