Around 100,000 people evacuated due to floods in Pakistan

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TOPSHOT - This photograph shows an aerial view of the flooded Chanda Singh Wala village in Kasur district on August 22, 2023. (Photo by Arif ALI / AFP)

Villages and cropland in the central province were inundated when the Sutlej River burst its banks on Sunday.

PHOTO: AFP

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Kasur, Pakistan - Around 100,000 people have been evacuated from flooded villages in Pakistan’s Punjab province, said emergency services on Wednesday.

Several hundred villages and thousands of acres of cropland in the central province were inundated when the Sutlej River burst its banks on Sunday.

Mr Mohsin Naqvi, the head of Punjab’s government, said monsoon rains had prompted the authorities in India to release excess reservoir water into the river, causing flooding downstream on the Pakistani side of the border.

“The flood waters came a couple of days ago and all our houses were submerged. We walked all the way here on foot with great difficulty,” 29 year-old Kashif Mehmood, who fled with his wife and three children to a relief camp, said on Tuesday.

The summer monsoon brings 70 per cent to 80 per cent of South Asia’s annual rainfall between June and September every year.

It is vital for the livelihoods of millions of farmers and food security in a region of around two billion people – but it also brings landslides and floods that lead to frequent evacuations.

Mr Farooq Ahmad, a spokesman for the Punjab emergency services, said on Wednesday: “We have rescued 100,000 people and transferred them to safer places.”

More than 175 people have died in Pakistan in rain-related incidents since the monsoon season began in late June, mainly due to electrocution and buildings collapsing, emergency services have reported.

Officials on the Indian side could not immediately be reached for comment.

Mr Muhammad Amin, a local doctor volunteering at a relief camp, said on Tuesday: “There is five or six feet (1.5m to 1.8m) of water accumulated over the roads. The only route that could have been used to come and go is now underwater. This 15km or 16km route is now being covered by boat so that we can rescue people.”

The Punjab disaster management agency warned that forecast monsoon rains could exacerbate the flooding in the coming days.

Pakistan is still recovering from devastating floods that inundated nearly one-third of the country in 2022, affecting more than 33 million people.

Scientists have said climate change is making seasonal rains heavier and more unpredictable.

Pakistan, which has the world’s fifth-largest population, is responsible for less than 1 per cent of global greenhouse gas emissions, according to officials, but is highly vulnerable to extreme weather exacerbated by global warming. AFP

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