Blistering heat meets cold politics


No relief in sight: Vendors loading cans of drinking water for sale on their motorcycle carts, as they fill them from a private water supply plant in Jacobabad in southern Sindh province. — AFP

In one of the world’s hottest cities, fresh and filtered water can quench the searing onslaught of climate change – but US President Donald Trump’s foreign aid freeze threatens its vital supply, an NGO says.

Pakistan’s sun-parched Jacoba­bad city in southern Sindh pro­vince sometimes surpasses 50˚C in increasing heatwaves causing critical health problems like dehydration and heat-stroke.

In 2012, USAID committed a US$66mil grant to uplift Sindh’s municipal services, including the flagship renovation of a plant pumping and purifying water from a canal 22km away.

But Pakistani non-profit HANDS says Trump’s aid embargo has blocked US$1.5mil (RM6.6mil) earmarked to make the scheme viable in the long-term, putting the project at risk “within a few months”.

“This has transformed our lives,” said 25-year-old Tufail Ahmed in Jacobabad, where wintertime temperatures are already forecast to pass 30˚C next week.

“If the water supply is cut off it will be very difficult for us,” he added.

“Survival will be challenging, as water is the most essential thing for life.”

Between September and mid-January Sindh saw rainfall 52% below average according to the Pakistan Meteorological Depart­ment, with “moderate drought” predicted in the coming months.

Heatwaves are becoming hotter, longer and more frequent due to climate change, scientists say.

The project pipes in 1.5 million gallons or 5.7 million litres daily and serves about 350,000 people in Jacobabad, HANDS says – a city where grinding poverty is commonplace.

HANDS said it discovered Trump’s 90-day freeze on foreign assistance through media reports with no prior warning.

“Since everything is just suspended we have to withdraw our staff and we have to withdraw all services for this water project,” said HANDS CEO Shaikh Tanveer Ahmed.

The service will likely stop functioning “within the next few months”, Ahmed predicted, and the project will be “a total failure” unless another funder steps in.

The scheme is currently in the hands of the local government who lack the technical or revenue collection expertise HANDS was developing to fund the supply from bill payments, rather than donations.

The international aid community has been in a tailspin over Trump’s campaign to downsize or dismantle swathes of the US government – led by his top donor and the world’s richest man Elon Musk.

The most concentrated fire has been on Washington’s aid agency USAID, whose US$42.8bil budget represents 42% of humanitarian aid disbursed worldwide.

But it accounts for only between 0.7% and 1.4% of total US government spending in the last quarter century, according to the Pew Research Center. — AFP

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