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Al Mustafa Welfare Trust Flood Recovery Program

Rebuilding Lives Through Agriculture, Livestock and Home Restoration after Floods

The recent devastating floods in Pakistan have swept away everything from flood victims, their homes, crops, livestock and the sources of their income that thousands of families depend on for survival. But to solve all of these problems, Al Mustafa Welfare Trust has launched a "Flood Relief Program 2025" on 29th September, 2025 and has developed a strategy to rebuild lives by restoring Agriculture, Livestock and Reconstruction of Homes.

A Holistic Recovery Approach

Recognizing these urgent challenges, AMWT's recovery agenda is designed as a holistic plan for long-term resilience.

  • Restoring Agriculture: Supplying farmers with seeds, farming tools, and essential resources to resume cultivation and rebuild food security.
  • Reviving Livestock: Providing veterinary care, animal fodder, and livestock replacement to restore the source of rural incomes.
  • Rebuilding Homes: AMWT is reconstructing disaster-resistant homes that enable families to withstand future disasters.
  • Sustaining Livelihoods: This project helps to maintain livelihoods as it empowers households with economic opportunities that enable them to move from dependence to independence.

This is not aid alone, but a full-fledged recovery plan that is made to endure.

 

What Al Mustafa Welfare Trust has Already Done?

This is not the first time Al Mustafa Welfare Trust has stepped up during a crisis. Since the floods emergency, the organization has been on the ground, delivering emergency aid where it was needed most.

  1. 162,000+ people supported across 27 districts in Punjab, Sindh, and KPK.
  2. 946,000+ cooked meals served through open kitchens in tent villages.
  3. 16 medical camps set up, treating nearly 6,000 patients.
  4. 20 rescue boats deployed to evacuate stranded families.
  5. 10 tent towns established, giving temporary shelter to over 5,000 displaced individuals.
  6. 60,000 kg of animal fodder distributed to protect rural livelihoods.
  7. 6,500+ volunteers mobilized, proving the strength of community-driven action.

In Muzaffargarh alone, the largest intervention zone, we had reached more than 30,000 people, serving over half a million meals and establishing four tent towns. In Sialkot, AMWT's presence brought critical visibility, medical care, and rescue efforts to nearly 15,500 residents.

Moving from Relief to Recovery

The emergency phase was about survival which was about food, water, shelter and medicine. The next phase is about rebuilding lives. AMWT is now turning its focus toward long-term solutions that address the root challenges communities face:

  • Food insecurity still leaves 30% of families without regular meals.
  • Medical emergencies caused by waterborne diseases such as malaria and dengue.
  • Shelter shortages, with at least 1,000 families still living without proper homes.
  • Farmers are facing poverty unless seeds, tools, and fodder are provided quickly.
  • Children and women are still carrying the invisible wounds of trauma.

Our new agenda is about solving these problems not just for today, but for the years ahead. Families in Pakistan need more than short-term relief; they need the tools and resilience to stand on their own again. That's what we are committed to delivering. Every bag of seed, every rebuilt home, every restored livelihood matters and the scale of this challenge is immense. So, join us today and donate, so we can help these families not just survive but truly thrive in their lives again. Because Every Family Deserves a Second Chance, and Your Support Can Make It Possible!

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