New floods expected: millions of people flee floods in Pakistan

More than 1,200 people die in Pakistan after devastating rains.

New floods expected: millions of people flee floods in Pakistan

More than 1,200 people die in Pakistan after devastating rains. Thousands are left without food and shelter. Emergency services are now trying to evacuate millions of residents because of the impending extreme rain. "It's a race against time," warns the government.

In southern Pakistan, rescue workers are working flat out to bring millions of people to safety from new predicted floodwaters from the north. Military helicopters and boats are also deployed in Sindh province, which has been hit hardest by devastating floods since mid-June, provincial government spokesman Murtaza Wahab said. "It's a race against time."

Heavy rains over the past week have caused the Indus, which rises in the Himalayas and flows into the Arabian Sea in southern Pakistan, to burst its banks again. Nearly 20,000 cubic meters of water per second was now flowing downstream and would soon reach major cities in Sindh, the Disaster Management Agency warned.

"We are trying to reach the people who are still in the middle of the water without food or shelter," said Rustam Jamali, a volunteer from the city of Dadu. The floods, caused by the heaviest rainfall in more than three decades, have already claimed the lives of more than 1,200 people since mid-June.

According to the government, more than 33 million people in the country with around 220 million inhabitants are affected by the floods. In the north of the South Asian country, where several places are still flooded a week after the last rains ended, thousands held out without food and shelter. "It's like we are refugees in our own villages. We can't walk a few hundred meters home," said a local resident from Swat Township.

The UN children's fund UNICEF warned on Wednesday that the "dangerous humanitarian situation could deteriorate further in the coming days and weeks" as heavy rains were expected in regions that were already flooded. In the affected areas, millions of children and hundreds of thousands of pregnant women are at risk and urgently need humanitarian aid.