Pakistan: Rescue efforts following flash floods continue

PAKISTAN: More than 300 people have been killed and 200 remain missing after flash floods last week in Pakistan. Rainfall during this year’s monsoon season is already 50% to 60% higher than last year.

Authorities in Pakistan  continued their rescue and relief work, having faced delays on Monday due to fresh rain, according to local officials.

The country’s northwest is continuing to deal with the aftermath of flash floods that killed over 300 people and left more than 200 unaccounted for.

Heavy rains began on Friday and most of the deaths have been reported in northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, according to the provincial disaster agency, which warned of new flash floods until Thursday.

Hundreds still missing after Pakistan flash floods

Volunteers had been assisting hundreds of rescue workers in their race against time to find possible survivors and retrieve bodies as rain started lashing the province.

“This morning fresh rains forced a halt to relief operations,” said Nisar Ahmad, 31, a volunteer in the worst-hit Buner district, where “12 villages have been completely wiped out and 219 bodies have been recovered.”

Buner, a three-and-a-half-hour drive from the capital, Islamabad, was hit by a cloudburst, a rare phenomenon in which more than 100 millimeters (4 inches) of rain falls within an hour in a small area.

ALSO READ: Flash floods wreak havoc in northern Pakistan

According to officials, in Buner there was more than 150 millimeters of rain within an hour on Friday morning.

“Dozens of bodies are still buried under the mud and rocks, which can only be recovered with heavy machinery. However, the makeshift tracks built to access the area have once again been destroyed by the new rains,” Ahmad added.

Around 200 people are still missing in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, according to local authorities.

Relief goods sent to worst-hit areas

Relief goods have been sent to the affected areas, Information Minister Attaullah Tarar told local Geo News television.

Food, medicine, blankets, camps, electric generators and pumps are included in the relief goods, the disaster management authority said in a statement.

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