Pakistanis criticise government response to floods

Residents complain that the Pakistan government didn't provide evacuees a place for shelter

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AP
AP

Peshawar: Residents of Pakistan's northwest have criticised the government's response to devastating flooding that has killed more than 800 people.

Hakimullah Khan, a resident of Charsadda town, said on Sunday that he hadn't received any help in tracking down his missing wife and three children.

Sehar Ali Shah, who returned to a house filled with water in Nowshera city, complained the government didn't provide evacuees shelter where they could stay until flood waters recede.

The government has deployed more than 30,000 army troops to help with the rescue and relief effort. They had evacuated 19,000 trapped people by Saturday night.

However, the United Nations estimated that some 1 million people nationwide were affected by the disaster.

People affected by flash floods live in makeshift camps on theoutskirts of Dera Ismail Khan, a town of flood-hit Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa province, Pakistan, yesterday.
Government official Lutfur Rehman said on Saturday floodwaters were receding in the northwest, but rescuers were facing problems reaching affected people because of damage caused to roads and bridges.

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