Key Points

Human rights defenders are sounding the alarm about terrible disaster relief conditions in Pakistan-occupied Gilgit-Baltistan. Families displaced by floods and landslides are forced to live in unsafe shelters without basic necessities. The Human Rights Commission of Pakistan highlights how vulnerable groups including women, children, and disabled persons are being completely neglected. They're calling for transparent relief funds and climate justice measures to address what they call "manmade" disasters.

Key Points: HRCP Decries Pakistan Disaster Relief Crisis in Gilgit-Baltistan

  • Displaced families live in unsafe shelters without clean water or electricity
  • Women, children, and disabled persons face severe neglect in relief efforts
  • Relief funds lack transparency and accountability according to community reports
  • HRCP demands inclusive disaster response and climate justice in school curriculum
2 min read

Human rights defenders decry dismal state of disaster relief in Pak-occupied Gilgit-Baltistan

Human Rights Commission of Pakistan exposes dire conditions in PoGB, where floods and landslides leave marginalized communities without shelter, water, or aid transparency.

"These disasters are no longer merely ‘natural’, they are manmade, fuelled by poor planning, land grabs, deforestation, corrupt practices and climate inaction. - HRCP"

Islamabad, Sep 13

Several human rights defenders and community members raised grave concerns about the dismal condition of disaster relief in Pakistan-occupied Gilgit Baltistan (PoGB), stating that a surge in floods, landslides, and glacial lake outbursts has left marginalised communities bearing the brunt of the crisis.

At an outreach meeting held by the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan (HRCP) in PoGB on Friday, the members highlighted that displaced families are forced to live in unsafe shelters with no access to clean water, electricity, healthcare, or education.

They noted the neglect of women, children, daily-wage workers, persons with disabilities, and transgender persons, while mental health remained ignored. The meeting also pointed out that the relief funds lack transparency and accountability.

According to the HRCP, during the meeting, stakeholders adopted a unanimous resolution stressing that disaster response in PoGB must be inclusive, transparent, and dignified. This included multi-sectoral coordination at all levels, community-led monitoring and rehabilitation, and transparent use of relief funds. Additionally, it called for the protection of vulnerable households, with fair compensation and relocation from high-risk zones, while suggesting that climate justice measures such as reforestation, halting exploitative natural resource extraction, climate insurance, and disaster preparedness be included in the school curriculum.

Earlier on Wednesday, raising concern over the devastating floods that swept across Pakistan, the HRCP asserted that these disasters are no longer merely ‘natural’, they are “manmade, fuelled by poor planning, land grabs, deforestation, corrupt practices and climate inaction.” The rights body stated that the state and successive Pakistani governments must be held responsible for the crisis in the country.

“While rescue and relief operations are underway, HRCP stresses that these efforts must be urgently expanded, with more rescue teams mobilised and more relief camps established with equitable access to food, shelter, clean drinking water, and medical services. Particular attention must be given to the most vulnerable, women, children, the elderly, and persons living with disabilities,” read a statement issued by the rights body.

The HRCP called on the federal and provincial governments of Pakistan to wake up to their constitutional obligations, demonstrate political will and foresight, and take decisive and inclusive action to prevent the country from remaining trapped in annual cycles of displacement and devastation.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
The situation of women and children is particularly worrying. No access to healthcare or education during disasters shows complete failure of governance. Pakistan should be held accountable for this humanitarian crisis.
A
Aman W
Corruption in relief funds is the biggest problem. The money never reaches the actual victims. This pattern repeats every year during disasters across Pakistan. Transparency is urgently needed.
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Sarah B
While the criticism is valid, we should also acknowledge that climate change affects everyone in the region. Maybe regional cooperation rather than blame game would help the actual victims. Just a thought.
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Vikram M
The mention of "manmade disasters" is absolutely correct. Deforestation and poor planning have made natural disasters much worse. Pakistan's government needs to prioritize people over politics.
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Nisha Z
Including climate education in school curriculum is a brilliant suggestion! Future generations need to be prepared. Hope they implement this properly across all regions.

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