Pakistan mourns the victims of Papua New Guinea’s landslide fatalities.
A landslide in Enga province, Papua New Guinea, killed many people and destroyed a lot of property, according to a statement from Mumtaz Zahra Baloch, a spokeswoman for the Foreign Office.
In response to the sad death, she sent her deepest condolences and sympathy.
“The victims and their families are in our thoughts and prayers.” According to the spokesperson, “We pray that the missing people will be found soon, and we stand with the people and government of Papua New Guinea during this time of national tragedy.”
A huge boulder in Papua New Guinea buried more than 2,000 people.
Officials from the country’s emergency center told the UN office in Port Moresby, the capital, that the landslide killed more than 2,000 people and destroyed a lot of property.
Early Friday morning, a piece of Mount Mungalo fell and buried many homes and the people sleeping in them. The town was on a remote hillside in Enga province, and it was almost completely destroyed.
Officials from the disaster office said the landslide “majorly damaged buildings and food gardens and had a major effect on the economic lifeline of the country.”
The letter, which was received by UN officials on Monday morning, said that the main road to Porgera Mine was “permanently blocked.”
As the landslide continues to move slowly, the situation is still unstable and relief teams and survivors are still in danger.
It said that the army and other national and regional authorities had to act “immediately and collaboratively” because of how bad the disaster was.
It asked the UN to tell Papua New Guinea’s “other international friends” and development partners of what was happening.
Reports said that the emergency center should be used to organize help.