Karachi: Scarcity affected people in Thar are suffering from
unavailability of medicines and clean water. Federal and Provincial governments
took steps for filling the available posts of doctor and freeing the funds for
clean water supply scheme.
According to a report of the district and sessions judge of
Umerkot on the situation in the affected areas, patients are suffering a lot
due to unavailability of the civil surgeon, physician, pathologist, skin
specialist, gynecologist, radiologist and other medical specialists.
The report was prepared and submitted by the district judge
on orders of the Sindh High Court that has been time and again asking the
provincial and federal governments to take effective and practical steps to
control the situation in the drought-hit areas of the desert.
Judge files report on Thar situation.
Several people, mostly children and women, have died due to
a lack of food and medical facilities.
Many petitions were also filed by different NGOs to find out
the court’s interference to enrich the situation. The petitioners appealed to
the court to take strict notice against administrations over their failure to
provide relief and medical facilities to drought-hit people in Thar.
water and medical facilities in Tharparkar |
The district judge in the report quoted local authorities as
telling him that the post of doctors and specialists at the district hospital
had been lying vacant since 2007, while an X-ray machine had been out of order
for the past two years. He stated in the report that low-quality medicines were
available at all government hospitals and health centers in the affected district.
The judge said that the provincial government did not make
any serious efforts for filling the vacant posts of doctors, paying
compensation to drought victims and releasing funds for the drinkable water
supply schemes in the famine-hit areas. He informed the high court that several posts of doctors,
civil surgeons, gynecologists, pediatricians and other medical specialists were
lying vacant in Umerkot hospital as only 130 doctors were serving against the certified
strength of 401.
The district and sessions judge, who visited the district
hospital in Umerkot along with other judges, said that 23 children were found
under treatment at the facility, there was no pediatrician posted there. He said 18 out of 29 rural health centers, basic health
units and government dispensaries in the drought-hit areas of Umerkot were not
functioning properly.
The judge quoted area people and officials as telling him
that two functional pipeline schemes, Chhor-Khokhropar and Ratnore-Banghal,
were under administrative control of the army. Around 40,000 people were
getting water from these schemes while no scheme was approved for the rest of
the population of the district.
The judicial officer said a water supply scheme for Umerkot
and adjoining desert areas had been under construction for the past seven
years. But the scheme could not be completed.
Besides, he added, the federal government did not issue any
grant. “Even the federal government has not made efforts to rush work on the
second phase of Rani Canal which can provide irrigation and drinking water to
the famine-hit areas of Umerkot and Tharparkar.
A two-judge bench, headed by Chief Justice Maqbool Baqar,
would take up the matter on Wednesday.
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