
Over the past 24 hours, more than 194 people have died in heavy monsoon floods and landslides in Kashmir, Pakistan and Pakistan.
Most of the 180 -year -old deaths were recorded by disaster authorities in the mountain Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, northwest of Pakistan. During the operation, at least 30 houses were destroyed and rescue helicopters crashed and five crew members died.
Nine people were killed in Kashmir, Pakistan, and five were killed in the Gilgit-Baltis Stan.
Government predictors said that heavy rain was expected in the northwest until August 21, and rainfall was expected in various areas declared as a disaster area in various regions.
In Buner, a survivor said that the flood arrived in AFP like “end”.
Azizullah said, “I heard a big noise as the mountain slipped. I rushed out and saw the entire area shaking as it was the end of the world.”
“Because of the power of water, the ground was trembling, and death felt as if death was looking at the face.”
ALI AMIN GADAPUR of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa said that the M-17 helicopter was crashed due to bad weather while flying to Bajaur, an area facing Afghanistan.
In Bajaur, AFP photographs with accumulated crowds around the excavator, which trolled hills wet with mud, were shown. The funeral prayer started at a nearby ranch, and people are sad in front of multiple bodies covered with blankets.
In the managed part of Kashmir’s management, rescuers pulled the body from the mud on Friday after the flood crashed through the Himalayan village, killing more than 60 people and washing dozens more.
Monsoon Rain between June and September provides about 3/4 of the annual rainfall of South Asia. The landslides and floods are common, and more than 300 people died this season.
In July, almost half of Pakistan’s 225 million people, Punjab, recorded 73% more rainfall than previous Monsoon and more deaths.
Scientists say climate change has made weather events more extreme and frequent.