Never seen so much water

Never seen so much water

Published: Less than 20 min ago

full screen A woman has put her belongings in a metal box, hoping to save them from the water in flooded Jaffarabad, Baluchistan. Photo: Zahid Hussain/AP/TT

Flood-ravaged Pakistan has declared a state of emergency. But the monsoon rains continue to fall relentlessly.

The rescue agency NDMA states that over 900 lives have so far been claimed in connection with this year’s monsoon rains, which began in June. In the last 24 hours alone, NDMA counts 34 dead.

The rains are necessary for the harvest and to replenish the water reserves in the country. But they also often trigger chaotic conditions even in normal years. And this year the situation is worse than usual. The only comparable year is 2010, when over 2,000 people died and a fifth of Pakistan was submerged.

– I have never before seen the rains trigger such enormous floods, says Rahim Bakhsh Brohi, a more than 80-year-old farmer in Sukkur in the province of Sindh.

Like many others of the millions affected by the flood, he is now forced to live on the country road. The asphalted and often raised roads are some of the few dry places that exist in the waterlogged landscape.

Sherry Rehman, the minister responsible for climate change, declared a state of emergency on Wednesday and appealed for international help.

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