Sabtu, 31 Juli 2010

More than 800 dead in Pakistani floods

Official: More than 800 dead in Pakistani floods


NOWSHERA, Pakistan – Flooding in Pakistan has killed more than 800 people in a week, a government official said Saturday as rescuers struggled to reach marooned victims and some evacuees showed signs of fever, diarrhea and other waterborne diseases.

The flooding caused by record-breaking rainfalls caused massive destruction in the past week, especially in the northwest province, where officials said it was the worst deluge since 1929. The U.N. estimated Saturday that some 1 million people nationwide were affected by the disaster, though it didn't specify exactly what that meant.

The information minister for the northwest province, Mian Iftikhar Hussain, said reports coming in from various districts across the northwest showed that more than 800 people had died due to the flooding. Many people remain missing.

Floodwaters were receding in the northwest, officials said, but fresh rains were expected to lash other parts of the country in the coming days.

In the Nowshera area in the northwest, scores of men, women and children sat on roofs in hopes of air or boat rescues.

"There are very bad conditions," said Amjad Ali, a rescue worker in the area. "They have no water, no food."

A doctor treating evacuees at a small relief camp in Nowshera said some had diarrhea and others had marks appearing on their skin, causing itching. Children and the elderly seemed to have the most problems, Mehmood Jaa said.

"Due to the floodwater, they now have pain in their bodies and they are suffering from fever and cough," Jaa told The Associated Press.

In Charsadda, Nabi Gul, who estimated he was around 70 years old, stood shaken at site of what was once his house and now was just rubble.

"I built this house with my life's earnings and hard work, and the river has washed it away," he said in a trembling voice. "Now I wonder, will I be able to rebuild it? And in this time, when there are such great price hikes?"

Rescuers were using army helicopters, heavy trucks and boats to try reaching flood-hit areas, the U.N. said. It reported that thousands of homes and roads were destroyed, and at least 45 bridges across the northwest were damaged.

The destruction is slowing the rescue effort, said Lutfur Rehman, a government official in Khyber-Pakhtoonkhwa, the northwest province.

"Our priority is to transport flood-affected people to safer places. We are carrying out this rescue operation despite limited resources," he said, adding they needed more helicopters and boats.

Qamar-uz-Zaman Chaudhry, the head of the Pakistan Meteorological Department, said that no more rain was expected in the next few days for the northwest and that floodwaters there were receding. But Punjab province in the east, Sindh province in the south, and Pakistan's side of the disputed Kashmir region all could expect a lashing over the next three or four days, he said.

Flooding has already affected some of those regions, with more than 21 people dying in Kashmir. A plane crash that killed 152 people in Islamabad on Wednesday also occurred during stormy weather.

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Khan contributed to this report from Peshawar.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20100731/ap_on_re_as/as_pakistan_floods

Hundreds dead in Pakistan flooding

Hundreds dead in Pakistan flooding

North-west region hardest hit as floodwaters wash away roads and bridges, leaving an estimated 400,000 people stranded


North-west of country hardest hit as floodwaters wash away roads and bridges, leaving about 400,000 people stranded
Link to this video

The death toll in three days of flooding in Pakistan reached at least 430 today, rescue and government officials said, as rains bloated rivers, submerged villages, and triggered landslides.

The rising toll from the monsoon rains underscore the poor infrastructure in Pakistan, where under-equipped rescue workers were struggling to reach people stranded in remote villages. The weather forecast was mixed, with some areas expected to see reduced rainfall and others likely to see an intensification.

Pakistani TV showed images of people clinging to fences and other stationary items as water at times gushed over their heads.

The north-west appeared to be the hardest hit, and Mian Iftikhar Hussain, the information minister for the province, said it was the worst flooding in the region since 1929. The highway connecting Peshawar to the federal capital, Islamabad, was shut down after the water washed away bridges and other links.

At least 291 people died in various parts of that province over the last three days, said Mujahid Khan of the Edhi Foundation, a privately run rescue service that operates morgues and ambulances across the South Asian country.

In Pakistani-controlled Kashmir, at least 22 people were confirmed dead last night, the area's prime minister, Sardar Attique Khan, told reporters.

The tolls from the deluge were expected to rise because many people were still missing. Poor weather this week also may have been a factor in Wednesday's Airblue plane crash that killed 152 people in Islamabad.

In the Swat Valley, residents were forced to trudge through knee-deep water in some streets.

