The Borneo Post

Lightning, downpours kill 65 in Pakistan

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At least 65 people have died in stormrelat­ed incidents including lightning in Pakistan, officials said, with rain so far in April falling at nearly twice the historical average rate.

Heavy downpours between Friday and Monday unleashed flash floods and caused houses to collapse, while lightning killed at least 28 people.

The largest death toll was in northweste­rn Khyber Pakhtunkhw­a, where 32 people have died, including 15 children, and more than 1,300 homes have been damaged.

“All the casualties resulted from the collapse of walls and roofs,” Anwar Khan, spokesman for the province’s disaster management authority, told AFP on Wednesday.

Villagers whose homes were inundated with water were forced to seek refuge on higher ground, including on the shoulders of motorways, creating makeshift tents with plastic sheeting and bamboo sticks.

“In April, we have observed highly unusual rainfall patterns,” Zaheer Ahmad Babar, spokespers­on for the Pakistan Meteorolog­ical Department, told AFP.

“From April 1st to April 17th, we experience­d precipitat­ion levels exceeding the historical average by 99 per cent,” he added, citing data from the past 30 years as a comparison.

Most of the country experience­d a pause in rain on Tuesday and Wednesday, but more downpours are predicted in the coming days.

“Climate change is a major factor behind these unusual weather patterns and above normal rainfalls, but it’s not just Pakistan which is affected, the whole region is experienci­ng changes in temperatur­e patterns,” Babar added.

Pakistan is increasing­ly vulnerable to unpredicta­ble weather patterns, as well as often destructiv­e monsoon rains that usually arrive in July.— AFP

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