Penticton Herald

Rains damage archeologi­cal site in flood-stricken Pakistan

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ISLAMABAD — In flood-stricken Pakistan where an unpreceden­ted monsoon season has killed hundreds of people, the rains now threaten a famed archeologi­cal site dating back 4,500 years, the site’s chief official said Tuesday.

The ruins of Mohenjo Daro – located in southern Sindh province near the Indus River and a UNESCO World Heritage Site – are considered among the best preserved urban settlement­s in South Asia. They were discovered in 1922 and to this day, mystery surrounds the disappeara­nce of its civilizati­on, which coincided with those of ancient Egypt and Mesopotami­a.

The swelling waters of the Indus, a major river in this part of the world, have wreaked havoc as heavy rains and massive flooding unleashed devastatio­n across much of Pakistan. At least 1,343 people have been killed and millions have lost their homes in the surging waters, with many experts blaming the unusually heavy monsoon rains on climate change.

The flooding has not directly hit Mohenjo Daro but the record-breaking rains have inflicted damage on the ruins of the ancient city, said Ahsan Abbasi, the site’s curator.

“Several big walls, which were built nearly 5,000 years ago, have collapsed because of the monsoon rains,” Abbasi told The Associated Press.

He said dozens of constructi­on workers under the supervisio­n of archaeolog­ists have started the repair work. Abbasi did not give an estimated cost of the damages at Mohenjo Daro.

The site’s landmark “Buddhist stupa” – a large hemispheri­cal structure associated with worship, meditation and burial – remains intact, Abbasi said. But the downpour has damaged some outer walls and also some larger walls separating individual rooms or chambers.

Abbasi said the civilizati­on at Mohenjo

Daro, also known as “Mound of the Dead” in the local Sindhi language, built an elaborate drainage system, which has been critical in flooding in the past.

Though the floods have touched all of Pakistan, the Sindh province has been among the worst hit.

On Monday, army engineers made a second cut into an embankment at Lake Manchar, Pakistan’s largest freshwater lake, to release rising waters in hopes of saving the nearby city of Sehwan from major flooding.

The water from the lake has already inundated dozens of nearby villages, forcing hundreds of families to leave their mudbrick homes in a hurry, many fleeing in panic.

Meanwhile, rescue operations continued Tuesday with troops and volunteers using helicopter­s and boats to get those stranded out of the flooded areas and to nearest relief camps. Tens of thousands of people are already living in such camps, and thousands more have taken shelter on roadsides on higher ground.

 ?? The Associated Press ?? Women carry belongings salvaged from their flooded home after monsoon rains, in Pakistan, Tuesday.
The Associated Press Women carry belongings salvaged from their flooded home after monsoon rains, in Pakistan, Tuesday.

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