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In Pakistan, heavy rains and floods have killed 45 people.

Authorities said that heavy rains in Afghanistan and Pakistan caused severe flooding and collapsed buildings, killing 45 people and injuring 74. Kabul warned of the continued dangers from bad weather. The National Disaster Management Authority said that the majority of deaths were reported in the war-torn provinces of Afghanistan, such as Parwan, Maidan Wardak and Daykundi, where torrential rainfall caused flash floods and landslides. This led to the destruction or total destruction 130 homes.

It said that conditions remained "unstable", with the risk of more rain and flooding continuing in certain areas. "In total 1,140?families were affected," NDMA stated in a press release.

The disaster management authority of the?Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Province in Pakistan, which shares a border with Afghanistan?, said that heavy rains caused walls and roofs to collapse on houses, killing at least 17 people. This included 14 children.

Both Pakistan and Afghanistan are listed by the United Nations as countries that are most vulnerable to climate change and extreme weather. Last year, a fierce monsoon caused havoc in Pakistan. It killed almost 1,000 people, destroyed crops, livestock, and homes.

In a report published in November, the United Nations Development Programme said that earthquakes, flooding, and droughts had destroyed 8,000 homes across?Afghanistan by 2025, straining public services to "their limits". Since the Taliban took power in Afghanistan, international aid has been cut. The country is struggling to cope. Reporting by Sayed Hassib in Kabul; Additional reporting by Saud Mesud in Dera Ismail Khan; Writing by Sakshi Daal. Editing by Kate Mayberry & Keith Weir

(source: Reuters)