Transcript Slide 1

Pakistan's principal natural resources are arable land and water. About 25% of
Pakistan's total land area is under cultivation and is watered by one of the
largest irrigation systems in the world. Pakistan irrigates three times more acres
than Russia. Agriculture accounts for about 23% of GDP and employs about
44% of the labor force.
Pakistan is one of the world's largest producers and suppliers of the
following according to the 2005 Food and Agriculture Organization of The
United Nations and FAOSTAT given here with ranking:
Chickpea (2nd)
Apricot (4th)
Cotton (4th)
Sugarcane (4th)
Milk (5th)
Onion (5th)
Date Palm (6th)
Mango (7th)
Tangerines, mandarin oranges, clementine (8th)
Rice (8th)
Wheat (9th)
Oranges (10th)
Pakistan ranks fifth in the Muslim world and twentieth worldwide in farm
output. It is the world's fifth largest milk producer.
This, along with sugarcane, cotton and rice make up 75% of all crops
grown in Pakistan.
The average temperature in Pakistan is 23.9 °C (75 °F).
The average temperature range is 21 °C.
The highest monthly average high temperature is 41 °C (106 °F) in June.
The lowest monthly average low temperature is 5 °C (41 °F) in January &
December.
Pakistan's climate receives an average of 489 mm (19.3 in) of rainfall per
year, or 41 mm (1.6 in) per month.
On average there are 49 days per year with more than 0.1 mm (0.004 in)
of rainfall (precipitation) or 4 days with a quantity of rain, sleet, snow etc.
per month.
The driest weather is in November when an average of 3 mm (0.1 in) of
rainfall (precipitation) occurrs across <1 days.
The wettest weather is in July when an average of 138 mm (5.4 in) of
rainfall (precipitation) occurrs across 9 days.
The average annual relative humidity is 37.9% and average monthly
relative humidity ranges from 20% in May to 58% in August.
Average sunlight hours in Pakistan range between 6.8 hours per day in
January and 9.9 hours per day in May.
There are an average of 3094 hours of sunlight per year with an average
of 8.5 hours of sunlight per day.
On 29th July 2010 heavy monsoon rains triggered
flooding in north west Pakistan, causing rivers to
burst their banks. Described as the worst floods in
living memory by the UN, it is estimated that
722,000 homes have been damaged or destroyed, at
least 1,600 have been killed and some 20 million
people have been affected.
What do you
think this
image is
trying to
show?
Maps of soil moisture during
Pakistan floods
© REUTERS/Akhtar Soomro courtesy of alertnet.org
Photo caption and credit
A villager fleeing from floodwaters carries a handmade rope bed on his head
while taking refuge on high ground in Thatta some 100 kilometers (60 miles)
from Karachi in Pakistan's Sindh province August 31, 2010. A month after
torrential monsoon rains triggered Pakistan's worst natural disaster on record,
flood waters are starting to recede -- but there are countless survivors at risk of
death from hunger and disease.
© REUTERS/Akhtar Soomro courtesy of alertnet.org
Important legal note
This photograph is fully protected by copyright. Schools and other educational
organisations aree free to use it for educational use. The licence does not extend
beyond this use. This means that anyone wishing to put the image on a website,
crop or edit it, or use it in any other way, must first contact the copyright holder
and negotiate a licence for the use they require.
This resource and other free educational materials are available at
redcross.org.uk/education
The British Red Cross Society is a charity registered in England and Wales
(220949) and Scotland (SCO37738).
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Activity ideas
What might be the hopes and fears of the man
pictured? How would students' themselves feel if
they were in his position? Write a different caption
that brings out the human story.
Invite students to find another picture, from a
website or newspaper, that conveys a different
human story about the Pakistan floods. Share and
explain with the whole group.
Boardblast a list of what students think surviving
after the floods means. What is essential? Think
about emotional and psychological needs as well as
physical. Is, for instance, mourning the dead
essential?
The flood waters are now receding. Does that
mean things are getting better? Or is the worst yet
to come for the people of the affected areas?
Invite students to research two reasons that would
back up each side of the argument.
Hanifa, 35, only just escaped with her husband and seven
children when flood waters swept through Fatah Pur village,
Sindh province in July 2010.
