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Tuesday, September 13, 2022, 18:05
Pakistan races to keep floodwaters out of vital power station
By Reuters
Tuesday, September 13, 2022, 18:05 By Reuters

Displaced people transport usable belongings salvaged from their flood-hit home as they cross a flooded area in Sohbat Pur city of Jaffarabad, a district of Pakistan's southwestern Baluchistan province, Aug 28, 2022. (ZAHID HUSSAIN / AP)

DADU, Pakistan - Authorities in Pakistan are scrambling to protect a vital power station supplying electricity to millions of people against a growing threat of flooding, officials said on Monday.

Floods from record monsoon rains and glacial melt in the mountainous north have affected 33 million people and killed almost 1,400, washing away homes, roads, railways, livestock and crops, in damage estimated at $30 billion

Floods from record monsoon rains and glacial melt in the mountainous north have affected 33 million people and killed almost 1,400, washing away homes, roads, railways, livestock and crops, in damage estimated at US$30 billion.

Both the government and UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres have blamed climate change for the extreme weather that led to the flooding that submerged huge areas of the nation of 220 million. 

ALSO READ: Flood-hit Pakistan looks 'like a sea', as 18 more die

The electricity station in the district of Dadu in the southern province of Sindh, one of the country's worst affected areas, supplies power to six provincial districts.

Troops were busy strengthening a dike built in front of the station, a visit to the site showed on Sunday.

"All preventive measures have been taken already to save the grid in case any flooding happens," Syed Murtaza Ali Shah, a top district official, told Reuters on Monday.

The comment followed orders from Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif, reported by state broadcaster Radio Pakistan, to ensure the 500kV power station did not get flooded.

ALSO READ: Pakistan flood toll rises with 25 children among 57 more deaths

On Monday, a dust storm in nearby Sehwan town uprooted hundreds of tents pitched at roadsides by people made homeless by the floods, as a fresh spell of rains expected in the middle of the month begins to set in, officials said.

"If rains come where would we go - we are sitting under open sky, we don't know what to eat, what to cook," Muhammad Hasan, one of those impacted by the storm, told Reuters.

"All the tents got uprooted by strong winds today, we do not know where to go. We are desperate."

ALSO READ: Pakistan's foreign minister thanks China for flood relief

The Pakistan Meteorological Department said on Monday it expects more rain in the area in the next few days, posing a new threat to displaced people living in tents or in the open along raised highways.

UN agencies have begun work to assess the South Asian nation's reconstruction needs after it received 391 mm of rain, or nearly 190 percent more than the 30-year average, in July and August.

Sindh received 466 percent more rain than average and all the flood waters pass through Dadu, a district with a population of 1.5 million, because of its location.


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