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Pakistani flood survivors look out from their makeshift tent after fleeing their village in Sajawal near Hyderabad, Pakistan, on Friday. Hundreds of thousands of Pakistanis were fleeing floodwaters Friday after the surging Indus River smashed through levees in two places, but many refused to leave the danger zone, while others took shelter in an ancient graveyard for Muslim saints.

Pakistani flood survivors look out from their makeshift tent after fleeing their village in Sajawal near Hyderabad, Pakistan, on Friday. Hundreds of thousands of Pakistanis were fleeing floodwaters Friday after the surging Indus River smashed through levees in two places, but many refused to leave the danger zone, while others took shelter in an ancient graveyard for Muslim saints.
Shakil Adil / The Associated Press

Floods that displaced 1 million are continuing to wreak havoc

By Alex Rodriguez / Los Angeles Times
Published: August 28. 2010 4:00AM PST

SUKKUR, Pakistan — Floodwaters that have reached the Indus River delta displaced at least 1 million southern Pakistan residents in recent days, U.N. officials said Friday, a significant escalation of what is already the country’s worst natural disaster in its history.

Further upstream in central and northern Pakistan, floodwaters have begun to recede a month after record monsoon rains swept away roads, bridges and other infrastructure and left millions of people homeless. The death toll stands at 1,600.

In southern Sindh province, however, the floods continue to wreak havoc as they reach cities near the Indus delta. U.N. officials said the floods have forced the evacuation of 1 million people in the last two days, mostly from the Qambar-Shadadkot and Thatta regions in the southern end of the province. In terms of surface area affected by flooding, Sindh is now the hardest-hit of Pakistan’s provinces.

“An already colossal disaster is getting worse, and requiring an even more colossal response,” said U.N. spokesman Maurizio Giuliano. “The magnitude of this crisis is reaching levels that are even beyond our initial fears.”

Officials with the world body say the speed with which the crisis is spreading is outpacing the international community’s efforts to reach legions of flood victims who lack access to food, clean drinking water, shelter and health care. U.N. workers are providing drinking water to 2.5 million people but have yet to reach the estimated 3.5 million others still in need.

Relief workers are especially concerned about the risk to children, many of whom were already in poor health before the floods. U.N. officials estimate that at least 70,000 children under the age of 5 and living in flood-affected areas suffered from acute malnutrition before the crisis. Up to 20 percent of children in flooded regions are suffering from diarrhea-related disorders and at high risk of dehydration and malnutrition.

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