The Japan Times - Midwife on the frontline of climate change on Pakistan's islands

EUR -
AED 3.985945
AFN 76.913616
ALL 99.019927
AMD 426.480335
ANG 1.958073
AOA 992.49634
ARS 1156.828581
AUD 1.72624
AWG 1.953517
AZN 1.847158
BAM 1.94932
BBD 2.193688
BDT 132.01117
BGN 1.954374
BHD 0.408939
BIF 3219.283669
BMD 1.085287
BND 1.449575
BOB 7.508042
BRL 6.317243
BSD 1.086478
BTN 94.766542
BWP 14.893354
BYN 3.555648
BYR 21271.631133
BZD 2.182425
CAD 1.561414
CDF 3121.285903
CHF 0.957554
CLF 0.026609
CLP 1021.070672
CNY 7.855147
CNH 7.86829
COP 4458.490474
CRC 543.293989
CUC 1.085287
CUP 28.760114
CVE 109.899673
CZK 25.094081
DJF 193.47507
DKK 7.4595
DOP 68.143478
DZD 144.6477
EGP 54.956668
ERN 16.27931
ETB 142.471286
FJD 2.494425
FKP 0.836997
GBP 0.839037
GEL 3.011695
GGP 0.836997
GHS 16.827437
GIP 0.836997
GMD 78.27846
GNF 9389.867658
GTQ 8.369223
GYD 226.820803
HKD 8.43462
HNL 27.769992
HRK 7.530918
HTG 142.481945
HUF 397.036988
IDR 17866.8924
ILS 3.964386
IMP 0.836997
INR 94.622633
IQD 1421.188409
IRR 45699.584597
ISK 145.579026
JEP 0.836997
JMD 170.424002
JOD 0.769522
JPY 160.516707
KES 140.431617
KGS 95.182804
KHR 4347.508485
KMF 488.874218
KPW 976.79692
KRW 1575.478074
KWD 0.334375
KYD 0.902054
KZT 533.650434
LAK 23515.501403
LBP 97134.380674
LKR 320.80423
LRD 217.008048
LSL 19.903637
LTL 3.204571
LVL 0.656479
LYD 5.232365
MAD 10.494922
MDL 19.718697
MGA 5050.428168
MKD 61.196607
MMK 2277.894021
MNT 3766.049545
MOP 8.68535
MRU 43.168517
MUR 48.920608
MVR 16.759157
MWK 1881.694603
MXN 21.911462
MYR 4.806868
MZN 69.331128
NAD 19.903637
NGN 1674.118228
NIO 39.935364
NOK 11.60991
NPR 151.467179
NZD 1.905283
OMR 0.417837
PAB 1.085287
PEN 3.974105
PGK 4.397315
PHP 62.311916
PKR 303.891421
PLN 4.17277
PYG 8601.972495
QAR 3.950816
RON 4.946436
RSD 116.358556
RUB 94.462002
RWF 1544.029873
SAR 4.070308
SBD 9.238749
SCR 15.651655
SDG 652.219908
SEK 11.073007
SGD 1.445317
SHP 0.852865
SLE 24.777438
SLL 22757.929829
SOS 620.312566
SRD 39.260204
STD 22463.255979
SVC 9.495912
SYP 14110.911047
SZL 19.903637
THB 36.668812
TJS 11.837362
TMT 3.797412
TND 3.341239
TOP 2.613748
TRY 39.738045
TTD 7.369506
TWD 35.753793
TZS 2866.735166
UAH 45.073599
UGX 3981.155344
USD 1.085287
UYU 46.044996
UZS 14055.173088
VES 70.734907
VND 27642.107493
VUV 133.922223
WST 3.075084
XAF 651.832291
XAG 0.03271
XAU 0.000368
XCD 2.938101
XDR 0.814064
XOF 651.832291
XPF 119.331742
YER 267.8421
ZAR 19.967257
ZMK 9768.887125
ZMW 30.983323
ZWL 349.462069
  • RBGPF

    1.5700

    68

    +2.31%

  • RYCEF

    -0.3500

    9.78

    -3.58%

  • CMSC

    0.0250

    23.085

    +0.11%

  • AZN

    1.1600

    76.73

    +1.51%

  • NGG

    -0.0500

    62.21

    -0.08%

  • JRI

    0.0000

    12.93

    0%

  • RIO

    0.6200

    61.4

    +1.01%

  • GSK

    0.3150

    39.195

    +0.8%

  • BCC

    -1.8850

    96.325

    -1.96%

  • SCS

    -0.1850

    10.895

    -1.7%

  • VOD

    0.3300

    9.49

    +3.48%

  • CMSD

    -0.0500

    23.16

    -0.22%

  • RELX

    0.1550

    47.885

    +0.32%

  • BTI

    -0.1400

    41.22

    -0.34%

  • BCE

    0.0800

    24.43

    +0.33%

  • BP

    0.1950

    32.395

    +0.6%

Midwife on the frontline of climate change on Pakistan's islands
Midwife on the frontline of climate change on Pakistan's islands / Photo: Rizwan TABASSUM - AFP

