

CHUNG: In a former classroom, now a makeshift relief camp, pregnant women take refuge from the floods that have ravaged eastern Pakistan, their bodies aching, eyes heavy with exhaustion and silent despair. Waiting for the water that swallowed their homes to recede, women in Chung, a settlement on Lahore's outskirts, have limited access to essential medicines, including pregnancy-related care. Shumaila Riaz, seven months pregnant with her first child, spent the past four days in the relief camp, enduring pregnancy cramps. "I wanted to think about the child I am going to have, but now, I am not even certain about my own future," she said.
Clad in dirty clothes they have worn for days and with unbrushed hair, women huddle in the overcrowded school hosting more than 2,000 people, surrounded by mud and stagnant rainwater. "My body aches a lot and I can't get the medicines I want here," said Fatima, mother to a one-year-old daughter and four months pregnant. "I used to eat as I please, sleep as I please, walk as I please — that is all gone now. I can't do that here," added Fatima.
Monsoon rains over the past week swelled three major rivers that cut through Punjab province, Pakistan's agricultural heartland and home to nearly half of its 255 million people. The number of affected people rose on Sunday to more than two million, according to provincial senior minister Marriyum Aurangzeb. Around 750,000 people have been evacuated, of whom 115,000 were rescued by boat — making it the largest rescue operation in Punjab's history, according to the provincial government.
The flooded rivers have affected mostly rural areas near their banks but heavy rain also flooded urban areas, including several parts of Lahore — the country's second-largest city. While South Asia's seasonal monsoon brings rainfall that farmers depend on, climate change is making the phenomenon more erratic and deadly across the region. Landslides and floods triggered by heavier-than-usual monsoon rains have killed more than 850 people nationwide since June. The latest downpour has killed at least 32 people, the provincial minister said on Sunday.
The pregnant women are also vulnerable to infectious diseases, according to doctors in the medical camp set up by a local NGO. "I receive around 200 to 300 patients every day with different infections and water-borne diseases," said Fahad Abbas, 27, a doctor at the medical camp. "There are a lot of patients here who are going through psychological trauma, especially women and children, after losing their homes." — AFP
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