Kashmiri men transport a stranded girl on a makeshift raft through the floodwaters in Srinagar on September 10, 2014.
Multan:
Pakistani troops on Thursday rushed to protect two major cities from raging floodwaters, using explosives to divert swollen rivers in a crisis which has hit more than a million people and inundated swathes of farmland.
The floods and landslides from days of heavy monsoon rains have now claimed more than 450 lives in Pakistan and India, with hospitals struggling to cope with the disaster.
Between 300,000 and 400,000 people remain stranded in Kashmir, where phone lines have been down for days and food and water supplies are running low, although the floods have begun to recede.
The floodwaters are moving downstream through Pakistan's Punjab province, a key agricultural area and the country's most prosperous area.
The army on Thursday planted explosives to blow three strategic dykes to divert waters away from the southern Punjab cities of Muzaffargarh and Multan, a major agricultural centre and the main hub for Pakistan's important cotton industry.
Similar drastic measures were taken on Wednesday to protect the city of Jhang, further upstream, where 10,000 people were evacuated overnight, according to senior rescue official Rizwan Naseer.
Hafiz Shaukat Ali, a senior administration official in Multan, said all schools in the area would be closed for the next two days.
The military, which often plays an important role in disaster relief efforts, said troops had rescued 22,000 people stranded by floodwaters around Punjab and Pakistan-administered Kashmir.
The country's National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA) said 257 people had been killed and more than 1.1 million affected -- a figure that includes both those stranded at home and those who fled after the floods hit.
Anger in India
In India, Prime Minister Narendra Modi held an emergency meeting on the disaster late on Wednesday, after reports of victims attacking emergency workers as anger over the slow pace of the rescue effort boiled over.
Mr Modi said getting food and water supplies to people in the worst affected areas in and around the state capital Srinagar was the priority.
He ordered a "massive effort to ensure basic hygiene and sanitation in the water-logged areas of Srinagar", a government statement said, amid fears of an outbreak of disease.
He ordered the home ministry to send officials to the flood-hit Himalayan state, whose government has come under fire from locals and the army over what they say is a failure to coordinate the rescue effort.
Shantmanu, divisional commissioner of the Jammu region, who uses only one name, said it was difficult to determine how many people had been killed in the worst flooding the state has seen in more than a century.
Hospitals in Srinagar have been overwhelmed by the disaster, which has left many without power or clean water.
One doctor at the Ahmed hospital in Srinagar described the desperate conditions in an impassioned plea on the 24-hour news channel NDTV on Thursday.
"There is no electricity. The hospital is entirely working on two gensets (portable generators), on alternate basis. Nothing is coming from anywhere... we had to hijack water, there is no water here," said the doctor, whose name was not given.
"We cut bedsheets in two and sterilised them for use in surgery."
'No repeat of 2010'
Pakistan has suffered deadly floods around the same time every year since 2010, when the country was hit by the worst inundations in its history.
The waters that year swamped 160,000 square kilometres (62,000 square miles) of land -- an area bigger than England -- and cost the country nearly $10 billion, the equivalent of 6.5 per cent of GDP. Around 1,800 people were killed and 20 million affected.
But an analysis this week by Topline Securities, a Karachi-based investment company, said this year's floods do not appear to be on the same scale.
"Seeing the preliminary numbers... reported by NDMA, magnitude of the flood looks like 2012 and 2013, but much lower than 2010," the report said.
The floods of 2012 killed nearly 600 people and affected 4.6 million, while those in 2013 killed around 300 and affected some 1.5 million.
The floods and landslides from days of heavy monsoon rains have now claimed more than 450 lives in Pakistan and India, with hospitals struggling to cope with the disaster.
Between 300,000 and 400,000 people remain stranded in Kashmir, where phone lines have been down for days and food and water supplies are running low, although the floods have begun to recede.
The floodwaters are moving downstream through Pakistan's Punjab province, a key agricultural area and the country's most prosperous area.
The army on Thursday planted explosives to blow three strategic dykes to divert waters away from the southern Punjab cities of Muzaffargarh and Multan, a major agricultural centre and the main hub for Pakistan's important cotton industry.
Similar drastic measures were taken on Wednesday to protect the city of Jhang, further upstream, where 10,000 people were evacuated overnight, according to senior rescue official Rizwan Naseer.
Hafiz Shaukat Ali, a senior administration official in Multan, said all schools in the area would be closed for the next two days.
The military, which often plays an important role in disaster relief efforts, said troops had rescued 22,000 people stranded by floodwaters around Punjab and Pakistan-administered Kashmir.
The country's National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA) said 257 people had been killed and more than 1.1 million affected -- a figure that includes both those stranded at home and those who fled after the floods hit.
Anger in India
In India, Prime Minister Narendra Modi held an emergency meeting on the disaster late on Wednesday, after reports of victims attacking emergency workers as anger over the slow pace of the rescue effort boiled over.
Mr Modi said getting food and water supplies to people in the worst affected areas in and around the state capital Srinagar was the priority.
He ordered a "massive effort to ensure basic hygiene and sanitation in the water-logged areas of Srinagar", a government statement said, amid fears of an outbreak of disease.
He ordered the home ministry to send officials to the flood-hit Himalayan state, whose government has come under fire from locals and the army over what they say is a failure to coordinate the rescue effort.
Shantmanu, divisional commissioner of the Jammu region, who uses only one name, said it was difficult to determine how many people had been killed in the worst flooding the state has seen in more than a century.
Hospitals in Srinagar have been overwhelmed by the disaster, which has left many without power or clean water.
One doctor at the Ahmed hospital in Srinagar described the desperate conditions in an impassioned plea on the 24-hour news channel NDTV on Thursday.
"There is no electricity. The hospital is entirely working on two gensets (portable generators), on alternate basis. Nothing is coming from anywhere... we had to hijack water, there is no water here," said the doctor, whose name was not given.
"We cut bedsheets in two and sterilised them for use in surgery."
'No repeat of 2010'
Pakistan has suffered deadly floods around the same time every year since 2010, when the country was hit by the worst inundations in its history.
The waters that year swamped 160,000 square kilometres (62,000 square miles) of land -- an area bigger than England -- and cost the country nearly $10 billion, the equivalent of 6.5 per cent of GDP. Around 1,800 people were killed and 20 million affected.
But an analysis this week by Topline Securities, a Karachi-based investment company, said this year's floods do not appear to be on the same scale.
"Seeing the preliminary numbers... reported by NDMA, magnitude of the flood looks like 2012 and 2013, but much lower than 2010," the report said.
The floods of 2012 killed nearly 600 people and affected 4.6 million, while those in 2013 killed around 300 and affected some 1.5 million.
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