UNICEF warns that more children will die without immediate international support, and revises funding appeal to USD$173.5 million

This is a summary of what was said by UNICEF Representative in Pakistan, Abdullah Fadil – to whom quoted text may be attributed - at today's press briefing at the Palais des Nations in Geneva.

07 October 2022
UN0694840
UNICEF/UN0694840/Malik

GENEVA/ISLAMABAD, 7 October 2022 –“Pakistan’s catastrophic floods have already claimed the lives of 615 children. Right now, almost 10million children are now in need of immediate, lifesaving support. It is a staggering number; indeed the scale of need is daunting. And with a heavy heart I must state that more children will die in the coming days and weeks if urgent action is not taken.

The situation on the ground is unlike anything we have seen before. With winter looming, needs will only increase. Some families have now been living in derelict makeshift tents for more than eight weeks. Some have only tattered rags to shield themselves from the scorching sun. Children are surrounded by pools of stagnant water poisoned with fertilizers and faeces, and swarming with diseases and viruses, sometimes meters away from where they sleep.

Today more than half a million children (520,000) face Severe Acute Malnutrition (SAM) and need immediate treatment; close to 80,00 suffer from Severe Acute Malnutrition with medical complications and need urgent medical interventions. Even before these super-floods hit Pakistan, the average stunting rate for children under-five was already at 50% in the affected districts.

More than seven million children and women now need immediate access to nutrition services, while nearly four million children lack access to health services. 7.6 million children are more exposed to protection risks and two million children are out-of-school as a direct result of the floods.

Damage to water supply systems and sanitation facilities has resulted in 5.5 million people who no longer have access to safe drinking water. Despite UNICEF delivering a million litres of clean water each and everyday, such is the scope of this crisis, many families have no alternative but to drink the disease-ridden water. They are now bearing the brunt of deadly water-borne diseases such as cholera, diarrhoea, dengue, and malaria, which only reinforces already acute malnutrition.

Despite severe challenges in reaching the most affected children and families, UNICEF has been on the ground since day one, supporting the Government of Pakistan’s flood response in 55 of the worst affected districts. We have already delivered lifesaving humanitarian supplies worth USD $10 million and flown more than 145 metric tons of humanitarian supplies into the country, including 820,000 antimalarial tablets lastweekend. We have set up 86 mobile health units and 226 temporary learning centres to help children cope with trauma and resume a routine. We have also established two hubs to improve access to the flood-affected areasand are in the process of establishing two more.

But we cannot respond to the sheer scale of the destruction and avert a major crisis without more immediate support. Scaling up nutrition, WASH and health now is critical to save children’s lives.

Amid all this, UNICEF has now revised it appeal to USD$173.5 million as part of the UN flash appeal of US$816 million to support the Government of Pakistan’s flood response. And yet just 13 per cent of UNICEF’s appeal for the children and families of Pakistan has been funded. Time is running out to save lives.

For aid workers such as myself who have been helping children and communities since day one, the situation is utterly heart breaking. Every day, we see alarmed parents rushing their sick children to mobile health camps for treatment. These children aresuffering from severe acute malnutrition, watery diarrhoea, malaria, dengue fever, typhoid, acute respiratory infections, painful skin conditions – the list goes on. Everywhere we go, we see desperation and despair growing as a result of this climate disaster. We need to take collective action before it is too late.”

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Notes for editors:

  • Multimedia materials (photos and b-roll)available here.
  • Find out more about UNICEF's response to the floods in Pakistan (Link).
  • Latest Pakistan Humanitarian Situation Report (Link).

Media contacts

Catherine Weibel
Chief, Advocacy and Communication
UNICEF Pakistan
Tel: +92 51 209 7810
Tel: +92 300 500 2595 (mobile)
Pravaran Mahat
Regional Communication Specialist
UNICEF ROSA
Tel: +977 9802048256

About UNICEF

UNICEF works in some of the world’s toughest places, to reach the world’s most disadvantaged children. Across more than 190 countries and territories, we work for every child, everywhere, to build a better world for everyone. 

UNICEF’s Regional Office for South Asia (ROSA) works with UNICEF Country Offices in Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Bhutan, India, the Maldives, Nepal, Pakistan and Sri Lanka to help to save children’s lives, defend their rights, and help them fulfil their potential. For more information about UNICEF’s work for children in South Asia, visit www.unicef.org/rosa and follow UNICEF ROSA on Twitter and Facebook.

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