Today’s Planet Earth: 
Our Loving Home 
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Greetings, caring viewers, 
to another edition of 
Planet Earth: 
Our Loving Home.
In 2009
hydrological disasters 
were the most frequent 
type of natural disaster 
comprising over 53% of 
all such events globally. 
Of the 180 reported 
hydrological disasters 
worldwide, 149 were floods
and 31 were 
wet mass movements 
like landslides, with 
over 57.3 million victims.
Compared to 2008, 
the number of persons 
affected 
increased by 27.4%. 
The continent with 
the largest occurrence of 
floods in 2009 was Asia.
Today we focus on 
the disastrous floods 
that occurred 
in the South Asian nation 
of Pakistan during 
July and August 2010.
Pakistan has 
a varied geography that 
includes plains, deserts, 
forests, hills and plateaus. 
The country can be 
roughly divided into 
three main parts – 
the northern uplands, 
the Balochistan Plateau 
and the Indus River plain. 
The majority 
of the nation’s population 
of 174 million lives 
along the Indus River.
In recent years 
Pakistan has experienced 
an increasing number of 
natural disasters 
including earthquakes, 
floods and droughts. 
In October 2005, 
a 7.6 magnitude 
earthquake caused 
over 70,000 deaths and 
damaged approximately 
600,000 homes. 
In addition, rapid melting 
of the Himalayan 
and Hindu Kush 
mountain glaciers, 
the world’s third largest 
frozen fresh water reserve 
that feeds 10 important 
river systems in Asia, 
is seriously threatening 
the country’s long-term 
primary water supply.
Beginning in July 2010 
the worst flooding 
in 80 years hit Pakistan, 
causing unprecedented 
damage in the nation. 
Thus far, more than 
20-million people 
have been affected, 
with nearly 2,000 deaths, 
almost 3,000 injured and 
over 1.9-million homes 
damaged or destroyed 
in the disaster. 
Three-quarters 
of the affected population 
live in the Sindh 
and Punjab provinces.
According to the website 
of the National Disaster 
Management Authority, 
which is a part of 
the Pakistani government: 
“The magnitude 
[of the flooding] 
is so huge both in scale 
and destruction 
that it is more than twice 
than the Pakistan 
Earthquake 2005, 
Cyclone Katrina 2005, 
Indian Ocean 
Tsunami 2004, 
Cyclone Nargis 2008 and 
Haiti Earthquake 2010, 
all put together in terms 
of geographical space 
and population affected.”
Over 36 hours beginning 
on July 26, 2010, 
extreme monsoon rains 
poured 312 millimeters 
of precipitation 
on Pakistan’s Khyber 
Pakhtunkhwa province. 
Hundreds of mud houses 
were swept away. 
Government buildings, 
local businesses, schools 
and bridges were ruined 
and thousands of hectares 
of crops were wiped out. 
In the wake of the flooding 
the government declared 
a state of emergency, 
and in addition to food, 
other relief items 
such as boats, tents, 
dewatering pumps, 
blankets, medicines, 
mobile clinics, ambulances, 
medical equipment, 
hygiene kits and tarpaulins 
were urgently requested 
from the international 
community.
Transportation systems 
such as highways 
and rail networks 
were paralyzed. 
Approximately 
657 kilometers of roads 
and 35 bridges were 
damaged or destroyed 
by floods. 
Sehwan Sharif Airport 
in Sindh was shut down 
after a levee 
containing a nearby lake 
was breached, 
leaving the facility 
more than a meter deep 
in water.
Flood waters came 
at 3:00 AM.
All we could do 
was save ourselves. 
Most of our stuff is
buried under the rubble 
and our house is destroyed.
Our houses had mud water 
like this high; 
animals were lying dead 
around us. 
I was screaming and
could not stop crying 
seeing all that.
Relief efforts 
by the military 
and emergency workers 
were started, 
but the torrential rainfall 
and high waters 
hampered their efforts. 