Midwife on the frontline of climate change on Pakistan's islands

On a densely populated island off Pakistan's megacity of Karachi, a group of pregnant women wait in a punishing heatwave for the only midwife to arrive from the mainland.

Text size:

Each week Neha Mankani comes by boat ambulance to Baba, an old fishing settlement and reportedly one of the world's most crowded islands with around 6,500 people crammed into 0.15 square kilometres (0.06 miles).

Climate change is swelling the surrounding seas and baking the land with rising temperatures. Until Mankani's ambulance launched last year, expectant mothers were marooned at the mercy of the elements.

At the gate of her island clinic waits 26-year-old Zainab Bibi, pregnant again after a second-trimester miscarriage last summer.

"It was a very hot day, I was not feeling well," she recalled. It took her husband hours of haggling with boat owners before one agreed to ferry them to the mainland -- but it was too late.

"By the time I delivered my baby in the hospital, she was already dead," she said.

- Summer heat hits pregnancies -

Heatwaves are becoming hotter, longer and more frequent in Pakistan, one of the countries most vulnerable to extreme weather conditions resulting from climate change.

In May and June, a string of heatwaves have seen temperatures top 52 degrees Celcius (126 degrees Fahrenheit) for days.

"Climate change doesn't affect everyone equally," 38-year-old Mankani told AFP during the 20-minute boat journey.

"Pregnant women and newborns, postpartum women are definitely more affected," she said.

"In the summer months, we see a real increase in low-birth weights, preterm births, and in pregnancy losses."

Women are at higher risk of stillbirth when exposed to temperatures above 90 percent of the normal range for their location, according to experts published in the British Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology last year.

"Before we didn't have the evidence, a lot of it was anecdotal," said Mankani. "But we've been seeing the impact of climate change for a while."

In Pakistan, 154 women die for every 100,000 live births -— a high maternal mortality rate shaped by socioeconomic status, barriers to healthcare access and limited decision-making powers, especially among young women, according to the United Nations.

Mankani began her 16-year career as a midwife in a Karachi hospital, where she worked at a high-risk ward, often treating women from the five islands dotted off the coast.

She founded the Mama Baby Fund in 2015 and set up the first clinics on the islands for expectant and new mothers. "Everyone opened their homes to us," she said.

The free 24/7 boat ambulance followed last year, crucially equipped to navigate rough seas in a region increasingly prone to flooding.

Sabira Rashid, 26, gave birth to a girl she named Eesha two months ago, following one stillbirth and a miscarriage at seven months -- painful losses she blames on not reaching the hospital in time.

"At the dock, they make us wait because they don't want to ferry only two or three people. They told us to wait for more passengers, no matter what the emergency," she said.

- Rising, dirty waters -

Girls on the impoverished islands are often wed as young as 16, with marriage considered the source of security for women in an area where polluted water is killing off the fishing trade.

"Most of these girls don't know how to take care of themselves, they get severe infections from the dirty water they are constantly exposed to," said Shahida Sumaar, an assistant at the clinic, wiping the sweat from her face.

The 45-year-old said basic advice is offered to young mothers during heatwaves, such as using dry, clean towels to wrap their newborns in, washing their breasts before feeding and staying hydrated.

But with no access to running water and little electricity, warding off heat stress is a challenge for all the islanders.

Women are at particular risk, typically responsible for cooking over open flames in small rooms with no fans or proper ventilation.

Ayesha Mansoor, 30, has four children and lives on the fringes of Baba, with just four to five hours of electricity a day.

The path to her home is covered by a carpet of discarded plastic bags which disappear underwater when the tide is high.

"Only those who have solar can deal better with the heat. We can't afford it," she said, swatting away flies that settled on her baby.

Mariam Abubakr, an 18-year-old assistant at the clinic who has grown up on the island, hopes to become its first full-time midwife.

"I used to wonder why we women didn't have any facilities here, a clinic that could just cater to us," she said.

"When Neha opened her clinic, I saw a way that I could help the women of my community."

Y.Mori--JT