logo
Trump's aid cut threatens water scheme in sweltering Pakistani city of Jacobabad

Trump's aid cut threatens water scheme in sweltering Pakistani city of Jacobabad

Gulf Today21-02-2025
In one of the world's hottest cities, fresh and filtered water can quench the searing onslaught of climate change — but US President Donald Trump's foreign aid freeze threatens its vital supply, an NGO says.
Pakistan's sun-parched Jacobabad city in southern Sindh province sometimes surpasses 50˚C in increasing heatwaves causing critical health problems like dehydration and heat-stroke.
In 2012, USAID committed a $66 million grant to uplift Sindh's municipal services, including the flagship renovation of a plant pumping and purifying water from a canal 22 kilometres away. But Pakistani non-profit HANDS says Trump's aid embargo has blocked $1.5 million earmarked to make the scheme viable in the long-term, putting the project at risk "within a few months."
"This has transformed our lives," 25-year-old Tufail Ahmed told AFP in Jacobabad, where wintertime temperatures are already forecast to pass 30˚C next week.
"If the water supply is cut off it will be very difficult for us," he added. "Survival will be challenging, as water is the most essential thing for life."
Between September and mid-January Sindh saw rainfall 52 per cent below average according to the Pakistan Meteorological Department, with "moderate drought" predicted in the coming months. Heatwaves are becoming hotter, longer and more frequent due to climate change, scientists say.
Services withdrawn
The project pipes in 1.5 million gallons (5.7 million litres) daily and serves about 350,000 people in Jacobabad, HANDS says — a city where grinding poverty is commonplace.
HANDS said it discovered Trump's 90-day freeze on foreign assistance through media reports with no prior warning.
"Since everything is just suspended we have to withdraw our staff and we have to withdraw all services for this water project," HANDS CEO Shaikh Tanveer Ahmed told AFP.
Forty-seven staff, including experts who manage the water purification and service the infrastructure, have been sent home.
The service will likely stop functioning "within the next few months", Ahmed predicted, and the project will be "a total failure" unless another funder steps in.
The scheme is currently in the hands of the local government who lack the technical or revenue collection expertise HANDS was developing to fund the supply from bill payments, rather than donations.
The international aid community has been in a tailspin over Trump's campaign to downsize or dismantle swathes of the US government — led by his top donor and the world's richest man Elon Musk.
The most concentrated fire has been on Washington's aid agency USAID, whose $42.8 billion budget represents 42 per cent of humanitarian aid disbursed worldwide. But it accounts for only between 0.7 and 1.4 per cent of total US government spending in the last quarter century, according to the Pew Research Centre.
Trump has claimed USAID is "run by radical lunatics" while Musk has described it as a "criminal organisation" needing to be put "through the woodchipper."
In Jacobabad, 47-year-old local social activist Abdul Ghani pleaded for its work to continue. "If the supply is cut off it will severely affect the public," he said. "Poverty is widespread here and we cannot afford alternatives."
'Supply cannot be stopped'
Residents complain the Jacobabad supply is patchy but still describe it as an invaluable service in a city where the alternative is buying water from private donkey-drawn tankers.
Eighteen-year-old student Noor Ahmed said before "our women had to walk for hours" to collect water.
HANDS says the private tankers have a monthly cost of up to 10 times more than their rate of Rs500 ($1.80) and often contain contaminants like arsenic.
"The dirty water we used to buy was harmful to our health and falling ill would cost us even more," said 55-year-old Sadruddin Lashari. "This water is clean. The supply cannot be stopped," he added.
Pakistan — home to more than 240 million people — ranks as the nation most affected by climate change, according to non-profit Germanwatch's Climate Risk Index released this year and analysing data from 2022.
That year a third of the country was inundated by unprecedented monsoon floods killing more than 1,700 and causing an estimated $14.9 billion in damages after a punishing summer heatwave.
Jacobabad's water system also suffered heavy damage in the 2010 floods which killed almost 1,800 and affected 21 million.
Pakistan produces less than one percent of global greenhouse gas emissions which scientists say are driving human-made climate change.
Islamabad has consistently called for countries which emit more to contribute to aid for its population suffering on the front line of climate change.
"It's incredibly hot here year-round," said Lashari. "We need water constantly."
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

