Dubai Telegraph - Floods leave women struggling in Pakistan's relief camps

EUR -
AED 4.179981
AFN 72.276545
ALL 94.05733
AMD 418.847741
ANG 2.037513
AOA 1043.563544
ARS 1695.109536
AUD 1.649804
AWG 2.048435
AZN 1.927843
BAM 1.953361
BBD 2.292797
BDT 140.252444
BGN 1.924255
BHD 0.429062
BIF 3396.987596
BMD 1.138019
BND 1.475732
BOB 7.895005
BRL 5.938067
BSD 1.138359
BTN 108.49365
BWP 16.251426
BYN 3.316501
BYR 22305.178182
BZD 2.289502
CAD 1.617632
CDF 2588.994053
CHF 0.920542
CLF 0.026779
CLP 1053.976312
CNY 7.732215
CNH 7.733308
COP 3856.736011
CRC 518.144042
CUC 1.138019
CUP 30.157511
CVE 110.530158
CZK 24.230991
DJF 202.249048
DKK 7.474442
DOP 67.655342
DZD 151.727907
EGP 55.875953
ERN 17.070289
ETB 181.116104
FJD 2.555078
FKP 0.858425
GBP 0.857128
GEL 3.004664
GGP 0.858425
GHS 12.933563
GIP 0.858425
GMD 83.610539
GNF 9980.429279
GTQ 8.682009
GYD 238.128535
HKD 8.926868
HNL 29.872993
HRK 7.533803
HTG 148.84157
HUF 355.527474
IDR 20424.430594
ILS 3.397557
IMP 0.858425
INR 108.295907
IQD 1491.374286
IRR 1565914.550273
ISK 143.777248
JEP 0.858425
JMD 179.026503
JOD 0.806841
JPY 184.958296
KES 147.141949
KGS 99.51965
KHR 4566.296481
KMF 492.762198
KPW 1024.217764
KRW 1763.679242
KWD 0.351966
KYD 0.948699
KZT 545.609272
LAK 25605.433996
LBP 101909.627922
LKR 382.415871
LRD 206.977226
LSL 18.661742
LTL 3.360275
LVL 0.688376
LYD 7.30034
MAD 10.705917
MDL 20.132513
MGA 4879.266197
MKD 61.638191
MMK 2389.39851
MNT 4077.504792
MOP 9.197356
MRU 45.668494
MUR 53.716132
MVR 17.582695
MWK 1975.601923
MXN 19.973872
MYR 4.660755
MZN 72.716148
NAD 18.665506
NGN 1565.341434
NIO 41.657182
NOK 11.279216
NPR 173.590239
NZD 2.005833
OMR 0.437566
PAB 1.138359
PEN 3.889737
PGK 4.982296
PHP 70.134421
PKR 316.654158
PLN 4.291815
PYG 6919.240408
QAR 4.148651
RON 5.228283
RSD 117.341453
RUB 88.19652
RWF 1668.336286
SAR 4.269167
SBD 9.160036
SCR 15.281775
SDG 683.369191
SEK 11.070077
SGD 1.474571
SHP 0.849646
SLE 27.739161
SLL 23863.699777
SOS 650.376047
SRD 42.680845
STD 23554.701755
STN 24.922623
SVC 9.96039
SYP 125.78766
SZL 18.660565
THB 37.956928
TJS 10.530069
TMT 3.983068
TND 3.344354
TOP 2.740078
TRY 53.106243
TTD 7.728216
TWD 36.251033
TZS 2987.298406
UAH 51.032869
UGX 4171.718705
USD 1.138019
UYU 45.762066
UZS 13579.412928
VES 719.879927
VND 29930.476468
VUV 136.674264
WST 3.164699
XAF 655.127624
XAG 0.018995
XAU 0.00028
XCD 3.075554
XCG 2.051603
XDR 0.813704
XOF 653.802249
XPF 119.331742
YER 271.572982
ZAR 18.676832
ZMK 10243.53666
ZMW 20.724763
ZWL 366.441749
  • CMSC

