After Heavy Rains, 300-Plus Dead Amid 'Extensive Devastation'

Flash floods swept through Afghanistan after unusually heavy deluges
By Newser Editors and Wire Services
Posted May 11, 2024 8:30 AM CDT
After Heavy Rains, 300-Plus Dead Amid 'Extensive Devastation'
A damaged house is seen after heavy flooding in the Baghlan province of northern Afghanistan on Saturday.   (AP Photo/Mehrab Ibrahimi)

Flash floods from unusually heavy seasonal rains in Afghanistan have killed more than 300 people and destroyed upward of 1,000 houses, the UN food agency said Saturday. The World Food Program said it was distributing fortified biscuits to the survivors of one of the many floods that hit Afghanistan over the last few weeks, mostly in the northern province of Baghlan, which bore the brunt of the deluges Friday. In neighboring Takhar province, state-owned media outlets reported the floods killed at least 20 people, per the AP.

Zabihullah Mujahid, the chief spokesman for the Taliban government, posted on the social media platform X that "hundreds ... have succumbed to these calamitous floods, while a substantial number have sustained injuries." Mujahid identified the provinces of Badakhshan, Baghlan, Ghor, and Herat as the worst hit. He added that "the extensive devastation" has resulted in "significant financial losses." He said the government had ordered all available resources mobilized to rescue people, transport the injured, and recover the dead.

The Taliban Defense Ministry said in a statement Saturday that the country's air force has already begun evacuating people in Baghlan and had rescued a large number of people stuck in flooded areas and transported 100 injured people to military hospitals in the region. Richard Bennett, UN special rapporteur on the situation of human rights in Afghanistan, said on X that the floods are a stark reminder of Afghanistan's vulnerability to the climate crisis, and that both immediate aid and long-term planning by the Taliban and international actors are needed.

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Videos posted on social media showed dozens of people gathered Saturday behind the hospital in Baghlan looking for their loved ones. An official told them they should go and start digging graves while staff were busy preparing bodies for the burial ceremony. Officials previously said that in April at least 70 people died from heavy rains and flash flooding in the country. About 2,000 homes, three mosques, and four schools were also damaged.

(More Afghanistan stories.)

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