Pakistan on ‘war footing’
To save Thatta city
PAKISTAN : Pakistani troops and workers were on a “war footing”
Sunday as they battled to save the southern city of Thatta after most of
the population of 300,000 fled advancing flood waters.
Torrential monsoon rains have triggered massive floods that have
moved steadily from north to south over the past month, engulfing a
fifth of the volatile country and affecting 17 million of its 167
million people.
Southern Sindh is the worst-affected province, with 19 of its 23
districts ravaged as flood waters swell the raging Indus river to 40
times its usual volume. One million people have been displaced over the
past few days and hundreds of thousands have already fled Thatta alone
ahead of the approaching torrents as soldiers work frantically to repair
breached levees on the river.
“The water is still two kilometres (about a mile) away from Thatta
where the armed forces and the local administrative workers are working
on war footing to save the city,” senior city official Hadi Bakhsh
Kalhoro told AFP.
“The army brought a maximum of resources to try to fill up the
breach. Almost all the people have left Thatta to safer places, all
shops and schools are closed.”
Water levels were still rising in the district, but Kalhoro said: “We
are hopeful that we can save at least Thatta city in two days.”
An AFP reporter said the road linking Thatta with the town of Sujawal
had been flooded and closed to all vehicular traffic, while Kalhoro said
an electricity grid station near Sujawal had been flooded.
The military said its engineers had repaired an important embankment
in the south and were trying to protect the highway linking Thatta with
the main southern city of Karachi.
Thatta, Monday, AFP |