Water level begins to subside in Parts of Sindh

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Nationwide death toll nears 1,500
KARACHI
The water level in the Main Nara Valley Drain (MNVD), commonly known as Right Bank Outfall Drain-I, at RD-10 upstream Manchhar Lake, started to decrease on Thursday as officials confirmed the intensity of floodwater also subsided to some extent in Dadu district.
However, they would not take any chances and said they would maintain a strict vigil on the drain to stave off any emergency.
Floods from record monsoon rains and glacial melt in the mountainous north have affected 33 million people and killed 1,486 since June 14, washing away homes, roads, railways, livestock and crops, in damage estimated at $30billion.
Both the government and UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres have blamed climate change for the extreme weather that led to the flooding, which submerged nearly a third of the country.
Sindh has been particularly hit hard, with the province’s Manchhar Lake (the largest freshwater lake in the country) witnessing a surge in its water level in recent days as floodwaters from the north and hill torrents from Balochistan flow southwards, leaving behind a trail of deaths and destruction.
Hundreds of thousands of people have been made homeless by flooding in Sindh, with many sleeping by the side of elevated highways to protect themselves from the water.
“We have been buying tents from all the manufacturers available in Pakistan,” Sindh’s chief minister Syed Murad Ali Shah said in a statement on Thursday.
Still, one-third of the homeless in Sindh don’t even have a tent to protect them from the elements, he said.
Over the last few weeks, authorities have built barriers to keep the flood waters out of key structures such as power stations and homes, while farmers who stayed to try and save their cattle have faced a new threat as fodder has begun to run out.
Dadu Assistant Commissioner Shahnawaz Mirani told that at least one foot had decreased at different places of the MNV drain.
He said the water level in various villages in Dadu was also decreasing with each passing day for now.
Separately, Dadu Deputy Commissioner Syed Murtaza Ali Shah said the discharge of water from the MNV drain into the Manchhar Lake was continuing and expressed hopes the the water level would further decrease in the days to come.
The DC said the locals and the civil administration were constantly monitoring the MNV drain so as to deal with any emergency.
According to the official in charge of the irrigation cell for Manchhar Lake, Sher Mohammad Mallah, water was being released from the lake into River Indus through the LS Dam.
“The water level in Manchhar has decreased from 121.9 feet RL to 121.7 feet RL.”
An engineer of the provincial irrigation department, Mahesh Kumar, told the water pressure was also easing on the ring bund of Bhan Syedabad, the Dawn News Quoted.
Mehar Assistant Commissioner Mohsin Shaikh told that the water level at the ring bund of Mehar had decreased by a foot.
He said a similar decrease had also been witnessed in the surroundings of Khairpur Nathan Shah and Johi areas.
Sheikh, however, said the relief and rescue works were still under way in Dadu district.
Sindh Chief Minister Syed Murad Ali Shah had on Wednesday said that there was seven to eight million acre-feet of water from Kashmore and Jacobabad to Jamshoro.
“We have to release it to River Indus through Manchhar Lake,” he told a press conference in Karachi today. He added that the lake also had 1.3m acre-feet of water. Meanwhile, the situation of the water flow at Guddu and Sukkur barrages in the Indus River is normal.
According to a Flood Forecasting Division report, the Inflow of water at the Guddu Barrage is 166,431 cusecs and the discharge is 153,656 cusecs. Similarly, at Kotri Barrage, the inflow of water is 155,948 cusecs and the outflow is 153,810 cusecs. The officials said a moderate flood situation at Kotri Barrage was still persisting.