UPDATED ON:
FRIDAY, JUNE 29, 2007
14:30 MECCA TIME, 11:30 GMT
 
NEWS CENTRAL/S. ASIA
Protests in Pakistan over relief
Six Pakistanis have been wounded during protests including a police chief [AFP]
Pakistani police fired teargas and live bullets to break up a protest by angry cyclone survivors after the onset of South Asia's rainy season over the past week claimed more than 500 lives.

Six people were wounded as thousands of hungry villagers complained about the lack of relief aid, an AFP photographer said on Friday.
He said that a police chief was among the wounded during the riots.

Severe weather conditions have affected India and Afghanistan over recent days but Pakistan has been hardest-hit.

A cyclone struck Baluchistan, Pakistan's southwest province on Tuesday, three days after a storm destroyed Karachi, the nation's biggest city, killing around 230 people.

 

Homeless

Khuda Bakhsh Baluch, the relief commissioner for Baluchistan province, said 1.1 million people were now known to have been affected by the cyclone.

 

He said around 250,000 of them have been made homeless.

 

Floods submerged four districts and inundated three others causing severe damage to roads, bridges, railway lines and even severed a natural gas pipeline.

 
The death toll from the cyclone and flooding in Pakistan has risen to about 60.
 
Witnesses in the town of Turbat, near the Iranian border, said police fired teargas to break up a protesters who raided a government agency and the office of a pro-government party.
 
Qambar Baloch, one witness, said: "The people are complaining that they're not getting relief assistance."
 
Cut off
 
Meanwhile Baluchistan's relief commissioner said the main problem he faced was getting help to the tens of thousands of people cut off by floods.
 

Police officers fired teargas and bullets
at angry
protesters [AFP]

"It rained throughout the province last night, but this is the normal monsoon. The worry now is not rain. The main problem is communication," Baluch said.
 
A fleet of aircraft, including more than a dozen military helicopters and several C-130 cargo aircraft, were called in but the rain hindered their flight.
 
"We're considering flying C-130s to areas which have airports. We'll dump relief goods and from there they'll be distributed, but many areas don't have airports," Baluch said.
 
Across the border in Afghanistan, heavy rain caused widespread flooding that has killed more than 40 people, destroyed roads and damaged homes and irrigation systems.
 
In India, tens of thousands of people on the east coast were clearing out of the path of a storm approaching from the Bay of Bengal, officials said.
 
"The storm is very close to Puri town on the Orissa coast and is likely to cross over the mainland any time," said L.V. Prasad Rao, director of a cyclone warning centre.
Source: Agencies
Related:
Second deadly storm hits Pakistan  
(26 Jun 2007)
Second storm batters Pakistan  
(26 Jun 2007)
Scores killed in Indian floods  
(23 Jun 2007)
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