ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s Punjab said it has evacuated a total of 1,147,000 people from areas at high risk from floods near the Sutlej, Chenab and Ravi rivers, the Provincial Disaster Management Authority (PDMA) said on Thursday, as floods devastate the country’s most populous eastern province.
Punjab has been reeling from floods this week due to heavy rains and excess water released by neighboring India. Overwhelmed by the surging water levels in Punjab’s three major rivers, the provincial government called in the army this week to support rescue and relief operations.
According to the latest press release by the PDMA Punjab, 1,652 villages near the three major rivers have been submerged. Areas near the Chenab river were worst affected by the floods, with 991 villages submerged, where authorities set up 126 relief camps and 112 medical camps.
“So far, a total of 1,147,000 people have been evacuated and moved to safer locations,” the PDMA said in its latest press release on the impact of floods in districts affected by rivers Chenab, Ravi and Sutlej.
Giving a breakdown of the numbers, the PDMA said 127,000 people had been evacuated near the Sutlej river while 11,000 were evacuated from the Ravi river, and 1,009,000 were evacuated from areas near the Chenab river.
In total, 73,000 animals were shifted to safer locations from near Chenab, 4,500 near Ravi and 70,000 near Sutlej. The PDMA said it had established 265 medical camps, 255 relief camps and 214 veterinary camps in all affected districts.
Since June 26, torrential monsoon rains linked to climate change have killed nearly 820 people and injured more than 1,100 across Pakistan, according to the National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA).
NDMA Chairman Lt. Gen. Inam Haider Malik, briefing reporters alongside Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif in Narowal district on Thursday, said the current floods represented an unprecedented monsoon pattern:
“This is the first time that the system coming from the Bay of Bengal, the system developing from the West, and the system developing from the Arabian Sea have had a collective effect,” he said.
Authorities fear the crisis will worsen as floodwaters move south into Sindh province, whose chief minister has assigned ministers to monitor flood threats in Guddu, Sukkur and Kotri, while lawmakers from riverine constituencies have been directed to stay in their districts.