PPP losing support among flood victims

05 Sep, 2010

A month after Pakistan's worst natural disaster, those most affected have lost almost everything they had. But the ruling political party is losing things too: It is losing the poor's vote. In Mehmood Kot, 40 km (25 miles) east of Multan in southern Punjab, day labourer Mohammad Ramazan says he won't vote again for his representative in parliament because she has done nothing for his demolished village.
He said Hina Rabbani Khar, minister of state for finance and economic affairs, just drove through the village after the floods and didn't stop. "I thought she would take care of us, but it did not happen," he said. "In the campaign, they promise a lot, but they do not take care of us."
The floods have deepened anger with the government of President Asif Ali Zardari, who also heads the Pakistan People's Party (PPP) which was already perceived as ineffective. Khar, a PPP member of parliament, told Reuters she had been to the village three times since the floods ripped through Pakistan, forcing at least 6 million from their homes and killing more than 1,600 people.
"Tell me who is ready to deal with the disaster like this," Khar said. "We all saw what happened with Katrina in the United States. ... Here you are looking at a slow-moving disaster, literally inching forward, through the length of your country." Her explanations don't matter much to Ramazan, who lost two children to diarrhoea in the past month. Rukhsana and Abdulhakim were just two years old and five months old. "We've been shattered," he said. "At this point we have nothing. I have nothing to give to my children. Eid is coming.
"PLEASE DON'T MAKE US BEGGARS" Though the village is 20 km (12 miles) from the Indus, it was inundated from two directions because local officials tried to block the floodwaters by diverting the river into a nearby canal. That broke, however, submerging Ramazan's home in 8-10 feet of water. Water from another canal hit the town from another direction shortly after that.
"We lost crops, sugarcane, cotton," said Rana Farmanullah, a resident and employee of Punjab's agriculture and water management service. "We left the houses, but when we returned, we didn't find anything. Robbers took everything. Electronics, jewellery. The whole village was looted."

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