Pakistan not to blame for climate crisis-fuelled
flooding, says PM Shehbaz Sharif
Sharif’s climate change minister called the flooding a
‘climate catastrophe’ and said the south Asian nation was ‘paying the price’
for western use of fossil fuels
Shah Meer
Baloch in Islamabad and Damian Carrington
Tue 30 Aug
2022 13.18 BST
Pakistan is
not to blame for a climate crisis-fuelled disaster that has flooded much of the
country, the prime minister has said, as he made a desperate plea for
international help in what he said was the “toughest moment” in the nation’s
history.
“We are
suffering from it but it is not our fault at all,” Shehbaz Sharif told
journalists on Tuesday afternoon at a press conference where his climate change
minister referred to the flooding as a “climate catastrophe”.
“We are
dealing with a situation I have not seen in my life,” Sharif said. “More than
one million houses are damaged or destroyed. Seventy-two districts of Pakistan
are in calamity and all four corners of Pakistan are underwater and more than
3,500km [2,175 miles] of roads have been washed away. Around one million
animals have died.
“It is the
toughest movement in the history of Pakistan. He has never seen such floods in
his life … Now I say without fear, I have not seen such devastation in my
life,” he said. “We request the international community to come and help us and
stand by us at this hour.” The floods had caused up to $10bn (£8.5bn) in
damage, he said, adding that there would be transparency on all assistance
funds donated.
Sherry
Rehman, Pakistan’s climate change minister, said towns had become “oceans and
rivers” but, due to climate heating, she expected the country to go straight
into a drought in upcoming weeks. “We are on the front of unfolding climate
catastrophe.”
Rehman said
Pakistan was responsible for less than 1% of global greenhouse gas emissions.
“Our footprint is so small … There are countries that have got to become rich
on the back of fossil fuels and let’s be honest about this,” she said. “Now the
time has to come to make a change and we all have a role to play but they have
a greater role in this climate catastrophe.”
At the same
press conference, Ahsan Iqbal, the planning and development minister, said:
“People are enjoying their lives in the west but someone here is paying the
price.”
The UN
secretary general, António Guterres, warned that Pakistan was facing a “monsoon
on steroids” as the government issued more flood warnings for the next 24
hours.
Heavy rains
over two months have caused the nation’s worst flooding in more than a decade.
Guterres
said on Tuesday that south Asia was a hotspot for the climate crisis and the
catastrophic flooding in Pakistan that had left tens of millions needing help
was a warning to every nation of the destruction wreaked by human-caused global
heating.
“The
Pakistani people are facing a monsoon on steroids – the relentless impact of
epochal levels of rain and flooding,” he said. “It breaks my heart to see these
generous people suffering so much.” The UN has issued an urgent appeal for
$160m to provide help.
“People
living in these [climate crisis] hotspots are 15 times more likely to die from
climate impacts,” Guterres said. “As we continue to see more and more extreme
weather events around the world, it is outrageous that climate action is being
put on the back burner, putting all of us, everywhere, in growing danger.”
In
Pakistan, the Balochistan and Sindh provinces have had more than four times the
average rainfall of the last three decades.
Majid Ali
Bughio, 30, left his home town in Sindh with 20 extended family members in the
early morning on Monday after they heard of breaches in a nearby embankment.
Bughio said
by telephone that he had advised his family to go towards Karachi, as many
parts of the Dadu and Badin districts were under water. “We need rations, food,
medicines and emergency help from the Sindh government and the government must
help us to vacate. We have been left on our own,” he said. “More than 70% of
the population in the [wider city of Khairpur Nathan Shah] have left. The shops
and all bazaars are deserted and many villages are underwater.”
The flash
floods have affected more than 33 million people, officials said. The National
Disaster Management Authority on Monday said the death toll from the monsoon
rains and floods in Pakistan had reached 1,136 – with 75 killed in the previous
24 hours.
In an
immediate warning issued on Tuesday, Pakistan’s Flood Forecasting Division said
that over the next 24 hours a very high level of flooding was likely to
continue in the Kabul River, which flows into Pakistan’s Indus River.
The Indus
highway in Sindh was submerged under two feet of water. The highway connects
Sindh with the Punjab and Balochistan provinces.
A video
shared by residents showed a coach that had slipped on the highway while water
was flowing and authorities were involved in the rescue of passengers. Local
people said there were no casualties.
The local
media reported a rise in waterborne diseases in Sindh and other parts of
Pakistan. In some parts of Sindh there had been a 100% increase in diseases.
The
flooding has washed away bridges, roads, houses, livestock and people across
the country.
Gul Hasan,
38, in Khairpur Nathan Shah, had sent his three children and wife to upper
parts of Sindh, while he stayed in his home town. He said: “I did not leave
because after some of my neighbours had left yesterday, people barged into
their houses and stole their belongings.
“This is so
sad at this hour of calamity we are witnessing such issues. I will leave my
home town after I leave the luggage and other stuff on the rooftop and water
comes to the city completely and I know that now no one can steal our decades
of savings.”
Aamer
Sarfraz, a Conservative member of the British House of Lords, said on Tuesday
that he was in Pakistan seeing the “devastating effects of the floods
first-hand”.
“I hope our
government significantly increases financial support for humanitarian relief
immediately. I know it’s summer recess and we have the distraction of a
leadership contest – but this really can’t wait. This is the moment to step up,
like we have done in the past.”
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