Hanifa’s home was badly damaged and six months on the
devastation is still visible: watermarks eight feet high are a
constant reminder of the floods’ magnitude. The water came
through with such force houses were literally cleared of their
belongings. Most residents simply gathered their children and
elderly family members and fled when the floods hit Pakistan.
“We only returned here 15 days ago,” Hanifa says. “We had been
living on the bank of the drainage culvert.” Hanifa now cooks
under a makeshift tent constructed from tarpaulins. Around her
are the broken walls of her former house, but within them she
has made a tidy, well-ordered home for her children.
Lost livelihood
Before the flood Hanifa and her husband were a farming family,
but it is impossible to work the land after the flood and some of
her children now work to support the family.
By taking jobs with motor mechanics or confectionary shops
they bring in a small amount of money (less than $1 a day). But
Hanifa wants things to change.
She says: “I would like my children to be in school, but this is our
situation right now. My wish for the future is that we have food,
that we can survive and for my children to get an education.”
Support from the Red Cross
The flood waters have taken months
to drain away enough to allow
residents of Fatah Pur to return. Now,
the Pakistan Red Crescent Society is
distributing essential household and
shelter items to help residents
resettle.
Each family is given a shelter toolkit
and tarpaulins, to help them make
short term repairs or construct a
shelter on their land. They also
receive water purification tablets,
blankets, a kitchen set, sleeping mats
and basic hygiene items such as
soap, toothpaste and laundry powder.
Hanifa says: “I’m looking forward to
receiving a proper kitchen set as I’ve
had very little to cook with. The
blankets and sleeping mats will also
make a big difference in the cold
nights.”
21 January 2011
Six months after the floods in Pakistan began, millions
of people remain homeless and in need of emergency
aid.
More than four million people are without adequate
shelter and millions more are in need of food and
other aid, with flood waters still engulfing large areas
in Sindh province in the south.
“It is a miserable situation and a disaster which is
continuing to unfold,” said Sir Nick Young, chief
executive of the British Red Cross. “I visited Pakistan
last week, and vast swathes of land are still flooded
preventing people from returning home. Even when
people can go back, conditions are desperate. Their
houses, fields and livelihoods have been ruined.”
Emergency needs continue
The floods destroyed 1.9 million homes, taking roofs
from over the heads of a population larger than that of
Greater London. The destruction also included 5.4 million
acres of damaged farmland, leaving entire communities
without a source of food or income.
“The achievements so far have been huge, but this
disaster affected 20 million people and millions are still
in need of emergency support. No single agency or
organisation can solve this alone,” said John English,
British Red Cross country representative in Pakistan.
“People in Pakistan want to rebuild their livelihoods, but
they need support to do it and this is where the British
Red Cross will focus its efforts.”
Malnourished children
More than 70,000 children are estimated to be severely
or moderately malnourished across affected provinces,
and villages in the south remain surrounded by
contaminated water, creating breeding grounds for
waterborne diseases.
In the north, families are living through sub-zero
conditions in the remnants of their homes. Many roads
remain blocked or damaged, leaving villagers with no
option but to walk for miles to seek help.
“The emergency is far from over,” John said. “Much more
help will be needed for people to get back on their feet,
and without that help, survivors will be forced further
back into poverty, hunger and vulnerability.”
The floods have destroyed road networks meaning many
places are now only accessible on foot.
The floods have caused devastating mudslides, destroying
homes, crops and infrastructures
Bridges have been swept away. This temporary footbridge
connects two communities, either side of the Duber Khwar
River
Peoples lives have been destroyed. They are homeless, hungry and left
with nothing.
People took refuge high up on the mountainsides, away from the flood
waters. However when people are sick, they have a three day walk down the
mountain to the nearest hospital.
This picture was taken in late
October, three months on from
the torrential monsoon rains.
Still the flood waters have not
receded and millions of people
still have been unable to return
home.
The only method of travel is by
boat.
Famida Ghancha has just
arrived at the Shabaz relief
camp.
“They wanted us to move out
of the School room we were
staying in so that the classes
could open.
We arrived here last night.
There is still five feet of water
in our village.”
Hidayat Siyal’s village is
about an hour away from
the nearest relief by boat
and is surrounded by
water.
“We’re unemployed and
have no money. It will
take us at least a year
and half before we can
harvest again.
It is impossible to plant
because of the floods.”