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Click here to download Afghan notebook: Pulling together in face of disaster
Travellers use a ladder to cross a river where rains have washed away the main Mazar-Kabul highway

Travellers have been forced to improvise after floods washed away parts of the main Mazar-Kabul highway

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Floods and landslides have claimed hundreds of lives in northern Afghanistan. Floodwaters have cut the main road link between north and south, but a wave of sympathy for the victims is uniting Afghans as never before.
Eighteen-year old Amanullah's world fell apart last month.
The poor ethnic Uzbek farmer from Jowzjan province was at a friend's wedding in the nearby town of Sheberghan when he got the news.
All six members of his immediate family - parents, two sisters and two brothers - had been swept away and killed, when flash floods struck their village.
Amanullah's family was one of many hit hard by the flash floodsAmanullah's family was one of many hit hard by the flash floods
When Amanullah returned, his house had been reduced to rubble, and the only trace of his family was a doll which his little sister had stuck on a tree.
His family are among the dozens of people killed in floods that have swept across northern Afghanistan in recent weeks. Thousands of houses have been destroyed and tens of thousands of people have been affected.
Thousands of travellers were left stranded as the main road from North to South was cutThousands of travellers were left stranded as the main road from north to south was cut
This week flood waters also washed away a big section of the main north-south road in the Tashqorghan gorge, effectively cutting off the north of the country.

BBC Afghan notebook

This is where our reporters share stories beyond the daily conflict and politics of a country going through the most important election in its recent history as foreign troops withdraw.
We'll focus on the surprising while treating the familiar from fresh angles, combined with a street-level view of a country in transition.
Most of the posts will be written, photographed or filmed by our journalists across Afghanistan.
You can use #BBCAfghanNotebook to follow our reports via Twitter.
Thousands of travellers are now stranded on both sides. Emergency repair work will take at least 10 days.
Further north-east in Badakhshan province, people are still reeling from a devastating landslide at the start of the month.
Three hundred houses were engulfed in thick mud in one of the poorest districts, Argo. Hundreds of people, including many women and children, are thought to have been killed.
After news of the landslide emerged the government declared a day of national mourning and ordered emergency assistance.
But it was the public response to the disaster that has been unprecedented.
In Afghanistan ethnicity is still a big issue. The victims of the Argo tragedy were ethnic Uzbeks, but all the country's different groups - from Pashtuns to Hazaras and Tajiks - have come together to help.

Click here to download Afghan notebook: Pulling together in face of disaster
15 May 2014

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