The death toll in Pakistan's worst flood in 80 years exceeds 1,100, with tens of thousands of people trapped or stranded in what Médecins Sans Frontières tells is a "mass case emergency".
Heavy rains from Iran and Afghanistan have combined with Pakistan's ravaging the north western Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa.
Latest reports put the death toll as high as 1,100, as more than 30,000 Pakistani troops are deployed to rescue those stranded.
"Aerial monitoring is being conducted, and it has shown that whole villages have washed away, animals have drowned and grain storages have washed away," said Latifur Rehman, spokesman for the Provincial Disaster Management Authority. "The destruction is massive and devastating."
More than 20,700 people have been safely evacuated from stricken areas but aid agencies say that more than 27,000 remain trapped in the more remote areas, including Kohistan, Nowshera, Dir and the Swat Valley.
Over the week almost 700 people drowned in the Peshawar valley, which includes the districts of Nowshera and Charsada, and 115 others are still missing, Khan said. The army has deployed 43 military helicopters and over 100 boats on rescue missions, said Rehman.
The picturesque Swat Valley, once known as the "Switzerland of Pakistan", has borne the brunt of the floods according to army spokesman Major-General Athar Abbas.
"Virtually no bridge has been left in Swat. All major and minor bridges have gone, destroyed completely," he said. The floods have destroyed more than 14,600 houses and 22 schools in the Swat alone.
Flood and government officials said massive flood waves would enter the southern Sindh province between Tuesday and Thursday this week – threatening property and farmland scattered on the river banks and in low-lying areas.
"A super flood of this magnitude will be the first in 18 to 20 years to hit Sindh, but major cities like Karachi and Hyderabad were unlikely to be affected," Jameel Soomro, a spokesman for the provincial Sindh government, told reporters.
The US embassy in Islamabad said it was providing immediate aid, including two water filtration units and more than 50,000 halal meals for affected areas.
On Friday it provided rescue helicopters to rescue 400 people stranded in flood zones. It has also announced it will provide 12 prefabricated steel bridges as temporary replacements for some of those damaged.
In Afghanistan, dozens of people were killed and thousands had to be rescued from flash floods in the north east.
"The level of devastation is so widespread, so large, it is quite possible that in many areas there are damages, there are deaths which may not have been reported," Major-General Abbas said last night.
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