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July 01, 2007 Sunday Jamadi-us-Sani 15, 1428






Glacier brings misery to Chitral



Dawn Report


PESHAWAR, June 30: Hundreds of villagers were stranded in the Sonoghur village on Saturday, a day after a large chunk of glacier broke loose in a remote area of Chitral district because of heavy rains.

Many others were marooned in the Battagram and Mansehra districts after landslides cut off major roads.

Seven bodies were recovered on Saturday from the Khyber Agency, near Peshawar. Five of the dead were identified as Afghans and their bodies were dispatched to Afghanistan.

At least 20 houses and a mosque were buried under the sliding glacier. No loss of life was reported.

Villagers told Dawn that the glacier was still moving towards low-lying areas.

Sonoghur village is 140kms north of Chitral. People in about 300 houses there have been evacuated. Stranded villagers need food and drinking water.

Reports suggested that relief activity in the affected village could not be initiated because of its inaccessibility. Bridges on the only road leading to the remote village were swept away by hill torrents a couple of days ago.

Meanwhile, over 100 NGO officials are stranded in the Allai area of Battagram district and the Kaghan Valley in Mansehra district. Landslides in various areas of both the districts have rendered roads unmotorable.

The district administration of Mansehra has asked people living along the banks of river Kunhar to move to safer places as river discharge has risen to a dangerous level after heavy rains.

Heavy rains damaged some houses and a man died when his house collapsed.

Officials of the provincial flood warning centre said the water level was decreasing in rivers Kabul and Swat. However, both rivers were still in high and medium floods at various points.

Khyber Agency’s administration on Saturday started distribution of relief goods among the flood-hit people in Landi Kotal and Jamrud. But a large number of people complained that they could not get the relief goods. They argued that the relief camp should have been set up at Sultankhel, which was worst-affected by flash floods, instead of establishing it at the tehsil office.

Peshawar-Torkham Road was opened for traffic on Saturday.






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