Devastating conditions were triggered by heavy monsoon rains that have so far killed more than 1,500 people

All four of Haliman’s daughters have fallen sick after she left her flood-ravaged house in her village in Qambar Shahdadkot district in the Sindh province of Pakistan. Two of her daughters have a recurring fever and two have skin diseases.

“I have never seen such diseases. The skin on my eldest daughter’s feet is peeling off,” said Haliman, sitting on a charpoy in a girls’ college in Larkana, where she had sought refuge along with a hundred others. “It is because of the floods and she waded through the flood water with me for hours. It is not only her feet, but her back, thighs and neck have bumpy rashes.”

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Labour MP Apsana Begum alleges ‘harassment’ from party

MP tells World Transformed festival at Labour conference she experienced racism in…

These byelection results are the verdict on a cruel and useless government that’s running out of road | Jonathan Freedland

Losses in Tiverton & Honiton and in Wakefield are more than midterm…

Sales of peat compost to gardeners to be banned from 2024

Funding for restoration of peatlands and tripling of tree planting in England…

Pinging hell: NHS Covid app causing widespread staff shortages

Industry leaders in retail, hospitality and manufacturing say parts of the economy…