    0.2250

    21.865

    +1.03%

  • NGG

    -2.4850

    80.385

    -3.09%

  • AZN

    -5.5250

    184.095

    -3%

  • BCC

    -1.6000

    76.03

    -2.1%

  • BTI

    -1.0150

    60.745

    -1.67%

  • RIO

    -1.3250

    93.605

    -1.42%

  • GSK

    -1.1750

    51.245

    -2.29%

  • BP

    -0.7850

    36.165

    -2.17%

  • BCE

    -0.2200

    21.29

    -1.03%

  • JRI

    0.0100

    12.97

    +0.08%

  • RBGPF

    0.6100

    65.61

    +0.93%

  • RYCEF

    0.4000

    19.5

    +2.05%

  • RELX

    -0.1750

    31.495

    -0.56%

  • CMSD

    0.2000

    22.1

    +0.9%

  • VOD

    -0.2050

    13.02

    -1.57%

Floods leave women struggling in Pakistan's relief camps
Floods leave women struggling in Pakistan's relief camps / Photo: Aamir QURESHI - AFP

Floods leave women struggling in Pakistan's relief camps

In a former classroom, now a makeshift relief camp, pregnant women take refuge from the floods that have ravaged eastern Pakistan, their bodies aching, eyes heavy with exhaustion and silent despair.

Text size:

Waiting for the water that swallowed their homes to recede, women in Chung, a settlement on Lahore's outskirts, have limited access to sanitary pads and essential medicines, including pregnancy-related care.

Shumaila Riaz, 19-years-old and seven months pregnant with her first child, spent the past four days in the relief camp, enduring pregnancy cramps.

"I wanted to think about the child I am going to have, but now, I am not even certain about my own future," she told AFP.

Clad in dirty clothes they have worn for days and with unbrushed hair, women huddle in the overcrowded school hosting more than 2,000 people, surrounded by mud and stagnant rainwater.

"My body aches a lot and I can't get the medicines I want here," said 19-year-old Fatima, mother to a one-year-old daughter and four months pregnant.

"I used to eat as I please, sleep as I please, walk as I please -- that is all gone now. I can't do that here," added Fatima, who asked AFP not to use her real name.

Monsoon rains over the past week swelled three major rivers that cut through Punjab province, Pakistan's agricultural heartland and home to nearly half of its 255 million people.

The number of affected people rose on Sunday to more than two million, according to provincial senior minister Marriyum Aurangzeb.

Around 750,000 people have been evacuated, of whom 115,000 were rescued by boat -- making it the largest rescue operation in Punjab's history, according to the provincial government.

The flooded rivers have affected mostly rural areas near their banks but heavy rain also flooded urban areas, including several parts of Lahore -- the country's second-largest city.

While South Asia's seasonal monsoon brings rainfall that farmers depend on, climate change is making the phenomenon more erratic, and deadly, across the region.

Landslides and floods triggered by heavier-than-usual monsoon rains have killed more than 850 people nationwide since June.

The latest downpour has killed at least 32 people, the provincial minister said on Sunday.

- Infections and trauma -

Sleeping in tents held together with thin wooden sticks, women displaced by the floods struggle to get sanitary pads and clean clothes when theirs are stained by blood from their periods.

Menstruation remains a taboo topic in Pakistan, with many women discouraged from speaking about it.

"We are struggling to get pads for when we get our period. And even if we do, there are no proper bathrooms to use," said Aleema Bibi, 35, as her baby slept on a sheet soiled with mud.

"We go to the homes nearby to use the bathroom," she added.

Jameela, who uses only one name, said she seeks privacy in a makeshift bathroom next to a cowshed.

"We wait for men in these homes to leave, so that we can go use the bathrooms and change our pads," she said.

Outside the medical truck beside the relief camp, a concerned woman asked where to take her eight-month-pregnant daughter-in-law who had gone into labour, AFP journalists saw.

The pregnant women are also vulnerable to infectious diseases, according to doctors in the medical camp set up by a local NGO.

"I receive around 200 to 300 patients every day with different infections and water-borne diseases," said Fahad Abbas, 27, a doctor at the medical camp.

"There are a lot of patients here who are going through psychological trauma, especially women and children, after losing their homes."

Even without the crisis of a flood, 675 babies under one month old die every day in Pakistan, along with 27 women in perinatal stages from preventable complications, according to the World Health Organization.

Another woman, who wanted to stay anonymous, said the medicine she once used to manage her period cramps was now too difficult to buy.

"We escaped death, but this misery is no less than death either," Jameela said.

X.Wong--DT