Dozens die as floods engulf northern Afghan villages
BBC News online -- 25 April 2014
At
least 58 people have been killed and hundreds of villagers left stranded
in devastating flash floods in northern Afghanistan, officials say.
People have been left trapped on the roofs of their homes and rescue helicopters have been deployed.
There are reports of flooding in other provinces in the north and west.
"Thousands of homes have been destroyed and thousands are suffering", Jowzjan's governor Boymurod Qoyinli told the BBC. He said that more than 80 people are missing and that 3,000 homes have been destroyed.
BBC Uzbek's Navid Nazari, reporting from the flood-hit areas, was told by one woman that she was taken by surprise by the flash flood just after reading evening prayers. She lost two of her children.
Heavy rain and storms on Thursday night created a perilous situation for villagers whose homes are largely built out of mud.
Three remote districts in the province were particularly badly affected, the governor told the BBC.
Our correspondent travelled on board one of the rescue helicopters deployed by the security forces.
He described a landscape where dozens of homes had been destroyed, many more submerged and villagers crouched on the roofs of their homes.
Labels: Afghanistan, Natural Disasters
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