SEHWAN:The city administration finally breached the dyke built to restrict water near Bagh-e-Yousuf as the situation worsened due to the rise in water to a dangerously high level at Manchar Lake.
The authorities had ordered the residents of nearby localities to move to safer areas due to the increased risk of the enbankment breaking down as the pressure water grew.
Irrigation department officials said that the water pressure will subside up to 30% and will flow into the Indus River through Kiran Pur and Indus Link.
Earlier, Deputy Commissioner Jamshoro Capt. (Ret.) Farid-Uddin-Mustafa had said that the dyke will not be breached and a last-ditch effort will be made (to keep the embankment intact).
The official said that the water level in the Manchhar lake is steadily rising, warning that the lake's embankment may collapse at any time. As a result, he advised that the union councils of Wahar, Bobak, Jaffarabad, and Chana be vacated.
"The next 24 to 48 hours are crucial for the Manchhar Lake," he cautioned.
According to a Geo News correspondent, the water has started overflowing from the lake's banks at some points, triggering panic among the local population of Sehwan.
Citizens in Bobak and surrounding areas of the lake demand the city administration breach the embankment at Yousuf Bagh so that hundreds of villages can be saved from inundation.
Manchar Lake is the largest natural freshwater lake in Pakistan and is one of the largest lakes in Asia. It is situated west of the Indus River, in the Jamshoro and Dadu Districts, 18 kilometres from Sehwan Sharif.
The Deputy Commissioner further directed the people to avoid visiting Manchar Lake unnecessarily as its dyke, RD54 to RD58, is withstanding huge pressure.
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