
As a result of the fierce monsoon floods and landslides, more than 200 people were missing from an earth in northwestern Pakistan, officials said.
Due to Flash Flood, more than 300 people died in the recent Kashmir of Pakistan and Pakistan, and most of the deaths were recorded in the mountain Khyber Pakhtunkhwa.
A local official at the worst influenced by a regional official of Buner District told the BBC that at least 209 people were still missing, but they were afraid that the number would increase.
The rescue team buried eight unidentified bodies.
Some relatives added that the road was severely damaged and could not claim the body.
A local rescue spokesman told the news agency AFP that it was partially buried.
Asfandyar Khattak, head of local disaster management authorities, said that “dozens of people” were missing in the Shangla region.
Monsoon Rain between June and September provides about 3/4 of the annual rainfall of South Asia.
As a result, landslides and flash floods are common, but scientists say that due to climate change, these weather events are being made more intense and frequent.
The ratio of salary was also hit by Kashmir, a few days after the death of a flash of floods.
Authorities said nine people were killed in Pakistan Pakistan Pakistan, and the other five died in the northern Gilgit-Baltis Stan.
Government predictors are expected to rain from the northwest until August 21, which are expected to have been declared as a disaster area.
Pakistan has been recognized for its devastation in the Monsoon season since June. At least 650 people died until this year.
In July, almost half of Pakistan’s 225 million people, Punjab, recorded more than 73% more rainfall than the previous season and died more.
Northern Pakistan is also one of the most glacier areas in the region, but it is rapidly thinning and retreating due to climate change. That is, it can remove rocks, soil and other debris.
Monsoon Rain can make the face of the mountain more unstable and sometimes worsens the landslide that blocks the river.
Recently, the exact cause of floods and landslides has not been decided yet, but glacier scholars say ice dissolution is a contribution factor.








