Birmingham communities rally to help Pakistan flood victims

Audrey Dias

BBC Midlands Today

BBC A group of six men, five of whom are wearing religious headwear, are posing for a photograph. They are standing in front of a building that has a glass door. Several of the men are wearing blue high-visibility jackets.BBC

The Faizan Global Relief Foundation is helping coordinate aid shipments being sent from Birmingham

Although they are thousands of miles apart, the devastation caused by floods in Pakistan is being felt in Birmingham.

The Faizan Global Relief Foundation in Stetchford is raising funds and organising aid shipments to help the communities affected after heavy rains wreaked havoc across the country in August.

More than 900 lives were lost, and thousands of homes were destroyed, leaving communities in dire need of assistance.

Head of the foundation, Syed Muhammad Faisal Sami, said he had seen the devastation. “I was there – their houses were gone, their family, their livelihood gone,” he said.

“They had mud in their house because when the cloud burst with the water, heavy mud came.”

He said the charity was providing rations, food packs and water and was working with a team of doctors and volunteers to mobilise support for those affected.

The foundation’s efforts were also focussed on restoring critical infrastructure, he added.

Mr Sami is due to go to Pakistan next week to oversee and coordinate rebuilding operations on the ground, in Jhelum.

“We have promised with the commissioner of [Jhelum] that we will rebuild the houses for them, and especially the mosque and the community centres and the school for them as well,” he said.

A man wearing a blue high visibility jacket and black religious headwear. He has a beard and is stood by a glass door with charity banners behind him.

Volunteer Talib Hussain says they wanted to support communities affected by the floods in Pakistan

In Pakistan, one eyewitness said: “I’ve seen the children, they’ve lost their parents, even the parents we have seen were crying because they have lost their children as well.”

Back in Stetchford, volunteer Talib Hussain, also expressed his concern: “It’s a very emotional time for us and therefore we want to help our families back in Pakistan.”

Continue Reading