ACCA Pakistan

Sign In

Subscribe

Subscribe to ACCA Pakistan.


Posts Tagged ‘ asif ali zardari ’

Aug 26
Thursday

Pakistan recovery ‘to take years’

Filed under Buzz

Pakistan will need at least three years to recover from the devastating floods that have swept across the country for more than three weeks, the country’s president has said.

Asif Ali Zardari warned that the displacement and economic hardship caused by the floods could spark widespread unrest. He also defended his government’s response, saying no country would have been able to effectively handle the floods.

“There is no way any nation, even if it’s a superpower… can bring the same level of satisfaction that will be close to the expectations of people,” Zardari said in an interview in Islamabad with a small group of foreign reporters.

Flooding has killed more than 1,500 people, according to the United Nations, and affected more than 17 million. Hundreds of thousands of homes have been destroyed, and more than 1.7m acres of farmland are underwater.

“I don’t think Pakistan will ever fully recover, but we will move on,” Zardari said.

Sindh threatened

The waters are once again threatening southern Sindh province, where the Indus river has reached dangerously high levels at the Kotri barrage.

Flooding has already submerged a number of villages in Thatta and Larkana districts in Sindh. Workers have frantically piled sandbags and rebuilt levees, and hundreds of thousands of people have been evacuated from the area.

Authorities estimated that 90 per cent of the 350,000 residents of the city of Shahad Kot have already fled.

More than 18km of new levees have already been built in Shahad Kot and nearby Qambar, but authorities worry that the rising floodwaters may top those barriers. The floods have been racing south down the Indus for several days.

‘Epidemic diseases’

Millions of people displaced by the floods have yet to receive any aid, and the UN said on Tuesday that more than 800,000 people have been cut off, reachable only by air.

Pakistani officials and aid organisations continue to warn of the threat of a disease epidemic. The UN says more than 3.5m children are at risk of waterborne diseases. And the flooding has ravaged Pakistan’s medical system: More than 200 hospitals and clinics are damaged.

Yousuf Raza Gilani, the Pakistani prime minister, warned on Tuesday that the country should prepare for an epidemic.

“As human misery continues to mount, we are seriously concerned with the spread of epidemic diseases,” he said during a visit to a makeshift health clinic.

HOW TO MAKE MONEY ONLINE Related Links
  • CitiGroup: Gold To Hit $2,000 - Wars To Follow Now that the Federal Reserve has bailed out Citigroup, it's back to business as usual. Having personally helped destabilize the world financial markets, they're now predicting a rise in gold prices to $2,000/oz in 2009. According to an article in the UK Telegraph: Gold is poised for a dramatic surge......
  • Times Square probe yield 3 arrests [/caption] WATERTOWN, Mass. – Federal agents conducted Thursday morning raids in Massachusetts, New York and New Jersey in connection with the failed Times Square car bomb and arrested three people, including two Pakistani men who provided money to the suspect, Faisal Shahzad, law enforcement officials said. The searches were the......
  • 5 Centenarians Offer Secret to Long Life Any time someone who is 100 years old wants to tell you how to live that long, you really should listen. These women are just amazing! I have a 95 year old grandmother that says all the time...."How did 95 years go by so fast? No one is supposed......
  • World battles swine flu as death toll rises Governments and health officials around the world continued to take steps Tuesday against the outbreak of swine flu that has killed scores of people in Mexico and spread to the U.S., Europe and possibly Asia. By early Tuesday, the swine flu outbreak in Mexico was suspected in 152 deaths and......
  • Copenhagen police release hundreds of detained activists [/caption] Only 13 protesters are still in custody after nearly a thousand arrested during demonstrations at climate change summit Danish police have released hundreds of activists who were detained during a mass rally to demand a global climate pact, as police were accused of overreacting to sporadic street violence. Only......
No additional entries found.



All content and source © 2010 ACCA Pakistan | Website Powered By M-CORP a division of Mughals Corporation.