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Pakistan races to protect two towns from surging floods

by Staff Writers
Karachi (AFP) Sept 6, 2010
Pakistani authorities were Monday racing to protect two southern towns and their 360,000 residents from surging floods, as the nation struggles to cope with its worst natural disaster in living memory.

A month and a half after monsoons caused devastating floods throughout the country, submerging an area the size of England, eight million people remain dependent on handouts for their survival, which many say are too slow coming.

Advancing floodwaters continue to threaten towns in Sindh province, where 19 of its 23 districts have been deluged, displacing more than 2.8 million people, according to provincial authorities.

"The situation is a bit serious in Johi town and Dadu. We are taking all-out measures to save them from ravaging floodwaters," provincial irrigation minister Jam Saifullah Dharejo told AFP.

"The water is 20 kilometres away from Dadu city but we cannot rule out a serious threat to this city," one of the largest in the north of Sindh, Dharejo said.

"We are making all our efforts to save Dadu and Johi," he added.

Dadu and Johi are about 320 kilometres (200 miles) north of the main southern port city of Karachi and officials fear the waters will breach protective embankments unless they are quickly strengthened.

"Things are getting serious, we have employed all the possible resources on the embankments to save the remaining towns and villages of Dadu district," Dharejo said.

District coordination officer Iqbal Memon said Johi was most in danger of the advancing floods.

"The floodwaters are fast heading towards Johi town after inundating most parts of Khairpur Nathan Shah and Mehar towns and several surrounding villages in Dadu district," he said.

"For two days, we are employing all available means to strengthen the protective embankments around Dadu and Johi but the threat still remains," he said.

About 80 percent of the Johi's population of 60,000 had already fled to safer areas. Memon, however, asked the 300,000 residents of Dadu not to panic.

"The people of Dadu city should remain vigilant for any serious situation that could come across," he said.

Meanwhile, troops had evacuated 2,644 people from flood-hit areas of Jati, Mehar, Johi, Shahdad Kot and Sujawal, the military said in a statement.

"Army has established 25 relief camps in Sindh," it said, adding that 33,047 people were given cooked food during the previous 24 hours.

The UN has warned that the slow pace of aid pledges could impede relief operations and says Pakistan faces a triple threat to food supplies -- with seeds, crops and incomes hit.

The floods have ruined 3.6 million hectares (8.9 million acres) of rich farmland, and the UN's Food and Agriculture Organisation said farmers urgently needed seeds to plant for next year's crops.

Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani has warned that the country faces inflation of up to 20 percent and slower growth because of the disaster.

The floods have killed 1,760 people but disaster officials have said the number of deaths is likely to rise "significantly" when the missing are accounted for.

China will provide an additional assistance of 30 million dollars in kind to Pakistan to supplement flood-relief efforts, China's ambassador to Pakistan Liu Jian told Gilani in Islamabad on Monday, an official statement said.

With the additional contribution, the total Chinese assistance to Pakistan has now risen to 50 million dollars.



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SHAKE AND BLOW
53,000 on flood alert in Australia: officials
Wangaratta, Australia (AFP) Sept 6, 2010
Tens of thousands of Australians were poised to flee their homes in the country's southeast Monday as worsening floods inundated at least 300 houses, officials said. Wild storms lashed Victoria state over the weekend, triggering landslides, knocking out power supplies and forcing hundreds of people out of their houses, with many rivers yet to reach their peak. At least 53,000 people had ... read more







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