Monsoon rains kill nearly 70 in Pakistan

Torrential monsoon rains have killed nearly 70 people in Pakistan, with the death toll expected to rise.

Two days of torrential monsoon rains have killed nearly 70 people in Pakistan, as authorities ordered the evacuation of low-lying areas around a major river.

The deaths have all come in the most populous province Punjab and in Pakistani-administered Kashmir, with most caused by roof collapses and electric shocks.

Pakistan has suffered deadly monsoon floods for the past four years - in 2013, 178 people were killed and around 1.5 million affected by flooding around the country.

Pakistan's National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA) warned there was a high risk of flooding in three towns along the Chenab River in Punjab and asked people to leave low-lying and vulnerable areas.

Troops have been mobilised for flood relief duties in eastern Punjab and "will remain on standby in Lahore", the provincial capital.

Dramatic images from Lahore, Pakistan's second-largest city, on Thursday showed some major streets flooded.

"At least 35 people have died and 108 been injured in Punjab," Rizwan Naseer, the director general of rescue services in Punjab, said on Friday.

A further 18 people died and a 53 were injured in Lahore, he said.

"Most of the deaths occurred due to roof collapses and electric shocks in the last 48 hours."

Naseer warned that the death toll was likely to rise as reports were coming in of floodwaters sweeping through villages in rural areas.

At least 31 people were killed In Pakistani-administered Kashmir with nine injured, Akram Sohail, chairman disaster management agency in Muzzafarabad, the capital of Pakistani-administered Kashmir told AFP.

"Most of them died due to landslides, roof collapse and drowning," Sohail said.

Also in mountainous Kashmir, three soldiers died on Thursday in a mudslide near the de facto border with India.

There were desperate scenes in the city of Rawalpindi, Islamabad's twin city, where rescuers struggled to free a man buried up to his face in mud that had engulfed his family's house.

"My house collapsed in the landslide due to the heavy rain. My whole family was trapped under the debris," the man's father Azeem Khan told AFP, shortly before his son was freed.

"I have nowhere to live."

Pakistan's meteorological office issued a severe weather warning for northeast Punjab and Kashmir, saying more intense rain was expected which could trigger flash flooding.

The NDMA said that the town of Palandri in Kashmir had received more than 30 centimetres of rain in the 30 hours up to 2pm on Thursday.


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