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Rains, floods kill 81 in Pakistan: disaster agency
by Staff Writers
Islamabad (AFP) July 28, 2015


Flooding near Vietnam's Halong Bay kills 14: official
Hanoi (AFP) July 28, 2015 - At least 14 people have been killed in the worst flooding for 40 years in Vietnam's northern Quang Ninh province, home to the UNESCO-listed Halong Bay tourist site, officials said Tuesday.

Three more people were missing and a number of local tourists remained stranded on nearby Co To island, which is cut off from the mainland due to torrential rain, according to a local disaster relief official.

"We have no information on any foreign tourists that may have been stuck in affected areas," the official said, speaking on condition of anonymity.

Of the 14 dead, a woman and two children were discovered drowned in a flooded house, he told AFP, with many residential areas in Halong City still under water after the province was hit by more than 500 millimetres (20 inches) of rain on Sunday alone.

Thousands of soldiers have been mobilised to help local residents evacuate flooded areas as well as districts hit by landslides trigged by the rains, Quang Ninh province's official website said.

The recent torrential downpour has been the heaviest and caused the worst flooding in more than 40 years, it said.

The UNESCO World Heritage Site Halong Bay, around 160 kilometres (100 miles) east of the capital Hanoi, is one of Vietnam's top tourist attractions and is known for its stunning limestone cliffs.

Vietnam is regularly hit by up to a dozen tropical storms and typhoons every year, but so far in 2015 it has not been directly affected by any major storms.

Torrential rains and flooding have killed 81 people in Pakistan over the past two weeks and affected almost 300,000, the disaster management agency said Tuesday, warning of more bad weather to come.

Severe rains which began in mid-July have caused havoc in both the north and south of the country, damaging more than 1,900 houses and injuring dozens of people, a spokesman for the National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA) said.

At least 38 people were killed in worst-hit northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province and 19 in Pakistan-run Kashmir, Ahmed Kamal told AFP. Eleven people also died in central Punjab province, eight in Southwestern Baluchistan and five in Gilgit Baltistan.

"Fairly widespread thunderstorms, rains with heavy falls (in) scattered places and very heavy falls (in) isolated places" are expected in the coming days Kamal said.

So far 172,016 people have been evacuated to safer places, he said, adding that rescue teams from the military, provincial governments and NDMA were carrying out "relief and rescue operations" in the affected areas.

Torrential rains have also destroyed infrastructure, sweeping away dozens of roads and bridges in the Chitral district of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, while floods have inundated 375 villages in southern Punjab, the MDMA said.

The agency has already issued severe weather warnings for southern Sindh, central Punjab and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa provinces and the Kashmir region.

Every year Pakistan is hit by severe weather patterns, which have killed hundreds and wiped out millions of acres of prime farmland in recent years, harming the heavily agrarian economy.


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SHAKE AND BLOW
Predicting Floods
Huntsville AL (SPX) Jul 24, 2015
In the pantheon of natural disasters, floods are among the worst. By any metric-from financial ruin to human toll-floods rank alongside earthquakes, hurricanes, and tsunamis. In fact, the most deadly disaster of the 20th century was the China floods of 1931, which may have resulted in more than a million deaths. Predicting floods is notoriously tricky. They depend on a complex mixture of r ... read more


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