Pakistan
Floods Appeal
Pakistan
Floods Appeal
Your donations helped DEC charities provide urgent relief to flood-affected families, supported them to rebuild their lives and livelihoods over the past two years, and strengthened their resilience to face future climate disasters.
This appeal is now closed and all appeal funds have been spent.
In this section
Tap segments to see a breakdown
How funds were spent (March 2023-February 2024)
- Water, sanitation and hygiene
- 29%
- Livelihood support
- 23%
- Healthcare
- 18%
- Food
- 9%
- Cash support
- 8%
- Protection
- 4%
- Education
- 4%
- Disaster risk reduction
- 3%
- Other
- 2%
MOBILE HEALTHCARE IN REMOTE VILLAGES
The devastating floods damaged 2,000 health facilities across Pakistan, leaving people living in tents especially vulnerable to poor health and the outbreak of disease.
DEC funds were used to set up mobile health clinics with teams going out to remote communities cut off from medical access.
Your donations helped provide lifesaving healthcare including maternity services, nutrition support and free medicines. In one year of the response, 452,800 people received basic medical care and 33,000 children were treated for malnutrition.
ACCESS TO WATER FOR FAMILIES AND FARMS
The floods caused extensive damage to water supplies, leaving people without access to clean water to drink, to grow food or feed their livestock.
Your donations provided access to clean water for drinking and cooking to 183,700 people during one year of the response through repairing water points and systems. The water supplies also helped irrigate agricultural land so farmers can restore their livelihoods.
DEC charities and their local partners also provided access to sanitation facilities, distributed hygiene items and raised awareness of safe practices over the last two years.
LIVELIHOODS AND RESILIENCE
Your donations supported 94,300 people to earn a living again, between February 2023 and February 2024. Families without enough land to grow crops were supported with poultry farming and goats, provided with skills training and cash grants for small business.
The DEC response has improved the resilience of supported communities in multiple ways including climate-smart agriculture training, improving awareness, and planting more than 110,000 trees to help mitigate the impact of future flooding.
Jerome Combes, Grant Manager for the Pakistan Floods Appeal at the DEC, visiting a DEC-funded livelihood support programme in Pakistan.
Future resilience
"Disaster Risk Reduction is work conducted to make disasters less likely to happen, or less damaging when they do happen. Agricultural training for farmers has helped teach climate-friendly methods of growing crops, helping to reduce the impact of drought and future flooding," says Jerome Combes, Grant Manager for the DEC Pakistan Floods Appeal.
"DEC charities have focused on enhancing the resilience of communities in Pakistan through an integrated response, working with local partners, community-based organisations, local authorities and government ministries.
This planned development means villages are able to organise themselves - as well as long-term infrastructure - and I can feel that people are not afraid for this project to end."
The mobile health clinic truck now featuring stories of flood survivors revisits parts of Sindh that were previously submerged, bringing moments of joy as well as healthcare to local communities. Photo: Khaula Jamil/DEC
Truck art stories
Trucks in Pakistan are elaborately decorated to celebrate local culture - people, places, events and stories.
Trucks are also vehicles of aid delivery - such as this one that served as a mobile health clinic funded by DEC charity CAFOD as part of the Pakistan Floods Appeal response.
The DEC worked with Pakistani truck artist Ali Salman Anchan to tell the stories of flood survivors supported by the appeal, recognising their courage and resilience.
From 10-year-old Ayra in Sindh, whose life was saved by a mobile health clinic, to farmer Maula Dinno who can grow crops again thanks to learning climate-smart techniques, this truck tells the stories of people your donations are reaching.
Latest updates
The latest on the appeal and the humanitarian situation in Pakistan.
Jump to
Pakistan Floods Appeal is now closed
23 April 2024
The Pakistan Floods Appeal is now closed and appeal funds will be spent up until August 31st 2024.
Over the past two years your donations have helped hundreds of thousands of people get through the disaster, providing them with emergency shelter, clean water, food, healthcare, cash payments and livelihood support.
