
Heavy rain that has caused severe flooding and landslides has killed at least 45 people in Afghanistan and Pakistan over the past five days, authorities say.
Afghanistan’s National Disaster Management Authority (ANDMA) said on Monday that 28 people have been killed in the floods and 49 injured with more than 100 homes destroyed.
Most of the deaths in Afghanistan were reported in central and eastern provinces, including Parwan, Maidan Wardak, Daikundi and Logar, according to ANDMA.
The authority added in a statement that weather conditions remained “unstable” in parts of the country and there is a continued risk of more rain and flooding in some areas.
“In total, 1,140 families have been affected,” ANDMA said.
Police spokesperson Sediqullah Seddiqi told the AFP news agency a 14-year-old boy died after being struck by lightning in the northwestern province of Badghis.
He added that in the same province, three people had drowned while trying to gather driftwood to be used for heating.
At the same time in Pakistan’s Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, which shares a border with Afghanistan, 17 people were killed and 56 wounded, the Provincial Disaster Management Authority said.
Extreme weather
Heavy rainfall has continued to sweep across Afghanistan since Thursday, causing floods and landslides in multiple provinces.
The weather prompted the closure of several highways, according to officials in central and eastern Afghanistan. Further rains and storms are forecast for Tuesday.
Afghanistan’s National Disaster Management Authority has warned citizens to refrain from using “rivers and flooded streams, and follow the weather forecast seriously”.
In the central province of Daikundi, the local disaster management department said a five-year-old was killed when a roof collapsed. A woman was also killed in the same circumstances in the eastern province of Nangarhar, police spokesperson Sayed Tayeb Hamad said.
Afghanistan is vulnerable to extreme weather, particularly heavy rainfall and monsoon seasons, which trigger floods and landslides in remote areas with fragile infrastructure.
In January, flash floods and snowfall caused the deaths of at least 17 people and killed livestock.
LATEST POSTS
- 1
From Loner to Force to be reckoned with: Individual Accounts of Change - 2
$30K Disability Scam Implodes After Surf Trip in Mexico - 3
Rescuers again fail to free whale stranded on Germany's Baltic coast - 4
$1,000 bribes, Mormon momfluencer mixers and making content to get plastic surgery: The wildest things I learned reporting my book - 5
Polar bears are rewiring their own genetics to survive a warming climate
Aurora chaser catches a fox basking in the glow of Finland's legendary 'fox fires' (photos)
Nestlé recalls infant formula in 49 countries. See list.
Pick Your Top Method for starting the Morning
Paul Feig loves a plot twist. Why not reboot 'Die Hard' starring a woman?
Flu illness count nears 5 million, with New York City among the hardest hit
Trump administration launches new immigration crackdowns in New Orleans and Minneapolis. Here are all the cities it has targeted so far.
James Webb Space Telescope spies mysterious high-energy radiation in star nursery
Glen Powell will host 'Saturday Night Live' with Olivia Dean as musical guest: What to know ahead of their debut
New dietary guidelines recommend more dairy, meat and fats: What to know













