اردو
  • Two million affected by ongoing floods: NDMA

    Flood victims wade through a flooded area along a road as they wait for help, in Multan, Punjab province September 13, 2014. Reuters Flood victims wade through a flooded area along a road as they wait for help, in Multan, Punjab province September 13, 2014.

    Military specialists blew up dikes in central Pakistan to divert swollen rivers and save cities from raging floods that have killed hundreds of people, authorities said Saturday.

    The breaches at the overflowing Chenab River were performed overnight as floodwaters reached Multan. News channels showed pictures of floodwaters gushing through the blown-up dikes.

    Civil and military officials have been using helicopters and boats to evacuate marooned people since Sept. 3, when floods triggered by monsoon rains hit Pakistan and Kashmir.

    The military said in a statement Saturday that it was still evacuating people and air-dropping food in the districts of Multan, Muzaffargarh and Jhang. It said troops had air-dropped tons of food in flood-affected areas, while the army's medical teams were also treating patients.

    In a fresh statement issued Sunday, the ISPR said rescue and relief operations are ongoing in Multan, Muzaffargarh, Uchsharif, Bahawalpur and Athara Hazari. It also said more than 37,000 people have been rescued by army troops.

    Ahmad Kamal, the spokesman for the National Disaster Management authority, said rains and floods had killed 280 people and injured more than 500 in Pakistan and Azad Jammu and Kashmir. He said more than 2 million people had been affected. Kamal said rescuers had evacuated 276,681 persons from flood-hit areas and aerial monitoring was being done through helicopters.

    Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif, who is himself supervising rescue operations, traveled to Jhang on Saturday. In a televised speech there, Sharif said his government was exempting flood-affected people from paying their electricity bills.

    “I assure you that we will rebuild your homes. We will do whatever is possible to help you,” he told a gathering of survivors near a flooded village.