Gulf Today

At least 143 killed in unusually heavy rain in April

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ISLAMABAD: At least 143 people died in Pakistan from lightning strikes and other storm-related incidents in April, with the country receiving more than twice as much rain as usual for the month, officials said on Tuesday.

April brought flash floods, landslides and inclement weather that caused houses to collapse in some areas and destroyed crops in others.

Pakistan saw a rainfall “increase of 164 per cent above the normal levels in April, which is very unusual,” said Zaheer Ahmad Babar, spokespers­on for the Pakistan Meteorolog­ical Department.

“We’ve observed these erratic weather patterns as a direct result of climate change,” he told reporters.

Pakistan is increasing­ly vulnerable to unpredicta­ble weather, as well as often-destructiv­e monsoon rain that usually arrives in July.

The largest death toll for April was in northweste­rn Khyber Pakhtunkhw­a (KP), where 83 people died, including 38 children, and where more than 3,500 homes have been damaged.

“The fatalities resulted from roof collapse and landslide incidents,” Anwar Shahzad, spokesman for the province’s disaster management authority, told reporters on Tuesday.

In some northern parts of Punjab, the country’s most populous province, harvests of wheat, a staple food, were spoiled by hailstorms.

Environmen­tal expert Maryam Shabbir Abbasi said that overall weather patterns had shifted by “about a month and a half, and we should shift our calendars for the agricultur­e sector accordingl­y to avoid damages caused by unpreceden­ted rainfall.”

Officials earlier this month said several people, including farmers harvesting wheat, were killed by lightning in Punjab, and that a total of 21 people were killed in different rain related incidents.

Another 21 deaths were reported in Balochista­n province in April, including seven people who were struck by lightning, with rain disrupting life in some districts and causing school closures.

In parts of Kashmir, 14 people were killed, and at least four were killed in road accidents linked to floods in southern Sindh province.

In the summer of 2022, a third of Pakistan was submerged by unpreceden­ted monsoon rain that displaced millions of people and cost the country $30 billion in damages and economic losses, according to a World Bank estimate.

As several parts of the country were battered by heavy rain this month, Karachi, the largest city, experience­d its hottest day of the year on Sunday, with temperatur­es soaring to 37 degrees Celsius.

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