Updated On: 21 March, 2023 04:37 PM IST | Islamabad, Pakistan | AP
The statement from UNICEF underscored the dire situation in impoverished Pakistan, a country with a population of 220 million that months later is still struggling with the consequences of the flooding, as well as a spiraling economic crisis

A picture from last year shows flooded residential areas at Jaffarabad town, Balochistan province. File Pic/AFP
The United Nations children`s agency on Tuesday warned that after last summer`s devastating floods, 10 million people in Pakistan, including children, still live in flood-affected areas without access to safe drinking water.
The statement from UNICEF underscored the dire situation in impoverished Pakistan, a country with a population of 220 million that months later is still struggling with the consequences of the flooding, as well as a spiraling economic crisis. The floods, which experts attribute in part to climate change, killed 1,739 people, including 647 children and 353 women.