Nevadas y lluvias dejan 61 muertos y 110 heridos en Afganistán – Chicago Tribune

KABUL (AP) — Intense gusts in Nevada left more than 60 people dead and more than 100 people across Afghanistan in three days, the country’s disaster management authority was informed on Saturday, as authorities struggled to open paths and access the aldeas aisladas.
National Disaster Management Authority spokesperson Yousaf Hammad claimed that 61 people had died and 110 were killed, while 458 houses were completely or partly destroyed and animal scientists had died in 15 of Afghanistan’s 34 provinces. The figures, it is said, could change as authorities compile more information from the provinces.
Afghanistan is extremely vulnerable to extreme weather events, with intense floods and floods causing repentant flooding that occurs until the morning among doctors, including the elderly, of people at a time. In 2024, more than 300 people were killed by flooding during the spring.
Decades of conflict, combined with poor infrastructure, a struggling economy, deforestation and the effects of climate change, have amplified the impact of dire stories, particularly in remote areas where many houses are built in the neighborhood and provide protection against repentant or strong diluents. Nevada.
In principle, at this time, the United Nations believes that Afghanistan “will follow one of the world’s major humanitarian crises in 2026.” The UN and its humanitarian agencies have launched an appeal for $1,700 million to help 18 million people in urgent need in the country.
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This story was translated into English by an AP editor with the help of a generative artificial intelligence tool.

