Associated Press
Published: July 3,2016
Two separate flood events have
taken at least 80 lives and left 12 missing in Asia this weekend. Days
of heavy rain killed 27 in China's southern province of Hubei and a
landslide claimed 23 more lives when it buried a village in Guizhou.
Meanwhile, overnight flash floods on Saturday killed at least 30 in a
remote village near Pakistan's northern border with Afghanistan.
Nearly
400,000 people have been evacuated or are in need of aid in Hubei.
Almost 15,000 houses have collapsed or are seriously damaged and more
than 500,000 hectares of crops have been affected, causing direct
economic losses of 5.669 billion yuan ($850 million), the provincial
civil affairs department said.
"A stalled frontal boundary
contributed to the heavy rains in eastern China," weather.com digital
meteorologist Chris Dolce said.
State television on Saturday
showed people using boats to navigate flooded streets in eastern Anhui
province. Anhui's civil affairs department said 18 people have died and
four are missing due to heavy rain since June 18. Vice Premier Wang Yang
warned last month that there was a high possibility of floods in the
Yangtze River and Huai River basins this year, which equate to a large
swath of China's southern, central and eastern areas.
(MORE: China Tornado Kills 98, Injures 800)
In Pakistan, heavy monsoon rains and flash floods washed away a mosque and several houses in Ursoon, an area of Chitral.
The
mayor of Chitral district, Maghfirat Shah said the flash flooding hit
as people were offering up special Ramadan prayers at the mosque. Dozens
of worshippers were swept away in the flood waters, which destroyed the
mosque and damaged several nearby houses and a security post.
The
bad weather hampered rescue efforts, but by morning most of the bodies
had been recovered and one person had been rescued, Shah said. A
spokesman for the disaster management authority, Yousuf Zia, said search
crews recovered the bodies of seven people. He said 30 people were
missing and believed dead. Authorities called for helicopters to join
the rescue and relief operation because nearby roads had been washed
away, Zia said, adding that in areas where the weather had cleared teams
were already distributing essential goods.
The
provincial chief minister, Pervez Khattak, expressed his grief over the
tragedy and announced that the families would receive compensation of
$300 for each loss of life. He said that he had given orders for
disaster management officials to quickly provide the affected
communities with tents, food, medicine and other relief goods.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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