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Rains, floods kill 228 in Pakistan, 119 in India

June 25, 2007 00:00:00


Wreckage of advertising boards, which collapsed due to Saturday's heavy rains and thunderstorms, are lying on a road in Karachi, Pakistan Sunday. The casualty figures from Saturday's storms now stand at 228. —AP Photo
Collapsed houses and severed electrical cables killed at least 228 people after heavy rains and thunderstorms lashed Pakistan's southern port city of Karachi, an official said Sunday, report agencies.
The casualty figures from Saturday's storms rose after 185 more bodies were counted in the city morgue, said Sardar Ahmed, minister of health for Sindh province, of which Karachi is the capital.The initial number of dead had been reported as 43.
Meanwhile in India, death toll from rains and floods climbs to 119 Sunday. Heavy rains and floods southern and western regions of the country have claimed 119 lives, causing widespread damage and disrupting road and rail traffic, media reports said Sunday. At least 68 more rain-related deaths were reported in the southern states of Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka, Kerala and western Maharashtra state since Saturday, raising the death toll due to the inclement weather to 119 over the past three days.
In Karachi, an official at the Edhi Foundation, which runs the morgue, said many of the victims came from Gadab Town, a cluster of villages with mud houses and other flimsy structures on Karachi's eastern outskirts.
Relatives have identified and claimed all 228 bodies, said Anwar Kazmi, a senior Edhi Foundation official. Among the 185 dead were eight children and 15 women while the rest were men, he said.
Most of the deaths were caused by collapsing homes but snapped power lines electrocuted many people in separate incidents, Ahmed said. At least 20 people were reported killed in electrocution incidents on Saturday.
"Forty-three bodies were counted in city hospitals last night and now 185 bodies have been identified in the Edhi Foundation morgue," he said.
A 22-year-old woman, her son, 2, and daughter, 3, were among the dead in Gadab Town, Karachi Mayor Mustafa Kamal said earlier.
Some 200 people were injured in the storm, he said.
Electricity was still disrupted in some neighborhoods Sunday. Residents, angry at having to spend a night without power to run fans or air conditioners in the sweltering summer heat, staged street protests, Kamal said.
Work on restoring the electricity supply had started and municipal workers were clearing storm-toppled trees, billboards and other debris from streets in the city on the Arabian Sea coast, he said.

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