
From flood to drought: Cairo tops list of world's ‘climate flip' cities

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Dubai Eye
8 hours ago
- Dubai Eye
Red alert issued for India's Mumbai as city braces for another day of heavy rain
Heavy rain continued to batter the Indian city of Mumbai on Tuesday, with the country's weather bureau issuing a red alert for the second day in a row. The India Meteorological Department (IMD) has forecast intense spells of rain accompanied by gusty winds across several parts. It added that Mumbai recorded 550mm of rain in 81 hours, just 10mm short of the monthly average for August. Schools and colleges will remain closed as a precautionary measure, the city's Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation (BMC) announced on Tuesday. All government and semi-government offices will also remain closed, with private firms being urged to allow employees to work from home. Waterlogging and heavy rain have impacted train and flight services, with Flightradar reporting that 155 outbound and 102 inbound flights at Mumbai Airport were delayed on Tuesday. The Central Railway trains have reported delays of 20-30 minutes. IndiGo airline advised passengers flying to Mumbai to expect delays due to "operational challenges" due to the extreme weather conditions. Indian army has been deployed in Maharashtra's Nanded district, after more than 200 villagers were left stranded by incessant rains on Monday. Five people have been reported missing from Mukhed taluka of Nanded district, around 600 km from Mumbai, Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis said. Over the last two weeks, torrential rain has killed dozens of people and deluged villages in India's Himalaya mountains.

Al Etihad
5 days ago
- Al Etihad
Deadly monsoon rains lash Pakistan, killing dozens
15 Aug 2025 15:58 PESHAWAR, Pakistan (AFP) Heavy monsoon rains have triggered landslides and flash floods across a remote region of northern Pakistan, killing at least 117 people in the last 24 hours, disaster authorities said on majority of the deaths, 110, were recorded in mountainous Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, according to the Provincial Disaster Management Authority (PDMA).Seven more people were killed in Pakistan-administered Kashmir, regional disaster management authorities said."So far, across Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, more than 110 people have died due to cloudbursts, flash floods, and roof collapses," PDMA spokesperson Anwar Shehzad told 60 people have been injured, he said Buner, Bajaur, Mansehra and Battagram have been declared disaster-hit Bajaur, a tribal district abutting Afghanistan, a crowd amassed around an excavator trawling a mud-soaked hill, AFP photos showed. Funeral prayers began in a paddock nearby, with people grieving in front of several bodies covered by meteorological department has issued a heavy rain alert for the northwest, urging people to avoid "unnecessary exposure to vulnerable areas".In the Indian-administered part of Kashmir, a region divided from Pakistan, rescuers pulled bodies from mud and rubble on Friday after a flood crashed through a Himalayan village, killing at least 60 people and washing away dozens monsoon season brings South Asia about three-quarters of its annual rainfall, vital for agriculture and food security, but it also brings and flash floods are common during the season, which usually begins in June and eases by the end of say that climate change has made weather events around the world more extreme and more is one of the world's most vulnerable countries to the effects of climate change, and its population is contending with extreme weather events with increasing torrential rains that have pounded Pakistan since the start of the summer monsoon, described as "unusual" by authorities, have killed more than 320 people, nearly half of them children. Most of the deaths were caused by collapsing houses, flash floods and July, Punjab, home to nearly half of Pakistan's 255 million people, recorded 73 per cent more rainfall than the previous year and more deaths than in the entire previous 2022, monsoon floods submerged a third of the country and killed 1,700 people.

Al Etihad
12-08-2025
- Al Etihad
Toll of India Himalayan flood likely to be at least 70
12 Aug 2025 11:51 New Delhi (AFP)Indian officials say at least 68 people are unaccounted for a week after a deadly wall of icy water swept away a Himalayan town and buried it in top of four people reported to have been killed, it takes the likely overall toll of the August 5 disaster to more than 70 broadcast by survivors showed a terrifying surge of muddy water sweeping away multi-storey apartment officials said Tuesday that they were searching for corpses in the wreckage of the tourist town of Dharali in Uttarakhand Singh Chauhan, from the National Disaster Response Force, said sniffer dogs had identified several sites indicating there was a body but when "when digging started, water came out from below".Chauhan said teams were also using ground penetrating radar in the grim than 100 people were initially reported as with roads swept away and mobile phone communications damaged, it has taken rescuers days to cross-check the local government now lists 68 people as missing, including 44 Indians and 22 Nepalis. Nine soldiers are on the floods and landslides are common during the monsoon season from June to September, but experts say climate change, coupled with poorly planned development, is increasing their frequency and change experts warned that the disaster was a "wake-up call" to the effects of global official cause of the flood has been given, but scientists have said it was likely that intense rains triggered a collapse of debris from a rapidly melting glaciers, which provide critical water to nearly two billion people, are melting faster than ever before due to climate change, exposing communities to unpredictable and costly disasters. The softening of permafrost increases the chances of landslides.



