San Francisco Chronicle

Floods in north and east leave at least 100 dead

- By Tameem Akhgar Tameem Akhgar is an Associated Press writer.

KABUL — Flooding has killed at least 100 people and injured scores of others as heavy seasonal rains drenched northern and eastern Afghanista­n, officials said Wednesday.

Annual heavy rains, compounded by mudslides, often threaten remote areas of Afghanista­n, where infrastruc­ture is poor. Summer often brings heavy rainfall in northern and eastern parts of the country, leading to floods that leave hundreds dead every year.

State minister for disaster management Ghulam Bahawudin Jilani said that in northern Parwan province, water inundated the central city of Charikar, where the health ministry said the local hospital was severely damaged and many of the injured were being transferre­d to the capital, Kabul.

The provincial spokeswoma­n, Wahida Shahkar, said the number of casualties may rise as people and rescue teams were still working to locate people buried under destroyed houses. The head of the provincial hospital, Abdul Qasim Sangin, said several children were among the dead and some of the injured are in critical condition.

On a highway just east of Kabul, at least eight people, including two children, drowned and 14 others were injured when the floodwater­s swept away the cars they were in, according to spokesman Ahmad Tameem Azimi.

Shahkar said the flooding started in the central part of the province overnight, following heavy rains and destroying many homes. She called on the government to deliver aid and provide immediate support for workers digging through mud to reach those still trapped.

President Ashraf Ghani in a statement ordered aid be delivered to Parwan and other provinces while expressing his condolence­s to the victims’ families.

Azimi, spokesman of the Disaster Management Ministry, said flooding blocked highways to eastern and northern provinces. “Along with rescuing people we are working to open the highways back to traffic,” he said.

More than 2,000 houses were destroyed in Parwan and over 1,000 people were displaced, Azimi said. Ground and air support sent to help those trapped by the flooding had reached the provinces.

The flooding waters and rushing mud in the mountainou­s Parwan province carried thousands of large rocks that caused major injuries and destroyed entire homes, burying people under the rubble.

“Nobody could run,“said Shah Arian, 22 one of the victims.

 ?? Wakil Kohsar / AFP via Getty Images ?? A villager sits next to his destroyed home as rescuers search for bodies after a flash flood inundated the city of Charikar, Parwan province, Afghanista­n.
Wakil Kohsar / AFP via Getty Images A villager sits next to his destroyed home as rescuers search for bodies after a flash flood inundated the city of Charikar, Parwan province, Afghanista­n.

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