“Older men and women are not the priority. They cry in silence and their tears are not heard.”
Tuesday, August 31st, 2010
One month after the flooding in Pakistan began, HelpAge International’s Pakistan programme manager Asma Akbar sends her latest update:
“People are starting to migrate and go back to their homes now. They are trying to go back as they feel much safer.
“Floodwaters continue to flow through Sind and Punjab but where HelpAge is working, in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (PKP) province, conditions are better. The water is not flowing through and has stopped moving. However this brings its own problems as standing water can cause disease.
Margaret Chilcott (pictured right), 62, is an Emergency Programme Coordinator for HelpAge International:
When HelpAge proposed the idea of a radio programme for older people to Father Jean (pictured), he jumped at the idea. It was obvious from the start that Radio Soleil and HelpAge had the same aim: giving a voice to the voiceless.
Asma Akbar is HelpAge’s Country Programme Manager for Pakistan.
Asma Akbar (pictured right), HelpAge’s Country Programme Manager for Pakistan, along with Project Coordinator Mahmood Ahmed have visited Nowshera District in Pakistan, one of the regions worst affected by the recent floods, to assess the needs of the region’s older people.
On Sunday 25 July, HelpAge International Haiti launched the radio show “Koze Granmoun, Pawòl Timoun” (or “Older people’s chatter, children’s discussions”), on Radio Soleil (105.7 FM).
Asma Akbar (left), HelpAge’s Country Programme Manager for Pakistan, has the latest update on the situation after the devastating Pakistan floods:
As we organised Mother’s Day and Father’s Day actiivites for older people in Haiti, I realised how little time is given to them for the rest of the year. It is like they no longer exist.