Pakistan floods are responsible for the death toll reaching 430 from three days of flooding in Pakistan reached at least 430 on Friday, as rains bloated rivers, submerged villages, and triggered landslides.
Pakistani TV showed striking images of people clinging to fences and other stationary items as water gushed over their heads. Helicopters were also shown winching people to safety.
The rising toll from the monsoon rains underscores the poor infrastructure in impoverished Pakistan, where under-equipped rescue workers struggled to reach people stranded in far-flung villages. The weather forecast was mixed, with some areas expected to see reduced rainfall and others likely to see an intensification.
The northwest was the hardest hit and Mian Iftikhar Hussain, the information minister for the region, said it was the deadliest and most destructive flooding there since 1929 when 408 people died.
The highway connecting Peshawar to the federal capital, Islamabad, was shut down. At least 60 bridges were destroyed, Hussain said.
In Pakistani-controlled Kashmir, at least 22 people were confirmed dead as of Thursday evening, the area's prime minister, Sardar Attique Khan, told reporters.
The floods cap a deadly week in Pakistan. On Wednesday, a passenger jet slammed into hills close to Islamabad killing all 152 people on board.