Around 40,000 kids have lost their homes in north Afghanistan's Baghlan territory as weighty storms and floods lashed the area and different districts on Friday, worldwide foundation Save the Youngsters said Monday.
"Youngsters are frightened. Many have lost everything, their homes as well as their schools and the spots where they play. They have lost all that is natural. They have lost all everyday practice," said Arshad Malik, country chief for the cause in Afghanistan.
More than 330 were killed across the devastated country, for the most part in Baghlan and some in Takhar, Badakhshan and Ghor areas, as per the Afghanistan office of the World Food Program and nearby Afghan authorities.
Worldwide associations and Afghan authorities have cautioned of a rising loss of life and irresistible illnesses, particularly among kids, following the floods. The World Wellbeing Association said Monday that it had sent eight crisis reaction groups to the flood-impacted area to screen the gamble of diseases.
Afghanistan is among the most weak nations to environmental change. It has been encountering an ascent in outrageous weather patterns, including floods and dry season, as per an statement delivered Sunday by the United Nations International Worldwide Children's Emergency Fund.