Pakistani villagers carry their belongings through flood water following heavy monsoon rain in Badin district, east of Karachi |
Islamabad, Pakistan (CNN) -- Heavy rains and
flooding in Pakistan's southeastern Sindh province has killed some 226 people
over the past month, the National Disaster Management Authority said Tuesday.
The dead include 34
children and 59 women, said an agency summary. In all, 5.3 million people have
been affected by the flooding, and 1.19 million homes have been damaged, the
authority said. The flooding has inundated more than 4.5 million acres and damaged
an estimated 80% of crops.
And the heavy rains
are not over. "Meteorological conditions indicate that a strong weather
system is developing over central parts of India that would cause widespread
heavy rains in Pakistan during the coming week," said a weather advisory
posted on the disaster agency's web site. "Heavy to very heavy rainfall
may generate severe flooding in lower Sindh," as well as flash flooding in
Punjab, Khyber Pakhtunkwa and Balochistan provinces, the advisory said.
The United Nations
was making arrangements to provide food supplies to half a million people for
the next month in Sindh, and it was also set to supply 20,000 tents this week,
the state-run Associated Press of Pakistan reported Monday. A U.N. team was visiting
Pakistan in response to a phone conversation between Pakistani President Asif
Ali Zardari and U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, the news agency reported.
Aid is also flowing
in from other countries. On Monday, the Chinese ambassador to Pakistan
presented a $50,000 check to the National Disaster Management Authority, and
has also promised $4.7 million in aid to flooded areas, as well as providing
tents, the authority said on its web site.
Also, the interior
minister of Iran, Mostafa Mohammad Najar, said Sunday Iran will donate $100
million in aid to Sindh, the Associated Press of Pakistan said. Najar said he
will take a planeload of relief goods to Pakistan within a week.
And Pakistan's
Finance Division has established a Prime Minister's Relief Fund for flood
victims in Sindh and elsewhere, according to the Associated Press of Pakistan.
Donations can be made by domestic and international donors, according to the
report.
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