logo
Pakistan resumes rescue operations in flood-hit areas; death toll reaches 300

Pakistan resumes rescue operations in flood-hit areas; death toll reaches 300

RNZ News2 days ago
By Mushtaq Ali for Reuters
A resident evacuates the area following a rise in floodwaters in the Buner district of Pakistan's Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province.
Photo:
AFP / ABDUL MAJEED
Authorities in Pakistan have resumed rescue and relief work in the country's northwest where flash floods have killed more than 300 people after heavy rain forced them to suspend operations for several hours.
Heavy rains that started on Friday have claimed lives and spread destruction in several northern districts, with most people killed in flash floods, according to the National Disaster Management Authority.
In hilly areas, the rains caused flash floods as well as mud and rock slides that washed away houses, buildings, vehicles and belongings.
Buner district was the worst hit, with more than 200 deaths.
Heavy rain in the flood-hit areas, including Buner, forced rescue teams to halt relief efforts for several hours on Monday, regional government officer Abid Wazir told Reuters.
"Our priority is now to clear the roads, set up bridges and bring relief to the affected people," he said.
People gather near a damaged vehicle and scattered debris after the road washed out following a flash flood in Mingora, the main city of Swat Valley, in monsoon-hit northern Pakistan's mountainous Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province on August 16, 2025.
Photo:
AFP / MEHBOOB UL HAQ
Relief goods have been sent to the affected areas, Information Minister Attaullah Tarar told local Geo News television.
Food, medicine, blankets, camps, an electric generator and de-watering pumps are included in the relief goods, the disaster management authority said in a statement.
Buner, a three-and-a-half-hour drive from the capital Islamabad, was hit by a cloudburst, a rare phenomenon in which more than 100mm of rain falls within an hour in a small area, officials said.
In Buner, there was more than 150mm of rain within an hour on Friday morning, they said.
More heavy rain was expected across Pakistan until early September, officials said.
"The current weather system is active over the Pakistan region and may cause heavy to very heavy rainfall during the next 24 hours," the disaster management authority said on Sunday.
Torrential rains and flooding this monsoon season have killed 657 people across Pakistan since late June, it said.
- Reuters
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Auckland floods inquest: Fire and Emergency reveal 'overwhelming' situation faced behind the scenes
Auckland floods inquest: Fire and Emergency reveal 'overwhelming' situation faced behind the scenes

RNZ News

timea day ago

  • RNZ News

Auckland floods inquest: Fire and Emergency reveal 'overwhelming' situation faced behind the scenes

Four men were killed during the Auckland Anniversary floods. Photo: Supplied Fire and Emergency has revealed the "overwhelming situation" it faced behind the scenes during the Auckland Anniversary floods as the inquest into 2023's deadly storms continue. The hearings started in June and were examining the public warnings issued during Cyclone Gabrielle and the Auckland Anniversary floods. Nineteen people were killed from the storms nationwide, including three men who died in the months following the weather events. Daniel Miller, 34 , Daniel Newth, 25, David Lennard, 78, and Dave Young, 58, were all killed duirng the Auckland Anniversary floods. Fire and Emergency NZ's national communications centre manager Gavin Travers gave evidence on Tuesday about the challenges FENZ had with communication and responding to call outs. He said the volume of 111 calls the fire service received during the January 27 floods was very large, totalling in 4945. Flooding in Auckland's New Lynn on the evening of January 27, 2023. Photo: RNZ/ Josie Campbell "It is a significantly high number of incidents for a localised event, absolutely. "I can tell you that the weekly incident report that goes out to our leadership team would see national numbers be around 1500, 1600," Travers said. He realised emergency services were dealing with an unprecedented situation by about 7pm that day. "As I said, I think, you know, by seven o'clock, it was pretty obvious to me, but by five o'clock, when we put the call out to the media team to distribute that messaging, that was in response to the significant number of calls that we were getting. "For example, there was water running over the backyard, which they, I call it, might not necessarily see or had seen before and perhaps it's worth recognising that in today's environment with technology, we will sometimes get a 111 call from three different people in the same address, all trying to get through to emergency services first, which has the opposite effect in terms of demand." Flooding on Candia Rd in Henderson Valley, west Auckland. Photo: Supplied Travers said it was the first time in his career he'd made a decision to ask people not to call 111 unless there were threats to life. He said it was also uncommon that every fire truck in Auckland had been dispatched. "I don't recall that happening since about February 2018, when we had a previous significant weather event." In a situation where all crews had been deployed, priority was always given to calls where there was a risk to life, Travers said. "So if it's a potential life risk, then they will take a resource off another call and send it to the life risk. The Auckland Domain the morning after January 27, 2023. Photo: Robert Smith "If we've got a fire engine going to a flooding call, maybe water's going through somebody's house, and as upsetting as that can be, if there's no life risk there but we have one waiting, we'll definitely go to a life risk first." Travers said 14 people were working as call takers across the country's call centres, which was more than usual. FENZ Region Manager for Te Ihu, Brad Mosby also gave evidence to the Coroner about his experience when he was a district manager based in Counties Manukau. He said it would have been beneficial in his opinion, to have declared a state of emergency earlier in the day. "In my professional view it would have been really useful to have had a declaration early it would have sent good message to the community that we have a significant event here and that our partner agencies are working together. "Some of the the stuff that wasn't being coordinated very well was the evacuation centres, we were really impressing on our colleagues in council and Auckland Emergency Management that we needed emergency centres, we had no where to send them." Flood relief in a South Auckland hall in the days following the event. Photo: RNZ/Angus Dreaver Mosby said he was particularly concerned about the Elton John concert at Mt Smart Stadium which was set to go ahead that day and said an Electronic Mobile Alert or EMA, could have been sent earlier. He said he raised it in internal meetings ahead of the concert that day. "We had 30,000 people coming into Auckland and anyone with a device in the zone of the EMA response would have picked up that we have a serious weather event here, with some good messaging about keeping away. "The reason I brought it up was because I thought it was a real risk." The Auckland phase of the inquest into the deaths of those who lost their lives during the two devastating and deadly storms of 2023 continues. Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

