NEW DELHI — Intense rains have lashed parts of Pakistan and India, triggering flash floods in Indian-controlled Kashmir’s Jammu area that left at least 32 people dead and many more missing following a landslide on a Hindu pilgrimage route, the Press Trust of India reported on Wednesday.
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The time frame of the flooding deaths was not immediately clear.
This came as authorities in Pakistan’s eastern Punjab province called for army assistance in rescue and relief efforts after torrential rains caused major rivers to swell, inundating villages and displacing more than 150,000 people, officials said.
Rescuers evacuated more than 20,000 people overnight from the outskirts of Lahore, Pakistan’s second-largest city, which also faced the risk of flood.
Those evacuated from areas near Lahore were living along the bed of the Ravi river, said Irfan Ali Kathia, director-general of the Punjab Disaster Management Authority.
Mass evacuations began earlier this week in six districts of Punjab after heavier-than-normal monsoon rains and the release of water from overflowing dams in neighboring India triggered flash floods in low-lying border regions, he added.
Forecasters predicted rain will continue across the region this week. Heavy downpours and flash floods in the Himalayan region have killed nearly 100 people so far in August.
Floods kill over 30 in Indian-controlled Kashmir, displace 150,000 in east Pakistan
Pakistan’s Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif on Wednesday praised authorities for the timely evacuations to avoid losses, and said relief supplies and tents are being provided to flood-affected people, according to a government statement.
Kathia warned floodwaters in the Ravi, Chenab and Sutlej rivers were rising dangerously and many villages were inundated in the Kasur, Okara, Bahawalnagar, Bahawalpur, Vehari and Sialkot districts.
Rescuers have used boats to evacuate people to safer places this week, he said.
India alerted Pakistan about possible cross-border flooding through diplomatic channels, rather than the Indus Waters Commission, which is the permanent mechanism under the 1960 World Bank-brokered Indus Waters Treaty.

Floods kill over 30 in Indian-controlled Kashmir, displace 150,000 in east Pakistan
New Delhi suspended the commission’s work after the April killing of 26 tourists in Indian-controlled Kashmir, though Islamabad insists that India cannot unilaterally scrap the treaty.
The latest flood warning comes as rescuers with sniffer dogs search for more than 150 people who have been reported missing this month after cloudburst flooding killed over 300 residents in three villages in the northwestern Buner district.
Floods have killed more than 800 people in Pakistan since late June.
Scientists say climate change is fueling heavier monsoon rains in South Asia, raising fears of a repeat of a 2022 weather disaster that struck a third of Pakistan and killed 1,739 people.
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