***Updates****
New videos:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8tukwwCpVG0
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xdd1W2kr0xo
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PMqGEa8ihDQ
UPDATE:
They may be
homeless and
stranded without possessions, but their integrity is intact. They made it very clear they weren't beggars. It was out of sheer desperation they were
asking for help. They had little food and almost no possessions. Most of their cattle
and productive capital got washed away with the flood, their land
unusable for years.
It was extremely difficult to get them to agree to be in a photo so that their story was conveyed to the rest of the world. Most of their women hid their faces, out of sheer embarrassment.
"We don't want any media attention, we don't want to be seen on TV, we don't want to be disgraced". These were the remarks of a young mother in her mid-30s as my cousin requested to take their photo.
The
men of the group are mostly farmers, used to a hard day's labour.
Sitting idly, doing nothing is hurting their pride. They don't want
handouts. They want to be able to go back to work again. Most realise
they are powerless against the forces of nature, lucky even to survive.
The photo below taken (attached) in my garage is the only picture they
allowed my cousin to take after much negotiation. Most of the men and
women dispersed and hid themselves, wanting not to be a part of the
picture. I wonder what lies behind the smiles of these two young kids
seen at the forefront. Will they ever see a home again?
This
is their temporary shelter/home, their possessions are few. Their
sleeping arrangements are very simple. A simple charpai/palang (a
simple portable bed woven of reed), one fan, use of a kitchen and two
bathrooms between the whole group. The younger girls are sleeping with
my mother in her room. The resources are few and far between. And it is
very hot out there.
Two
of the girls staying at our house are in Year 9. They spend most of
their time studying. Year 10 is the all important Matriculation (GCSE
equivalent) year in Pakistan. I am not sure if they will have a school
to go to?
My
mother tells me that Ban Ki-Moon the UN Secretary General visited the
flood victims in my area (Multan) a few days ago. According to the BBC
he has never seen anything like it before.
Government schools and local mosques have become make shift homes,
with newly set-up relief camps in the area.
The Shias (in their
thousands) of Muzzafargarh and Alipur are really badly hit, the local
Hussainias and Imam Barghas in the city of Multan have become their
temporary shelters. Some of them went back to assess the damage to
their homes. Such is the devastation it was impossible for them to even
identify where their houses used to be.
Everyone has chipped in a little a bit. Will it be enough?
Just to let you know that it costs roughly
£4000 to even build a normal standard house in rural Pakistan.
...............................................
2 trawlers full of flood victims (about 80 people), mostly women and
children turned up at my home in Multan couple of days ago, they are
staying at my house in the garage/verandah. Most of them have had their
homes totally destroyed, 10ft under water, no possessions left. They
will be there for a good few months. Through Ramadhan and Eid.
Most
people are without food, clean drinking water and shelter, with a risk of disease. The
story is the same across Pakistan. Although a lot of
aid has been given by charities BUT officials have stolen most of the
good things, to even get hold of the bad stuff they need to know people
in the government, aid distribution is really poorly managed.
A
lot of the villages in my area (Multan), near Muzafargarh and the
southern part of Punjab are Shia populations, millions have been left
homeless and swathes of people have turned up in the area where I live.
The local mosques and Hussainias have become temporary homes.
Any
donations are welcome, I assure you the money will go directly to the
people, my mother is already in the process of delivering and gathering
aid.