Nowshera flood victims start returning homes

By Bureau report
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Published September 05, 2022

PESHAWAR: The flood victims, who had sought shelter in camps set up by Cantonment Board Nowshera, have started returning to homes after the situation normalised.

Hundreds of people were rescued by the cantonment when the flood hit the area recently.

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“Water from upper parts of the district directly hit the city especially the cantonment area, submerging almost all markets and shops,” said Cantonment Board Nowshera Chief Executive Officer Zofishan Manzoor.

The returning people were given edibles, blankets, medicines and other necessary items at camps set up at different localities of the cantonment, she said.

“Neither a human nor a single animal died in the cantonment that was completely submerged in the flood,” she said. All birds and animals from a nearby zoo were also rescued, she said.

The official said the cantonment administration had set up four camps. She said the district administration had established three camps, sheltering over 2,700 people and hundreds of livestock. She said that the flood victims got meals, clean drinking water as well as clothes.

The official said the cantonment authorities shifted its complete record to a safer place before the flood could damage it.

The official said that the flood affected more than 20,000 people living in the cantonment.

According to the damage assessment, 600 shops and 85 homes owned by the cantonment board were damaged while 2,500 private properties including houses, shops and markets were damaged. The cantonment board also provided medical assistance to the affected people and their livestock.

The flood damaged Bagh-e-Jinnah, a two kilometres long picnic spot. She said that several under-construction sites were damaged, however, the cantonment administration has received no funds and financial assistance from federal and provincial governments so far.

The official said that floodwater of several nullahs that passed through the cantonment toward the Kabul River caused losses and damaged properties and businesses.

She said that the cantonment authorities launched evacuation the moment reports of high flood started coming in and the water level started rising.

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