mohandasgandhi:

Behind the photograph: the human face of Pakistan’s deadly flood 
It was an image that conveyed the human cost of the Pakistani floods –  and the failure to deliver aid to those affected – more powerfully than  any statistic: four young children lying on a filthy patchwork quilt, one of them sucking on an empty yellow bottle, all of them covered by flies.

The photograph by Associated Press’s Mohammad Sajjad went around the world and featured in the Guardian’s Eyewitness slot last week. The Guardian identified the child with the bottle as  two-year-old Reza Khan and tracked him down to a makeshift camp at a  roadside in Azakhel, some 19 miles from Peshawar, the capital of the  insurgency-plagued province of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, bordering Afghanistan.

The  camp is a hotchpotch of about two dozen tents donated by various aid  organisations, but it is run by none. Its residents must fend for  themselves, and rely on the charity of passersby. There are 19 families  here, all of them Afghan refugees: people who were displaced once by  conflict in their homeland have now been displaced again by the  month-long deluge.

Reza’s family is from Butkhak, near the Afghan  capital, Kabul. His father fled the area as a young boy, some 30 years  ago, to escape the cycle of foreign occupation and internecine battles  plaguing his homeland.

When we found him, Reza was in a tent with  his mother, Fatima, who, like most Afghans, has only one name, and six  of his seven siblings, all huddled on a blue blanket extended over the  muddy floor. He was still clutching the same bottle. It was still empty.

Fatima  tried to calm the boy, who cries in a constant, low whimper, as well as  his twin brother, Mahmoud. She covered three of her other children –  she has eight, all under the age of nine – with a dirty mosquito net  somebody in a passing car gave her, but it has several gaping holes. Her  eldest child, a nine-year-old girl called Sayma, is mute and seems  dissociated from her surroundings. Her green eyes stare blankly ahead,  seemingly oblivious to her brothers’ wails. Flies carpet the few  blankets arranged on the floor, and swarm all over the children. There  is precious little in the tent – one cooking pot, a few cushions and two  or three items of children’s clothing. The stench of human and animal  waste is overwhelming in the hot, humid air. There is no sanitation,  just shallow, open ditches of raw sewage that attract flies and  mosquitoes.

“They have had nothing to eat today. I have no food,”  Fatima says as she tries to swat the flies away from her children with a  bamboo fan. “He’s crying with hunger,” she says, pointing to Reza.  “It’s been a month since he had any milk.”

You can help.

Not to diminish the pain of Katrina, but you barely hear an ounce of the story of what is happening right now in Pakistan compared to the outrage of the response to a disaster that hit closer to home.
One disaster is not more worthy of our attention than another, but the silence when it comes to the one half a world away is deafening. You can do something.

mohandasgandhi:

Behind the photograph: the human face of Pakistan’s deadly flood

It was an image that conveyed the human cost of the Pakistani floods – and the failure to deliver aid to those affected – more powerfully than any statistic: four young children lying on a filthy patchwork quilt, one of them sucking on an empty yellow bottle, all of them covered by flies.

The photograph by Associated Press’s Mohammad Sajjad went around the world and featured in the Guardian’s Eyewitness slot last week. The Guardian identified the child with the bottle as two-year-old Reza Khan and tracked him down to a makeshift camp at a roadside in Azakhel, some 19 miles from Peshawar, the capital of the insurgency-plagued province of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, bordering Afghanistan.

The camp is a hotchpotch of about two dozen tents donated by various aid organisations, but it is run by none. Its residents must fend for themselves, and rely on the charity of passersby. There are 19 families here, all of them Afghan refugees: people who were displaced once by conflict in their homeland have now been displaced again by the month-long deluge.

Reza’s family is from Butkhak, near the Afghan capital, Kabul. His father fled the area as a young boy, some 30 years ago, to escape the cycle of foreign occupation and internecine battles plaguing his homeland.

When we found him, Reza was in a tent with his mother, Fatima, who, like most Afghans, has only one name, and six of his seven siblings, all huddled on a blue blanket extended over the muddy floor. He was still clutching the same bottle. It was still empty.

Fatima tried to calm the boy, who cries in a constant, low whimper, as well as his twin brother, Mahmoud. She covered three of her other children – she has eight, all under the age of nine – with a dirty mosquito net somebody in a passing car gave her, but it has several gaping holes. Her eldest child, a nine-year-old girl called Sayma, is mute and seems dissociated from her surroundings. Her green eyes stare blankly ahead, seemingly oblivious to her brothers’ wails. Flies carpet the few blankets arranged on the floor, and swarm all over the children. There is precious little in the tent – one cooking pot, a few cushions and two or three items of children’s clothing. The stench of human and animal waste is overwhelming in the hot, humid air. There is no sanitation, just shallow, open ditches of raw sewage that attract flies and mosquitoes.

“They have had nothing to eat today. I have no food,” Fatima says as she tries to swat the flies away from her children with a bamboo fan. “He’s crying with hunger,” she says, pointing to Reza. “It’s been a month since he had any milk.”

You can help.

Not to diminish the pain of Katrina, but you barely hear an ounce of the story of what is happening right now in Pakistan compared to the outrage of the response to a disaster that hit closer to home.

One disaster is not more worthy of our attention than another, but the silence when it comes to the one half a world away is deafening. You can do something.

Source: Guardian

191 Notes

  1. abhicake reblogged this from aaylaveau
  2. h0peisdop3 reblogged this from litemyfire
  3. meaah reblogged this from jhnbrssndn
  4. maiathebee reblogged this from soupsoup
  5. my-photoalbum reblogged this from mohandasgandhi and added:
    may god help them :(
  6. robokachinder reblogged this from livercake
  7. petersolar reblogged this from artangelo
  8. catherinewillis reblogged this from pakistanpassion
  9. aaylaveau reblogged this from pakistanpassion
  10. pakistanpassion reblogged this from carpe-cerevisi
  11. artangelo reblogged this from koneja and added:
    porque no lo merecen weon, los niños no.
  12. saturnapartments reblogged this from picturesoftheday
  13. touchmeordont reblogged this from mattressesunderwater
  14. seagullflight reblogged this from dreamofwhatcanbe
  15. gregleding reblogged this from brainofg
  16. teasipper reblogged this from ciaoson-deactivated
  17. brainofg reblogged this from soupsoup
  18. neverbecomeolder reblogged this from soupsoup
  19. dylvez reblogged this from jhnbrssndn and added:
    Absolutely awful. Please do something. I did, and so should you.
  20. callmely reblogged this from sodisarmingdarling
  21. thomacosed reblogged this from durrrrrrrrtyghettokid
  22. immaniac reblogged this from jhnbrssndn and added:
    Lil baby, come to my house.
  23. ssiken reblogged this from mohandasgandhi and added:
    this breaks my heart.
  24. durrrrrrrrtyghettokid reblogged this from jhnbrssndn
  25. d2fang reblogged this from mohandasgandhi
  26. witnessingthisdunya reblogged this from mynameisirma
  27. jhnbrssndn reblogged this from soupsoup


Higher Legal - California State Bar certified Los Angeles lawyer referral service focusing on personal injury cases. | promo codes | Medifast Coupons | dining table and chairs | compare car insurance rates | online dating | Submit Articles at SooperArticles.com | SEOP celebrity Eric Schiffer | e cigarette