If you would still like to donate to help people affected, you can donate to the following appeals from DEC member charities:
How farmers in Pakistan are learning new methods to combat climate change
19 September 2023
Dr Muhammad Mazhar Alam is Senior Health and Nutrition Advisor at Concern Worldwide, Pakistan explains how DEC funds are being used to teach farmers in Pakistan climate friendly techniques.
Following the flooding last year, 33 million people were affected, and 4 million acres of agricultural land was lost along with over a million livestock in areas where many depend on the land for their income.
These techniques are designed to help protect farmers against future climate related disasters.
Preparing communities for future climate disasters in Pakistan
7 July 2023
Extreme flooding during the monsoon season in Pakistan last summer was made more likely by climate change, according to a major study.
As global temperatures continue to rise, weather patterns are becoming more unpredictable, increasing the risk of weather-related natural disasters.
Using disaster risk reduction measures such as these can help reduce their impact, DEC charities have been working with flood affected communities in Pakistan to help prepare them for future climate related disasters.
Mobile health clinics provide a lifeline to flood-hit communities
26 June 2023
The floods damaged many healthcare facilities across the country, and roads that people used to get to them.
To help people in remote areas access treatment, DEC charities have established mobile health clinics headed up by local medical professionals. Teams go out in vans stocked with essential medicines and equipment, targeting areas where people don’t have access to medical support, providing on-the-spot help.
The clinics play a significant role in bridging the gap between people who live in remote, rural areas and essential medical care.
The King meets with representatives from DEC charities
8 June 2023
His Majesty The King met with representatives from the charities of the Disasters Emergency Committee (DEC) today (8 June 2023) to hear about the impact of UK donations to the Pakistan Floods Appeal which helped hundreds of people in the first six months of the response.
During the meeting with His Majesty The King at Buckingham Palace, DEC Chief Executive Saleh Saeed spoke about how DEC charities and their local partners had provided life-saving aid in the months following the floods and spoke of his visit to the affected areas late last year.
Putting women's needs at the heart of emergency response in Pakistan
8 March 2023
For International Women’s Day, DEC Chair of Trustees Sue Inglish reflects on the stories of women she met in Pakistan’s flooded villages.
Trustees Sue Inglish, Melanie Hind and DEC chief executive Sale Saeed travelled to Pakistan in December to visit DEC-funded projects in flood affected areas.
During the visit, the team saw how cash support is allowing women to meet their family’s needs, mobile are clinics providing access to healthcare and more.
The projects visited are run by DEC charities Concern Worldwide, Oxfam, and Islamic Relief.
Pakistan Floods Appeal raises £40 million including £5 million in UK Aid Match
12 December 2022
The DEC #PakistanFloodsAppeal has raised £40 million thanks to your donations, including £5 million in #UKAidMatch.
— DEC (@decappeal) December 12, 2022
Water has still not receded in some areas and families are struggling to survive without food, shelter and healthcare.
Thank you for your ongoing support. pic.twitter.com/r69Ok5Y0nB
DEC charities meet His Majesty The King, as Pakistan Floods Appeal tops £38 million
29 November 2022
CEOs and experts from the 15 charities that make up the DEC today met with His Majesty The King to discuss the impact of funds given by the UK public to international humanitarian crises, and how the changing climate is affecting the world’s most vulnerable communities.
This was coupled with the news that the DEC's Pakistan Floods Appeal has now raised an astounding £38 million, thanks to the generosity of the British public with donations also from Their Majesties The King and The Queen Consort and Their Royal Highnesses The Prince and Princess of Wales.
The appeal also received £5 million in UK Aid Match from the UK Government.
Supporting mothers and babies affected by the Pakistan floods
29 November 2022
The extreme flooding that hit Pakistan left hundreds of thousands of women in need of maternity services. DEC charities are helping by providing food, shelter and mobile health clinics.
Read some of the ways DEC charities have been supporting pregnant women in the wake of extreme flooding.
England cricket captain Ben Stokes donates to the Pakistan Floods Appeal
28 November 2022
I’m donating my match fees from this Test series to the Pakistan Flood appeal ❤️🇵🇰 pic.twitter.com/BgvY0VQ2GG
— Ben Stokes (@benstokes38) November 28, 2022