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Flash floods kill 3 tourists and leave 15 missing in northern Pakistan | TribLIVE.com
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Flash floods kill 3 tourists and leave 15 missing in northern Pakistan

Associated Press
8706636_web1_8706636-cfb17e0dfeec40728b35980f38808af2
Government of Gilgit Baltistan via AP
Rescue workers help trapped tourists Tuesday, July 22, 2025, after a cloudburst triggered landslide on a highway near the Chilas district, northern Pakistan.
8706636_web1_8706636-c6011c9fd5e94050a6c3db2b1243bca6
Government of Gilgit Baltistan via AP
Rescue workers and police use heavy machinery to search for missing tourists Tuesday, July 22, 2025, after a cloudburst triggered floods and landslides on a highway near the Chilas district, northern Pakistan.
8706636_web1_8706636-258dd6c33ae14e6cadaba92b3f9316bb
Government of Gilgit Baltistan via AP
Rescue workers help trapped tourists Tuesday, July 22, 2025, after a cloudburst triggered landslide on a highway near the Chilas district, northern Pakistan.

PESHAWAR, Pakistan — Flash floods triggered by heavy monsoon rains swept away several vehicles carrying tourists in northern Pakistan, killing at least three people and leaving 15 others missing, officials said on Tuesday.

Pakistani rescue officials say the above-normal monsoon rains since June 26 have killed at least 225 people and injured more than 500 across the country. Experts say climate change is driving an increase in extreme weather events in the region.

A cloudburst caused floods and landslides Monday, stranding more than 200 local tourists after a key highway near the northern Chilas district was blocked, said Faizullah Faraq, a government spokesperson in the Gilgit-Baltistan region. Army helicopters were used in the evacuation, he said.

Several vehicles had been buried under the rubble of landslides and rescuers are using heavy machinery to find the missing tourists and residents, Faraq said. Three bodies have been recovered.

The National Disaster Management Authority issued an updated flood days before, warning against travel to northern areas due to potential landslides and blocked roads.

Earlier this month, authorities warned they cannot rule out a repeat of extreme weather like the 2022 floods that submerged a third of the country and killed 1,737 people.

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Categories: U.S./World
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