More than 110 dead as severe weather hits Pakistan, Afghanistan

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ISLAMABAD, Jan 14, 2020 (BSS/AFP) – Avalanches, flooding and harsh winter
weather has killed more than 110 people across Pakistan and Afghanistan in
recent days, officials said Tuesday, as authorities struggled to reach people
stranded by heavy snowfall.

At least 75 people died and 64 were injured across Pakistan, with several
still missing, while a further 39 people were killed in Afghanistan,
according to officials in both countries.

Forecasts suggest more harsh weather is on the way.

Pakistani Kashmir was the worst-hit area, with 55 people killed and 10
others missing, the National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA) said in a
statement.

In the picturesque but conflict-riven Neelum Valley in Kashmir, heavy
snowfall triggered several avalanches, including one that killed at least 19
people.

“An avalanche hit their village, 10 people are still missing,” the NDMA
said.

Frequent avalanches and landslides occur in Kashmir during the winter,
often blocking roads and leaving communities isolated.

Authorities have shuttered schools, while several highways and roads were
closed across the country’s northern mountainous areas, according to
officials.

To the southeast in Balochistan province, at least 20 people had been
killed in separate weather-related incidents.

“Most of those who died were women and children,” said Mohammad Younus, an
official with the provincial disaster management authority, adding that
hundreds remained stranded.

Across the border in Afghanistan, more than 300 houses were either
destroyed or partially damaged throughout the country, said Ahmad Tamim Azimi
a spokesman for the Natural Disaster Management Authority.

“A cold snap, heavy snowfall and rains that started two weeks ago have
caused damage,” he said, adding that most casualties were caused after roofs
collapsed under thick snow.

Hardest hit were southern Kandahar, Helmand, Zabul and western Herat
provinces.

In Herat, seven people — all members of the same family and including
children — died when their roof caved in, Azimi added.

Harsh winters often take a heavy toll in mountainous Afghanistan, and the
country remains poor despite billions of dollars in aid from the
international community.