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Families still looking for missing loved ones after Afghanistan floods killed scores


People stand in muddy water after heavy flooding in Baghlan province, in northern Afghanistan, May 12, 2024. Victims of the devastating floods are burying the dead and looking for the loved ones still missing.
People stand in muddy water after heavy flooding in Baghlan province, in northern Afghanistan, May 12, 2024. Victims of the devastating floods are burying the dead and looking for the loved ones still missing.

When he heard that devastating floods hit his village in northern Afghanistan last week, farmer Abdul Ghani rushed home from neighboring Kunduz province where he was visiting relatives. When he got home, he found out that his wife and three children had perished in the deluge.

Two of his sons survived but another son, who is 11, is still missing. "I couldn't even find the road to my village," he said, describing how he turned back and went another way to reach his district of Nahrin in Baghlan province.

Across Baghlan, others like Ghani and survivors of the disaster were still searching for their missing loved ones and burying their dead on Monday.

"Roads, villages and lands were all washed away," Ghani said. His wife, his 7-year-old and 9-year-old daughters and a 4-year-old son died.

"My life has turned into a disaster," he said, speaking to The Associated Press over the phone.

An Afghan man collects his belongings from his damaged home after heavy flooding in Baghlan province, in northern Afghanistan, May 12, 2024.
An Afghan man collects his belongings from his damaged home after heavy flooding in Baghlan province, in northern Afghanistan, May 12, 2024.

The U.N. food agency estimates that the unusually heavy seasonal rains in Afghanistan left more than 300 people dead and thousands of houses destroyed, most of them in Baghlan, which bore the brunt of flooding on Friday.

Survivors have been left with no home, no land and no source of livelihood, the World Food Organization said. Most of Baghlan is "inaccessible by trucks," said WFP, adding that it is resorting to every alternative it can think of to get food to the survivors.

In a statement Sunday, U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres expressed condolences to the victims, adding that the world body and aid agencies are working with the Taliban-run government to help.

"The United Nations and its partners in Afghanistan are coordinating with the de facto authorities to swiftly assess needs and provide emergency assistance," the statement said.

The dead include 51 children, according to UNICEF, one of several international aid groups that are sending relief teams, medicine, blankets and other supplies. The World Health Organization said it delivered 7 tons of medicine and emergency kits to the stricken areas.

Meanwhile, the U.N. migration agency has been distributing aid packages that include temporary shelters, essential nonfood items, solar modules, clothing, and tools for repairs to their damaged shelters.

The latest disaster came on the heels of a previous one, when at least 70 people died in April from heavy rains and flash floods in the country. The waters also destroyed about 2,000 homes, three mosques and four schools in western Farah and Herat and southern Zabul and Kandahar provinces.

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