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Pakistan flood update: Oxfam provides 100,000 people with clean water

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Less than a week into the crisis, Oxfam is delivering clean water to almost 100,000 people made homeless by catastrophic flooding in Pakistan.

In four of the worst-affected areas of the Khyber Paktankhwa (formally NWFP) and Punjab Province, Oxfam and partners are repairing damaged water systems and trucking drinking water to those stranded or displaced from their homes.

Oxfam’s Country Director Neva Khan said:

“We are providing water purification packets to people who are reduced to drinking from ponds and dirty standing water. At the same time, we are training people on how to clean the water and how to stay as hygienic as possible in such a chaotic and dangerous environment.

“The rains started falling a week ago and with every day that goes by more young children will be fighting deadly water-borne diseases. At this critical time, we are prioritizing getting drinking water to women and children to stem an increase in diarrheal diseases."

In Punjab Province, Oxfam has deployed emergency boats to assist government search and rescue efforts, which have already evacuated 54,000 people to safety.

Khan said:

" People are sheltering in schools, living in makeshift shelters, or being hosted by families whose homes are still standing. In the worst-hit areas, everyone is struggling to find clean drinking water and food. Oxfam is providing clean water to people who have lost everything."

Oxfam is appealing for $US6 million to help people get through the immediate days and weeks and to boost recovery over the long-term. The agency is also planning to provide emergency latrines and hygiene kits to help people who have lost everything in the floods, as well as cooked food and cash for work.

What Oxfam is doing:

  • Oxfam has rehabilitated four water systems by repairing pipes or providing fuel to pumps – these simple measures have provided clean water for four villages or 56,000 people. 
  • Oxfam is delivering water to those who have been stranded or displaced. For four days, we have been making four to six daily trips to 14 different locations reaching 39,200 people per day with drinking water.
  • Water quality is very important, so Oxfam is treating the water with chlorine, and in Swat Valley in Northern Pakistan, it is using a water treatment plant.

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