A boy wades in flood water near his home in Shikarpur, Pakistan (AFP or licensors)
By Lydia O’Kane
Sep 1 2022
The Executive Director of Caritas Pakistan, Amjad Gulzar, speaks about the work the organization is doing to assist those hit by severe floods in the country.
As Pakistan continues to be hit by unprecedented flash floods which have washed away roads, crops, infrastructure, and bridges, Caritas Pakistan is one of the aid organizations on the frontline of a catastrophe the country’s climate change minister has called a “climate-induced humanitarian disaster of epic proportions.”
The Catholic aid agency is joining forces with its member Caritas organizations to share resources aimed at supporting those impacted.
Over a thousand people have been killed, and more than 1500 injured by the historic floods.
It is estimated that more than 1 million homes have been damaged, leaving tens of thousands displaced.
Amjad Gulzar is the Executive Director of Caritas Pakistan. He told Vatican News that in early July they started responding in the badly affected areas of Karachi and Baluchistan. Since then, flooding has wreaked havoc on 116 out of 160 districts of the country, and he has seen at first hand the effect that these floods have had on people’s lives.
“I personally went to two dioceses, one in Baluchistan and then the south Punjab district Rajanpur. And I have seen more than 20 kilometres area that was under the water and many villages there have been disappeared. And our team members, they provided their immediate shelter or tents and cooked food to the victims. And we have seen the misery and the vulnerability that was evident. And we could see that a level of response that hasn’t been made by the government so far in those areas,” the executive-director said.