On August 8, 
another deluge 
added to the crisis, 
as landslides pummeled 
the country’s northern 
regions, including 
the entire northwestern 
Swat Valley. 
Parts of Punjab 
and Sindh provinces 
were affected as well.
On August 14 and 21, 
the Indus River once more 
breached its banks, 
inundating more villages 
and towns, and displacing 
hundreds of thousands 
in the southern provinces 
of Sindh and Balochistan. 
Flood victims 
had to escape to schools 
and mosques for shelter. 
Some were left stranded 
on rooftops or on isolated 
patches of higher ground. 
The only way to reach many 
was by helicopter or boat. 
We spent some nights 
there on the top 
of the hill. 
The people who have 
relatives in safe areas 
in that area got shelter 
from them, and those who 
don’t are going here and 
there in search of shelter 
to escape the waters.
These children 
all live in a camp. They 
are being provided food, 
water and tented shelter 
that you can see behind me. 
But it is very open 
and very, very difficult 
for their families. 
UNICEF is supporting 
with water and sanitation 
and digging latrines and 
making sure that children 
have vitamins and 
medicines as well.
The number of 
individuals that 
have been provided 
shelter is between 
1.2 and 1.5 million. 
The support arriving in 
the pipeline is estimated 
at another 2.5-million 
individuals that can be 
assisted with shelter. 
So putting those together 
you are looking at
just short of four-million
individuals that will be 
assisted with shelter. 
The estimated need 
is somewhere around 
eight million.
Therefore there 
is still a sizable shortfall 
in the shelter needs.
Eighty percent 
of the people
in the affected regions 
rely on agriculture 
to make a living 
and a staggering 
22,000 square kilometers 
of farmland, 
including the most fertile 
and productive areas 
of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa 
and Punjab, have been 
submerged or devastated 
by the massive flooding. 
The floodwaters 
ruined approximately 
two-million metric tons 
of rice, 
10 million metric tons 
of sugarcane, and 
half a million metric tons 
of wheat seed stocks. 
The United Nations 
estimates 
that 12-million people 
are still in need of 
emergency food aid.
Seventy-five percent 
of irrigation 
has been destroyed, 
like all cultivated land, 
crops; everything 
has been destroyed 
because of this water. 
People have been 
migrating from 
Shikarpur to these areas. 
They don’t have anything 
to eat, they don’t have 
any shelter.
They were already running, 
just not sure where 
to move, and where not to. 
The WFP (World Food 
Programme) is scaling up 
its operation, 
providing food to more 
than six-million people 
affected by the flood. 
It still remains a challenge, 
and of course, logistics 
is a bigger challenge 
when roads are gone, 
bridges have gone down. 
We need international 
assistance as quickly 
as possible.
Drinking contaminated 
water from roadsides, 
rivers, ponds and lakes 
has made victims 
vulnerable to illnesses 
such as diarrhea 
and cholera.
Malaria is a danger 
as mosquitoes breed in 
standing pools of water. 
The damage or destruction 
of over 500 
health care facilities has 
worsened the situation. 
We suffered a lot. 
We had a lack of 
clean water and 
had to drink flood water.
Cholera is breaking out, 
and that is going 
to be very dangerous. 
Drinking water and 
the saches for purifying it 
are going to become 
very important 
over the next few days.
It is possible to expect 
an increase of malaria cases 
due to the exposure 
of people to water. 
We are expecting 
this increase to be 
in the next four weeks.
I’ve seen young children
here with skin diseases
and other things setting in.
So we have to make sure
we have
the nutritional content and
the full ration coming on.
The economic cost 
of the floods is staggering, 
with Pakistani officials 
indicating it could approach 
US$43 billion. 
In addition, 
His Excellency 
Asif Ali Zardari, 
President of Pakistan, 
worries that 
it could take his nation 
years to recover 
from the catastrophe. 
I think a lot of us 
haven’t understood 
the scale of this disaster. 
It is horrendous. 
It is going to put us back 
so many years that 
we’re not even starting 
on the infrastructure. 
