Chitral flood toll revised down as Pakistan Army flies help in

Officials earlier put the total number of people killed in K-P at 43, saying that 41 of them died in Chitral


Afp July 04, 2016
Personnel of Pakistan Army shift a man injured during the floods in Chitral, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa on July 3, 2016. PHOTO: ONLINE

PESHAWAR:

Officials Monday revised the death toll from flooding caused by monsoon rains in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa to 33, as Pakistan Army said it was flying food and medical supplies to damaged areas.


On Sunday officials had put the total number of people killed in K-P at 43, saying that 41 of them had died in a village in Chitral district, where flash floods swept away their homes without warning.


Authorities also said two Chinese engineers had been killed at the Tarbela dam construction site in K-P.


Monsoon-induced floods kill 33 in K-P


But on Monday officials said there had been duplication in the death count, revising the Chitral toll down to 29.


They also said two more local workers had died alongside the Chinese engineers at the dam construction site, bringing the total toll across the province to 33.


Thirteen people are still missing in Chitral, said the district's deputy commissioner Usama Waraich, adding that authorities were evacuating some residents with more rain forecast Monday.



Labourers wade through flood water following heavy rain in Lahore. PHOTO: AFP


Dozens of homes in the village of Ursoon in Chitral were damaged in the floods with the army saying Monday five of them were completely swept away.


The remote village had received no evacuation warning and remained cut off Monday, with roads to it damaged by the floods.


Flash floods kill 43 in parts of K-P


The military said it was flying in medical aid, tents and food to Ursoon by helicopter Monday.


Afghan authorities also said they had recovered 13 bodies, including of eight Pakistani soldiers, which had been swept over the border from Chitral into Afghanistan.


"We found the bodies yesterday and they were handed over to the Pakistani authorities," Ehsanullah Fazal, head of the public health hospital in Afghanistan's Kunar province, told AFP.

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