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How Pakistan’s Lifeline is Slowly Drying Up (Swiss Press Online 2024, by Andreas Babst / Rebecca Conway / Roland Shaw / Alex Kräuchi) - Swiss Press Award

Neue Zürcher Zeitung

3rd place
Online
2024

Andreas Babst / Rebecca Conway / Roland Shaw / Alex Kräuchi

The report follows a journey along the Indus River in Pakistan, which runs approximately 1,500 kilometres from the Passu Glacier to the coastal city of Karachi. “There is no better place to get an understanding of the way people’s lives here have gone out of kilter,” writes the author. Ever increasing temperatures are melting the glaciers and yet the river is carrying less and less water. Built up with dams and weirs, it feeds an extensive irrigation system, earning it its title of Pakistan’s Lifeline. The threat is that it will one day dry up completely. People on the Indus tell of their worries and hardships: an engineer who operates the locks and only experiences either droughts or floods; or a fisherman who can barely survive on his meagre catch. According to a hydrologist: “We have thrown the river out of balance”. In addition to the increasing use of river water by the growing population, climate change with its record heat waves and heavy rainfalls is making Pakistan one of the most inhospitable countries in the world.

Interview with Andreas Babst / Rebecca Conway / Roland Shaw / Alex Kräuchi

Swiss Press Award 24 Online – E – Team Neue Zürcher Zeitung NZZ

Interview with Andreas Babst / Rebecca Conway / Roland Shaw / Alex Kräuchi

02:36

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