A newly constructed part of a dam in the Charsadda district collapsed, while the UN said it had reports that 5,000 homes were underwater in that area.

Hussain estimated 400,000 people were stranded in various north-west villages.

"A rescue operation using helicopters cannot be conducted due to the bad weather, while there are only 48 rescue boats available for rescue," he said today.

Pakistan's poorest residents are often the ones living in flood-prone areas because they can't afford safer land.

South-west Baluchistan province has also been hit hard by the recent rains. Last week, flash floods in that region killed at least 41 people and swept away thousands of homes. A UN statement today said 150,000 people were affected there.

The UN said Punjab province in Pakistan's east was also hit by some flooding. Crops were soaked in farmlands throughout the country. The UN said the humanitarian community was trying to put together a proper response, but the rains were making many roads impassable, complicating efforts to assess needs.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2010/jul/30/hundreds-dead-pakistan-flooding

Pakistan monsoon floods kill more than 400

Pakistan monsoon floods kill more than 400


PESHAWAR, Pakistan (AFP) – Flash floods and landslides triggered by torrential monsoon rains have killed more than 400 people in Pakistan in three days and affected at least 600,000, a minister said Friday.

Hundreds of homes and thousands of hectares (acres) of cultivated land were destroyed in the northwest and Pakistani Kashmir, with the main highway to China reportedly cut off and communities left isolated.

"This is the worst ever flood in the province of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa in the country's history," provincial information minister Mian IftikharHussain told a news conference.

"At least 408 deaths have been confirmed in floods and rain related incidents across the province," he said.

Another 150 people are missing, he said adding that floods washed away 200 kilometres (125 miles) of main roads and link roads.

"At least 600,000 people have been affected and the number was likely to go up as water levels continue to rise in rivers in Peshawar,Nowshera and Charsada, the minister said.

Swat, Shangla and Peshawar were cut off from the rest of country as roads and highways were submerged in water, he said.

The death toll dwarfed even the 152 killed when a Pakistani passenger jet crashed into hills overlooking Islamabad on Wednesday and capped a week of tragedy for the nation's 167 million people.

Relief organisations earlier put the toll at 325 dead in the northwestern province, where impoverished families live in remote mountain villages.

"We have so far gathered the figure of 325 deaths due to flash floods in the northwest and (Pakistan-controlled) Kashmir," Anwer Kazmi, spokesman for Pakistan's largest charity the Edhi Foundation told AFP.

"Our officials have got reports of at least 300 deaths in Khyber Pakhtoonkhwa province while 25 people died in Kashmir's capital Muzaffarabad.

"We have not collected the complete figures from some districts and fear the number of casualties is much higher," he said.

The meteorological department said an "unprecedented" 312 millimetres (12 inches) of rain had fallen in the last 36 hours in the northwest but predicted only scattered showers during coming days.

Provincial relief commissioner Shakil Qadir said the worst-hit area was Malakand, where 102 people died and 16,000 were marooned because bridges have collapsed and road links been cut.

Qadir said that around 2,800 Pakistani holidaymakers had been stranded in the Swat valley, where the military maintains a heavy presence after a massive operation against Taliban insurgents last year.

Efforts are being made to airlift them to safety in helicopters, he said.

The dead in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa included 29 people killed when a landslide hit their houses Friday, police said.

Women and children were among the dead. The landslide caused by heavy monsoon rain destroyed 11 houses on a mountain in Shangla district.

"Twenty-nine people have died. I think the death toll will rise. There are women and children among the dead," senior police officer Qazi Jamil told AFP.

The Karakoram Highway, which links Pakistan to China, was closed as rains washed away a bridge in Shangla district, also cutting off Gilgit-Baltistan from other parts of the country, media reports said.

In Pakistani Kashmir, another 22 people were killed and more than 30 injured Thursday as dozens of houses collapsed due to heavy rains, said the regional prime minister Sardar Atique Ahmed.

The army said it sent boats to rescue stranded people and army engineers were attempting to open roads and divert the waters from key routes.

The monsoon in southwestern Baluchistan has killed 25 people over the past few days, senior officer of the disaster management authority Ataullah Khan told AFP in the provincial capital Quetta on Friday.

Flash floods have affected eight districts, he said, adding that around 275,000 people have been affected and more than 15,000 houses have been destroyed.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20100730/wl_sthasia_afp/pakistanweatherfloodslandslide_20100730145029