Pakistan's flood disaster has devastated the community in Australia. This is how they're helping

The Pakistani community in Australia is doing all it can to help their families affected by the devastating floods. But the diaspora is calling for help from the government to ease the pressure - and help those struggling to survive.

A man carries his sick daughter along a road damaged by flood waters

Thousands of people living near flood-swollen rivers in Pakistan's north were ordered to evacuate as 1,000 people have died due to the heavy rain. Source: Getty / AFP / Abdul Majeed

Key Points
  • The Pakistani community in Australia is doing all it can to help their families affected by the devastating floods.
  • The diaspora is calling for help from the government to ease the pressure - and help those struggling to survive.
International student Mujahed Torwali felt like all he could do was watch from afar as his village in Pakistan is being ravaged by deadly flooding.

A heavy monsoon season has claimed the lives of more than 1,000 people, with flash flooding leaving residents stranded as villages, roads and bridges are swept away amid the destruction.

as a call for international help has been made to secure aid as families are left without food, electricity or basic necessities.
 Man holding a baby wades through a flooded area
Flash floods triggered by heavy monsoon rains have killed over 1,000 people across Pakistan. Source: AAP / Arshad Arbab
Mr Torwali is one of the hundreds of members of the Pakistani diaspora in Australia who are gathering supplies to send to those hardest hit all while trying to find out if their families are alive and safe.

"I can’t focus on anything because I don’t know what’s happening there with my family because everything is just cut off. We are just cut off," he told SBS News.

"They are living in that part of the world and I'm living here, so all the time, I'm thinking about them. And there is no internet, no telephone, no mobile and nothing, so that's why I am very anxious at what's happening there."

While the country's army and navy continue rescue efforts, the government says it will launch a United Nations-backed appeal in the coming days - seeking more than $230 million in global donations.
Displaced people carry belongings after they salvaged usable items from their flood-hit home
Displaced people carry belongings after they salvaged usable items from their flood-hit home in Pakistan's southwest. Source: AP / Zahid Hussain
Here in Australia, the Pakistani diaspora has come together to support those affected, while many anxiously wait to hear news of their loved ones

Mr Torwali is from the Swat district in Pakistan's north, where there are major internet outages - similar to many affection regions in the country.

He said he only received news his family was safe on Saturday night, but his four-year-old daughter who is still in Pakistan is unwell and unable to receive medical attention.

"She was sick - having some tooth issues and pain," he said.

"They were unable to take her to the doctor because the road was blocked and there was no doctor there was no medicine, everything is underwater."

His local village has been destroyed in what he says is the worst flooding the region has ever seen.
People clamber for a plate of food from a man offering plates.
People affected by floods are hugely reliant on food relief as their communities have been ravaged. Source: AAP / EPA / Arshad Arbab
"There were some houses, there were some buildings, big trees, they were there for hundreds of years but this flood just washed over everything. So, it means that this is for the first time in history."

It's not just the Swat district that's been affected, with the destruction stretching across much of the country.

President of the Australian-based Pakistani organisation, Sabeel-E-Mustafa Foundation, Rukhshanda Zama is appealing to the Australian community to donate used clothes, blankets, bed sheets, tarps and tents.
Woman in hijab and hi-vis vest stands in front of Pakistan flag.
Rukhshanda Zaman is rallying for more donations to assist those flood-affected in Pakistan. Source: SBS News
"We want people to come forward and bring it to us and we are arranging containers to be shipped to Pakistan for that relief for those flood-affected areas," she said.

The relief efforts are mobilised across the country in Sydney, Wollongong, Brisbane, Perth, Canberra and Melbourne.

Also from the foundation, Zeeshan Iqbal, as well as the Pakistani Community in Australia group, said it's a critical time for the Australian government to provide a show of support to Pakistan.

"We want the government and we appeal to the prime minister to send aid to Pakistan because it’s the right time and we would really appreciate if something can be sent in the form of aid," he said.

The Foundation says donations of new and used tents are desperately needed, as many of the displaced in Pakistan will be homeless for months - some even years.

"It has been devastating. It has been coming from the top to the bottom of Pakistan. And people are being displaced, we don’t have enough rescue people, so we need help from every corner of the world. So us Pakistanis, diaspora around the world, that’s what we are trying to do."

The donations will be shipped in the coming weeks.

Share
4 min read
Published 29 August 2022 11:22am
Updated 29 August 2022 2:46pm
By Ariana Lucente, Kath Landers, Rena Sarumpaet
Source: SBS News


Share this with family and friends