They [the floods] 
have devastated 
the infrastructure.
Roads have been 
washed away, bridges 
have been washed away.  
The people 
are in great need 
of life-saving assistance 
at this time. 
Food, medical (care), 
shelter, the needs are huge.
To get there the 
World Food Programme 
and our partners are 
using every means possible. 
We have started 
a helicopter airlift to 
people who are stranded. 
We are also using 
on the ground support; 
people are using carts. 
Whatever we can find 
to move food and other 
life support assistance 
we will do so.
Normal monsoon rains 
enormously magnified by 
climate change 
are considered 
the primary cause 
of the disaster. 
World Meteorological 
Association director 
Ghassem Asrar’s assessment 
is that a warming 
Atlantic Ocean coupled 
with the La Niña effect, 
meaning 
lower temperatures in 
the central Pacific Ocean, 
created the conditions for 
the very intense rainfalls. 
Regarding the calamity 
in Pakistan, 
he stated in an interview, 
“There's no doubt 
that clearly 
the climate change is … 
a major contributing factor.” 
Dr. Rajendra Pachauri, 
head of the United Nations 
Intergovernmental Panel 
on Climate Change 
has said, 
“The floods of the kind 
that hit Pakistan may 
become more frequent 
and more intense 
in the future in this and 
other parts of the world.” 
It was clear that
the monsoons, this year,
are turning into a killer.
It’s due to global warming 
and the climate change. 
Now after seeing the 
results of climate change 
in Pakistan, 
I say to all other countries, 
they must do something 
prior to any disaster, 
because we are 
in the disaster now.
I ask the world, 
the climate is changing now, 
and they have seen 
the tragedy of
climate change, the climax 
of the climate change 
in Pakistan. 
Climate change (is) 
very horrible, very terrible. 
We have to do something. 
The warming of our planet 
is mostly driven by 
factory farming. 
In the report “Livestock 
and Climate Change,” 
published in 
World Watch magazine 
in 2009, it was estimated 
that over 51% 
of human-caused global 
greenhouse gas emissions 
arise from the cycle of 
producing and consuming 
animal products. 
Pakistani-American 
professor Saleem H. Ali, 
an environmental expert, 
believes that avoiding meat 
is one of the best ways 
for individuals to help 
mitigate global warming.
I think we need 
a much more 
responsible lifestyle. 
We can get a huge return 
in terms of a reduction 
in greenhouse gas 
emissions if 
people adopted more 
vegetarian lifestyles. 
It’s good for their health 
and it’s good 
for the environment.
You would also be 
following Islamic ethics 
in my view because 
in Islam, overall, 
as with most religions, 
wastage is a sin. 
If you are wasting 
precious resources to just 
have a meat-centered diet, 
I think that is contrary 
to the vision of Islam. 
And if you go back to 
the time of Muhammad, 
the founder of Islam, 
Prophet Muhammad, 
he had a very spartan 
lifestyle, he was not 
into big feasts and huge, 
grandiose spending.
In all Muslim traditions,
their usual diet was much 
more vegetable-based. 
Similarly, 
on an individual level, 
I have been trying to 
get Muslim countries 
to also educate people 
about the greenhouse-gas 
emissions from especially 
beef production, 
which is a huge problem. 
With more and more 
people across the globe 
adopting the harmonious, 
plant-based lifestyle, 
the day will soon come 
where we finally 
halt climate change.
We sincerely thank 
the many compassionate 
countries, 
international organizations 
and relief workers 
for their generosity, 
tireless efforts 
and dedication in helping 
alleviate the agony of 
Pakistan’s flood victims. 
May all the affected 
soon be able to resume
their normal lives.
Have great courage, 
do not despair and have 
a strong sense of hope. 
I’m here to bring 
the hope and future, 
better future for all of you.
God-willing! 
Green viewers, 
thank you for joining us 
on today’s Planet Earth: 
Our Loving Home. 
Coming up next is 
Enlightening Entertainment 
after Noteworthy News. 
May your days be filled 
with love and bliss.