North Carolina braces for flooding from Hurricane Erin
North Carolina braces for flooding from Hurricane Erin

Al Etihad

time18 hours ago

  • Al Etihad

North Carolina braces for flooding from Hurricane Erin

21 Aug 2025 11:57 WASHINGTON (AFP)Hurricane Erin's furthest bands began brushing the outer banks of North Carolina's coast on Wednesday, where the Category 2 storm triggered mandatory evacuation orders, and officials warned summer beachgoers along the US East Coast of life-threatening surf and rip currents in the coming isn't expected for Erin -- welcome news for the southern US state still reeling from last year's deadly Hurricane Helene -- but North Carolina officials declared an emergency Tuesday as Erin's predicted impacts began taking of coastal North Carolina and Virginia were under tropical storm warnings, according to officials at the National Hurricane Centre (NHC)."Swells generated by Erin will affect the Bahamas, Bermuda, the east coast of the United States and Atlantic Canada during the next several days," NHC said, adding that "Erin is a large hurricane."As of Wednesday afternoon, Erin was churning northward some 245 miles (395 kilometres) southeast of North Carolina, packing maximum sustained winds of 110 mph (175 kph), the NHC said -- with the possibility it could still restrengthen to a major unusually large size means tropical storm-force winds extend hundreds of miles from its centre, earning it the moniker "Enormous Erin" by hurricane specialist Michael Lowry, who wrote on Substack that the United States was fortunate to be spared a direct evacuation orders were in effect for Ocracoke and Hatteras Islands in North Carolina Governor Josh Stein urged residents to store enough food, water and supplies to last up to five days -- and to safeguard important documents like insurance policies."We have already pre-positioned three swift water rescue teams and 200 National Guard troops to various locations on the coast, along with boats, high clearance vehicles and aircraft," he added.

Pakistan: Five days of flash floods kill hundreds, cause widespread destruction
Pakistan: Five days of flash floods kill hundreds, cause widespread destruction

