Pakistan floods threaten three towns as levee fails

August 26, 2010 12:14 pm | Updated November 28, 2021 09:27 pm IST - KARACHI

Pakistani flood victims sit in line as they wait for relief goods at an army relief camp for displaced people at Sultan Colony in Muzaffargarh district, Punjab province, on Wednesday. Photo: AP.

Pakistani flood victims sit in line as they wait for relief goods at an army relief camp for displaced people at Sultan Colony in Muzaffargarh district, Punjab province, on Wednesday. Photo: AP.

Pakistani officials urged anyone left in three southern towns on Thursday to evacuate immediately as floodwaters broke through a levee, endangering areas previously untouched by the country?s almost month-long disaster.

The swollen Indus River broke through the Sur Jani embankment in southern Sindh province late Wednesday, threatening the towns of Sujawal, Daro and Mir Pur Batoro, said Mansoor Sheikh, a top government official in Thatta district.

Most of the 400,000 people who live in the area are thought to have evacuated already, but those remaining were warned to flee, he said.

The floods began almost a month ago with the onset of the monsoon and have ravaged a massive swath of Pakistan, from the mountainous north through to its agricultural heartland. More than eight-million people are in need of emergency assistance, and the U.S. and other nations have pledged hundreds of millions of dollars in aid.

The death toll in the floods stands around 1,500 people, but the disaster ranks as one of Pakistan?s worst ever because of the scale and massive economic damage, especially to the country?s vital agricultural sector. The U.N. said earlier this week that some 800,000 people are still cut off by the floods and accessible only by air.

As floodwaters receded in the north, they continued to wreak havoc in the south as bloated rivers coursed through.

Pakistan?s senior meteorologist, Arif Mahmood, said on Thursday that high tides were preventing the Indus River from fully shedding excess water into the Arabian Sea.

?We hope these tides would fully subside after 48 hours,? he said.

The Pakistan government says about $800 million in emergency aid from the international community has been committed or pledged so far. But there are concerns about how the money will be spent by the government, which has a reputation for inefficiency and corruption.

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