ENUGU, Nigeria (VOICE OF NAIJA)- About 50 people, including eight children, have been killed by floods and landslides which was triggered by monsoon rains in Pakistan since last month, officials said Friday.
The summer monsoon brings South Asia 70-80 per cent of its annual rainfall between June and September every year.
It is vital for the livelihoods of millions of farmers and food security in a region of around two billion people, but it also brings landslides and floods, Channels Television reports.
A national disaster management official told AFP, adding that 87 people were injured during this period said, “Fifty deaths have been reported in different rain-related incidents all over Pakistan since the start of the monsoon on June 25.”
Also, according to the official data, the majority of the deaths were in eastern Punjab province, and were mainly due to electrocution and building collapses.
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The emergency service Rescue 1122’s spokesman Bilal Ahmed Faizi, said in northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, the bodies of eight children were recovered from a landslide in the Shangla district on Thursday.
Faizi added that rescuers were still searching for other children trapped in the debris.
Also, officials in Lahore, Pakistan’s second-largest city, said it had received record-breaking rainfall on Wednesday, turning roads into rivers and leaving almost 35 percent without electricity and water this week.
Meanwhile, the Meteorological Department has predicted more heavy rainfall nationwide in the days ahead and warned of potential flooding in the catchment areas of Punjab’s major rivers.
The province’s disaster management authority on Friday said it is working to relocate people living along the waterways.
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Scientists have said climate change is making seasonal rains heavier and more unpredictable.
Last summer, unprecedented monsoon rains put a third of Pakistan under water, damaging about two million homes and killing more than 1,700 people.
Early last month also, storms killed at least 27 people, including eight children, in the country’s northwest.
According to officials, Pakistan, which has the world’s fifth largest population, is responsible for less than one percent of global greenhouse gas.