Middle East Eye

time2 days ago

  • Middle East Eye

Pakistan: Five days of flash floods kill hundreds, cause widespread destruction

Thousands of peoples' lives have been devastated by flash floods that have besieged Pakistan and Pakistan-administered Kashmir over the last five days. Since June, at least 700 people have been killed across the country. The floods have swept away entire villages, leaving people trapped under rubble or without homes in the areas of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Gilgit Baltistan, and Azad Jammu and Kashmir in the mountainous north of the country. Many roads have been damaged, making it hard for people to escape or seek refuge elsewhere. Members of a family sit outside their damaged shop after the Buner district of Pakistan's Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province was hit by a flash flood on 18 August (Abdul Majeed/ AFP) New MEE newsletter: Jerusalem Dispatch Sign up to get the latest insights and analysis on Israel-Palestine, alongside Turkey Unpacked and other MEE newsletters At least 358 people have died in the province of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP), with 225 of those deaths coming from the hardest-hit district of Buner, according to the Provincial Disaster Management Authority (PDMA). At least 100 people are said to be missing. Families are left to grieve people and places, after the flash floods appeared and disappeared in a matter of hours. According to data from PDMA, 780 houses were damaged in the province, with 349 completely destroyed and another 431 sustaining partial damage. Locals collect wood in the aftermath of a flash flood from Noseri Dam near Muzaffarabad, the capital of Pakistan-administered Kashmir, on 16 August (Sajjad Qayyum/ AFP) In Dalori village in KP, rescuers struggled to excavate bodies among intense intermittent bouts of rain. KP's Chief Minister Muhammad Ali Saif said over $34m had been released for rescue efforts, with 6,000 rescue personnel deployed and over 5,000 people rescued so far. Umar Islam, a 31-year-old labourer, struggled to hold back his tears as he told AFP about his father, who was killed on Monday. "Our misery is beyond explanation. In a matter of minutes, we lost everything we had," he said wringing his hands as neighbours tried to console him. Another villager, Fazal Akbar, 37, said the village was "reduced to ruins" in just 20 minutes. "It happened so suddenly that no one even had a minute to react," he said. "Announcements were made by the mosque, and villagers rushed to begin the rescue themselves." Rescue workers try to clear away the rubble of collapsed houses as they search for victims, a day after a flash flood in Dalori village( Aamir QURESHI /AFP) Death tolls continue to rise as rescuers struggle to reach villages and towns impacted due to continuous rain, causing roads to flood or become damaged, and phone networks being impacted. Rains spread south The monsoon season typically arrives in Pakistan between June and September. Heavy rain began falling on Tuesday in Pakistan's south, including the country's largest city of Karachi. People wade through a flooded street after heavy rainfall in Karachi on 19 August (Asif HASSAN / AFP) Home to at least 2o million and the country's main commercial hub, Karachi came grinding to a halt as roads flooded. Multiple neighbourhoods were hit with power cuts and traffic was gridlocked for hours at end. Flight operations at Karachi's Jinnah International Airport was also disrupted. Chief meteorologist of the Sindh province, Amir Hyder Laghari, told AFP that he was worried large urban cities such as Karachi would not be able to cope with the heavy rain "due to weak infrastructure" such as crumbling pipes and old sewer systems. A man takes shelter as a car lies partially submerged in floodwaters along a street after heavy rainfall in Karachi on 19 August (Asif HASSAN / AFP) At least seven people had died as a result of heavy rain pounding the city. The rest of the Sindh province and Balochistan have also been badly impacted by flash floods, with between 40 and 50 houses sustaining damage, reports have said. At least 22 people have died in Balochistan from the flooding. The storms show no sign of abating, with authorities warning flash floods are expected to continue until the weekend, as well as into the end of the month, according to the National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA) chairman, Lieutenant General Inam Haider Malik. The flash floods are one of the most damaging aspects of Pakistan's monsoon rain reason, but landslides are also a regular feature of the season. Since the monsoon rains commenced on 26 June this year, the NDMA says more than 700 people have been killed and close to 1,000 injured. It is the latest tragedy for the country, which is among the world's most vulnerable countries to the impact of climate change and has been increasingly facing extreme weather events in recent years. Monsoon floods submerged one-third of Pakistan in 2022, resulting in approximately 1,700 deaths.

Wildfires scorch 74,000 more acres in Spain
Wildfires scorch 74,000 more acres in Spain

Al Etihad

time3 days ago

  • Al Etihad

Wildfires scorch 74,000 more acres in Spain

19 Aug 2025 13:43 Madrid (AFP)Raging wildfires tore through an additional 30,000 hectares (74,000 acres) of western Spain in less than 24 hours, satellite data showed on Tuesday, but cooler temperatures have raised hopes of 373,000 hectares (922,000 acres) have been scorched in Spain this year as of 0700 GMT Tuesday, according to the European Forest Fire Information marks the country's worst fire season since records began in 2006, surpassing 2022, when 306,000 hectares were consumed by bulk of the devastation has come from massive fires that have been burning for more than a week in the northwestern provinces of Zamora and Leon, Galicia's Ourense province, and Caceres in the western region of have evacuated thousands of residents from dozens of major roads are closed, and rail services between Madrid and Galicia have been Minister Pedro Sánchez was expected to visit fire-hit areas in Zamora and Caceres on officials warned that the blazes remain far from extinguished, the end of a 16-day heatwave has improved conditions for temperatures have dropped by 10 to 12 degrees Celsius and humidity levels have risen, the central government's representative in Castile and Leon, Nicanor Sen, said. "These changes are facilitating and improving the conditions to gain control of the fires," he told public broadcaster TVE.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store