Another 13 people died in rain-related incidents in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa while the Balochistan government imposed an “urban flood emergency” in Quetta, officials said on Monday.

Contin­uous heavy rains accompanied by thunderstorms have lashed several parts of the country in the past few days, resulting in a total of 39 deaths, out of which 12 occurred on Sunday — six in KP, four in Punjab and two in Balochistan.

Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif said he had directed the chairman of the National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA) to coordinate with all the provinces on the rain situation.

PM Shehbaz chairs a meeting in Islamabad. — DawnNewsTV

Addressing a high-level meeting on power projects, he conveyed his condolences on the loss of lives. PM Shehbaz urged the NDMA and its provincial counterparts to work together to ensure that basic relief supplies reached the places in need.

Heavy rainfall, floods and landslides continued to wreak havoc in the northern parts of KP for the fourth consecutive day.

According to a KP PDMA report issued on Monday night, the death toll since April 12 rose to 21 from the previous day’s eight with 13 more deaths — six men, two women and five children. Meanwhile, the total number of injured rose to 32.

The report noted that Chitral, Upper Dir, Lower Dir, Shangla, Swat, Malakand and Bajaur districts were among those affected by the rainfall and flooding.

According to a flooding report issued by the Peshawar Irrigation Department’s Flood Cell at 1pm, Panjkora River at Dir was witnessing a high-level flow of 64,028 cusecs.

Similarly, Swat River saw a high-level flow at Khwazakhela and Munda Headworks of 52,291 and 96,000 cusecs, respectively.

“Medium” flow was reported in Kabul River at Nowshera while “normal” flow was recorded at the Shah Alam, Naguman and Jindi rivers.

This photo shows flooded Swat River on Monday. — KP PDMA

Swat’s Rescue 1122 spokesperson Shafiq Gul said a house collapse at Matta Swat resulted in over 40 cattle perishing. However, no human losses were reported in the incident.

Heavy rain coupled with thunderstorms resulted in main and link roads being blocked, paralysing life across the province. According to the National Highway Authority (NHA), the Karakoram Highway was open for all sorts of traffic.

However, tourists travelling to Swat, Kalam and Kumrat were stranded at multiple locations as the Kalam road was blocked at various points due to landslides.

Rescue 1122 spokesperson Rasool Khan Sharif said the KKH was blocked at Pattan after a landslide, leaving vehicles stuck on both sides. He further said the Bisham-Swat road was also blocked at several points in Shangla and that two goats perished after a house was struck by a landslide in the district’s Chakat area.

Ahmad Ali, a tourist from Abbottabad who was stranded among several others at the Thal area of Kumrat in Upper Dir, told Dawn.com that he had been stranded since Monday morning as the road leading to Kumrat caved in and was blocked by the landslides.

Ali lamented that he had not seen any government authority take measures to reopen the road or help them while they were stranded “without food or water”.

The tourist demanded that the government help and rescue the people stuck as there were chances of more landslides occurring there while families remained stranded on the road.

press release issued in the afternoon, it said “another strong westerly wave” was likely to enter western parts of the country on the night of April 16 (Tuesday) and was likely to grip most parts of Balochistan on April 17 and would extend to upper parts on April 18.

The PMD said that under the weather system’s influence, rain-wind/thunderstorm (few heavy, with isolated very heavy falls) were expected in Gwadar, Kech, Awaran, Chagi, Kharan, Awaran, Lasbella, Khuzdar, Kalat, Noushki, Mastung, Jhal Magsi, Naseerabad, Sibbi, Kohlu, Dera Bugti, Barkhan, Loralai, Harnai, Qilla Saifullah, Mastung, Ziarat, Shirani, Zhob, Musa Khel and Barkhan from Tuesday night to the morning of April 19 (Friday).

In KP, the same was forecast with snowfall over high mountains in Chitral, Dir, Swat, Abbottabad, Mansehra, Haripur, Kohistan, Shangla, Buner, Malakand, Waziristan, Kohat, Lakki Marwat, Bannu, Dera Ismail Khan, Bajaur, Mohmand, Karak, Khyber, Peshawar, Charsadda, Nowshera, Swabi, Mardan and Kurram with occasional gaps from April 17 night to April 21. Hailstorm was also expected at isolated places during the forecast period, the met office added.

The PMD warned that heavy rainfall may generate flash flooding in local nullahs and streams of Balochistan, especially in Gwadar, Kech, Awaran, Kalat, and Khuzdar on April 17-18.

It predicted the same in Dir, Swat, Chitral, Kohistan, Mansehra and the tributaries of Kabul River, as well as in Gilgit-Baltistan and Kashmir from April 18-20.

The met office further alerted about the “possibility of landslides in upper KP, Murree, Galiyat, Kashmir and GB, which it said may affect the vulnerable locations from April 18-21.

reported severe damages in coastal towns such as Pasni, Kech, and Panjgur districts as well as the port city of Gwadar.

These damages include heavy losses to houses and infrastructure, and disruptions to transportation networks, including the coastal highway and other link roads, cutting off access to many areas from Quetta and other districts.

The power supply had been severely affected, with electric pylons uprooted in Pasni and Panjgur areas, leading to outages lasting hours in Quetta and surrounding areas. Gas supply disruptions and low pressure had also been reported across various areas of the provincial capital and other cities.

Normal life and traffic had been significantly impacted across Makran and other regions of northern, central and southern Balochistan, with incessant rains affecting around 25 districts of the province.

Reports indicated that Pasni, a coastal town in the Gwadar district, had been particularly hard hit, with extensive areas submerged under rainwater.

“Pasni looks like a big lake at the moment as flash floods entered the human settlements and main commercial areas,” Noor Ahmed Kalmati, chairman of Pasni Municipal Committee, had told Dawn by phone.

“Dozens of mud houses and boundary walls collapsed in heavy rains that lashed the small town for four hours,” Kalmati said, adding that the municipal committee was trying to rescue residents trapped by floodwaters.

In Kech district, scores of houses had been damaged, and link roads washed away, cutting links to Turbat and other areas of Makran.



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