Words of Wisdom:

"What did the 5 fingers say to the face?.........SLAP! - Dave Chappelle" - Dhayyati@yahoo.com

Flood Info

  • Date Submitted: 12/18/2010 11:20 AM
  • Flesch-Kincaid Score: 59.3 
  • Words: 769
  • Essay Grade: no grades
  • Report this Essay
Pakistan faces economic catastrophe after the devastating floods that have wiped out farmland and ruined infrastructure, with feared losses of billions of dollars likely to set back growth by years.

The country's worst ever humanitarian disaster has ravaged an area roughly the size of England, affected 20 million people, exacerbated a crippling energy crisis and raising fears of social unrest.

“It seems we're doomed to walking through a dark tunnel. We're on an unending path of misery,” said Morio Pahore, a farmer from small town Thul in southern Pakistan who is now living in a tent on a highway.

Shirtless, his face burnt dark by the sun, the greying 50-year-old said he lost everything when the rains fell and the river burst its banks.

“We had goats and buffalo and a wooden hut. We had grain to eat. The river ate everything, leaving the whole family hungry and empty-handed.

“I don't think we can start again for many years. Everything is under water and even if the river recedes, the water will be there for a long time.”

It is a tragedy repeated millions of times over for farmers and peasants across the country who saw their livelihoods washed away in minutes after the floods first hit three weeks ago.

Agriculture accounts for 20 per cent of Pakistan's gross domestic product.

President Asif Ali Zardari said it would take two years to provide farmers with crops, fertilisers, seeds and food. Experts say it will take far longer.

On top of that, floods have inflicted widespread damage on infrastructure.

In cities, flood waters have destroyed electricity installations, roads and phone lines.

The World Bank, which has announced a 900 million dollar loan for Pakistan, expects the economic impact to be huge, indicating that direct damage was greatest in housing, roads, irrigation and agriculture.

It estimated crop loss at one billion dollars, saying the full impact on soil erosion and agriculture could only be assessed when the water...

Comments

Express your owns thoughts and ideas on this essay by writing a grade and/or critique.

  1. No comments