Record Spanish wildfires close part of Camino de Santiago route
Record Spanish wildfires close part of Camino de Santiago route

RNZ News

timea day ago

  • RNZ News

Record Spanish wildfires close part of Camino de Santiago route

By Nacho Doce and Guillermo Martinez , Reuters A wildfire burns near a highway in A Gudina, northwestern Spain, on August 15, 2025. Photo: AFP / Cesar Manso Spain's worst wave of wildfires on record have spread to the southern slopes of the Picos de Europa mountains and prompted authorities to close part of the popular Camino de Santiago pilgrimage route. "This is a fire situation we haven't experienced in 20 years," Defence Minister Margarita Robles told Cadena SER radio. "The fires have special characteristics as a result of climate change and this huge heat wave," she said. The heatwave spanning 16 days is the third-longest on record and sent temperatures up to 45 degrees Celsius over the weekend, according to state weather agency Aemet. It is expected to start easing on Monday evening or Tuesday (local time). Southern Europe is experiencing one of its worst wildfire seasons in two decades, with Spain and Portugal among the hardest-hit countries. So far this year, an estimated 344,400 hectares have burned in Spain - an area equivalent to the size of the island of Mallorca - according to the European Forest Fire Information System (EFFIS). It's the largest area on records that go back to 2006 and more than four times the 2006-2024 average. People carry out mountain clearing work in anticipation of the possible arrival of the fire from the Picos de Europa National Park blaze. Photo: AFP / Cesar Manso A firefighter died when his truck crashed near the village of Espinoso de Compludo, raising the death toll to four from the recent wave of fires. In Portugal, wildfires have burned about 216,200 hectares so far this year, according to EFFIS - more than four times the 2006-2024 average for this period - and two people have died. The Spanish army has deployed 3000 troops and 50 aircraft to help firefighters, emergency services general director Virginia Barcones said. Spain is also receiving or has been offered help from France, Italy, Netherlands, Slovakia, Germany and the Czech Republic through the European Civil Protection mechanism, according to the Interior Ministry. In the past week alone, about 20 wildfires have devastated thousands of hectares in the regions of Galicia and Castile and Leon, forcing authorities to cut rail services in the area, as well as a 50-km (30-mile) stretch of the Camino de Santiago, an ancient pilgrimage path trodden by thousands in the summer. It links France and the city of Santiago de Compostela on the western tip of Spain, where the remains of the apostle St James are said to be buried. Patrice Lepettre, a 75-year-old pilgrim in Astorga, told Reuters the inconvenience for hikers was temporary and could not be compared to the locals' plight. "It's a terrible thing for the population. The pilgrims can go back home and come another year to finish the Camino, but for the people who live here, it's a terrible thing," he said. Leaders of regions run by the main opposition People's Party (PP) have criticised the central government for poor planning and asked for more resources to fight the wildfires. Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez on Sunday urged a "state pact" on climate change with all main political forces, which was dismissed as a "diversion" by PP spokesperson Ester Munoz on Monday. The Interior ministry said 27 people have been arrested and 92 were under investigation for suspected arson since June. In Palacios de Jamuz in the northern region of Castile and Leon, where a wildfire had burned down whole rows of houses, Delia Lobato was inspecting the damage and lamented the deaths of people and trees. "Such young people who had their whole lives ahead and who are gone, that's the hardest thing," she said. "We will plant again, and if I don't see it grow well my children will." - Reuters

Hurricane Erin drenches Caribbean islands, threatens US coast
Hurricane Erin drenches Caribbean islands, threatens US coast

NZ Herald

timea day ago

  • NZ Herald

Hurricane Erin drenches Caribbean islands, threatens US coast

A Luma Energy crew work on restoring the power as category 3 Hurricane Erin leaves the region in Luquillo, Puerto Rico on August 16, 2025. Photo / Ricardo Arduengo, AFP Listening to articles is free for open-access content—explore other articles or learn more about text-to-speech. A Luma Energy crew work on restoring the power as category 3 Hurricane Erin leaves the region in Luquillo, Puerto Rico on August 16, 2025. Photo / Ricardo Arduengo, AFP Hurricane Erin has strengthened and was forecast to expand as the powerful Category 4 storm drenched Caribbean islands and threatened dangerous rip currents along the US East Coast. In its latest advisory, the US National Hurricane Center (NHC) said Erin was packing maximum sustained winds of 220km/h while moving west-northwest at 16km/h. Its outer bands were forecast to bring localised downpours across Cuba and the Dominican Republic through Monday, as well as the Turks and Caicos and the Bahamas – where a tropical storm warning is in place – through Tuesday. These areas could receive localised totals of up to 15cm of rain, according to the NHC. In Puerto Rico, a US territory of more than three million people, weekend flooding swamped homes and roads in the island's east, and widespread power outages left residents in the dark, though service has since been restored to more than 96% of customers.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store