Chattanooga Times Free Press

3 days of monsoon rains kill 58 people across Pakistan

- BY MUHAMMAD FAROOQ

KARACHI, Pakistan — Three days of heavy monsoon rains triggering flash floods killed at least 58 people in various parts of Pakistan, as troops with boats rushed Sunday to evacuate people from flood-affected districts in the country’s southern Sindh and southweste­rn Baluchista­n provinces.

Every year, many cities in Pakistan struggle to cope with the annual monsoon deluge, drawing criticism about poor planning. The monsoon season runs from July through September, during which swelling rivers cause damage to crops and infrastruc­ture.

According to Pakistan’s National Disaster Management Authority, 19 people were killed in rain-related incidents in the northweste­rn Khyber Pakhtunkhw­a province, 12 in southern Sindh province, eight in Punjab province and 10 in the country’s scenic northern Gligit Baltistan region in the past three days.

Rains also partially damaged about 100 homes and caused a breach in a flooded main canal, inundating villages in Sindh province. In a statement, the military said troops used boats to rescue stranded people and move them to safety. It said a medical camp was also establishe­d and food was being provided to the rescued people.

Heavy rains also lashed many districts in the southweste­rn Baluchista­n province, killing eight people, damaging homes and inundating many villages in the district of Jhal Magsi, according to Saleem Zakir, spokesman for provincial disaster management authority. He said rescuers with the army’s help were still trying to evacuate people from the district’s flood-hit villages.

He said floods damaged a bridge and a gas pipeline and destroyed coastal roads on the Arabian Sea, severing links to the port of Gwadar, part of China’s multi-billion dollar one-road project linking south and Central Asia to China.

According to local media reports, hundreds of people moved to nearby hills when the floodwater­s entered their villages in remote areas of Baluchista­n, and the military used helicopter­s and boats to move them to safer places. Authoritie­s were dispatchin­g tents and food for the flood-affected people.

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