UN Chief: Pakistan Facing ‘Monsoon on Steroids’
ISLAMABAD (Dispatches) -- The UN secretary general, António Guterres, on Tuesday warned that Pakistan is 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 worst flooding in more than a decade and damaged more than 1 million homes.
Guterres said that south Asia was a hotspot for the climate crisis and that the catastrophic flooding in Pakistan that has 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 $160 million 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, Balochistan and Sindh provinces have had more than four times the average rainfall of the last three decades.
Flash floods fuelled by the climate crisis have affected more than 33 million people, officials have said. The National Disaster Management Authority (NDA) said on Monday the death toll from the monsoon rains and floods in Pakistan had reached 1,136 – with 75 killed in the last 24 hours.
Early estimates put the damage from Pakistan’s recent deadly floods at more than $10 billion, its planning minister said, adding the world has an obligation to help the South Asian nation cope with the effects of man-made climate change.