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Pakistan floods moving south

Floodwaters ravage hundreds of villages in Pakistan's Punjab province, destroying homes, soaking crops and threatening more lives.

Floodwaters ravaged hundreds of villages in Pakistan's Punjab province Wednesday, destroying homes, soaking crops and threatening more lives.

Aid workers warned thatswollen rivers would soon surge into the country's south, prompting more evacuations.

This year's monsoon season hasbrought the worst flooding in Pakistan in living memory and already killed more than 1,500 people.

So far, the majority of thedevastation has been in the country's volatile northwest region.

But authorities worry that the worst is yet to come as flood waters move south into the more populous and affluent Punjab regionand more rain is expected.

The United Nations scrambled to provide food and other assistance to 3.2 million affected people in a nation already struggling with a poor economy.

After causing huge destruction in Pakistan's volatile northwest, floodwaters deluged villages and some urban centres in Punjab, home to 60 per cent of the country's people. The army used boats and helicopters to move stranded villagers in the area to higher ground.

Water levels were so high in large tracts of Kot Addu and the nearby area of Layyah in the south of the province that only treetops and uppermost floors of some buildings were visible.

Military spokesman Maj. Gen. Nadir Zeb told reporters Wednesday that at least 30,000 people have been rescued from flood zones in Kot Addu and nearby areas in the last72 hours. He warned that more flooding was expected asmore rain isforecast in the next few days and evacuations were likely.

Pakistani air force crew members unload relief goods donated by China from a plane at an airbase in Rawalpindi, Pakistan, on Wednesday. ((Anjum Naveed/Associated Press))

"People must co-operate with us, and they must leave those areas where floods are going to hit," he said.

Monsoon season in Pakistan usually lasts about three months, through mid-September.

In a typical year, the country gets an average 137 mm of rainfall during the monsoon season. This year, it already has received 160 mm, said Muhammad Hanif, head of the National Weather Forecasting Centre in Islamabad.

The rains are falling about 25 to 30 per cent above normal rates, Hanif said. The northwest, which has been hit the hardest, experienced "once-in-a-century" rains, and can expect more wet weather in coming days, though at normal levels that should allow some recovery. The vast majority of deaths have been reported in that region.

Punjab expecting heavy rains

Punjab in the country's east and Sindh province in the south, however, should expect significant rainfall, he said.

At least 47 people had been killed in Punjab since flooding began in late July, Pakistan's National Disaster Management Authority said.

Nearly 1,000 villages have been affected and some 15,000 houses destroyed in the province, the United Nations said.

People wait to cross a flooded road in Bannu, northwestern Pakistan, on Tuesday. ((Ijaz Mohammad/Associated Press))

The rush of muddy water over riverbanks in Punjab threatened to destroy vast stretches of crops that make the province Pakistan's breadbasket. Numerous crops have also been lost in the northwest.

The loss of farm produce is one reason the UN has warned of serious food shortages, and its World Food Program has estimated that 1.8 million people will need to be fed over the next month.

The program has also warned that close to 80 per cent of the country's food stocks have already been washed away.

"We are prioritizing the worst-affected areas," WFP executive director Josette Sheeran said. "Operations are being mounted on both sides of the border in Pakistan and in Afghanistan in these heartbreaking days of loss and suffering."

Rescue workers have struggled to deliver aid because of washed-out bridges and roads and downed communication lines.

Several foreign countries have stepped in to help. The United States sent six large military helicopters from Afghanistan to help with the relief effort.

The four CH-47 Chinook helicopters and two UH-60 Blackhawk utility helicopters arrived at Ghazi Airbase in Pakistan on Wednesday, a U.S. Embassy statement said.

But many flood victims have complained that aid is not reaching them fast enough or at all. That anger could spread as floodwaters threaten Sindh province. Authorities expect several districts will be hit by rising waters in Sindh, which is on track to experience its worst flooding in 34 years, the UN said.