Torrential rains and gale-force winds have led to the deaths of more than 200 people in the coastal city of
Some 43 people were killed by the storms on Saturday afternoon, while the other bodies were recovered on Sunday.
Dozens more were injured as heavy winds uprooted trees and brought down power lines, electrocuting people.
The minister of health for Sindh province, where
Most parts of the city have been without electricity for almost a day.
In
Hospital 'emergency'
"The destruction was nothing like I have seen in my life in
"The sky went grey, the rain started coming down and then everything started to quiver in the face of the storm."
Many of the fatalities were caused by the initial high winds. The rain followed and lashed the city for the next half hour.
It flooded much of the city and many shanty town homes were washed away, the BBC's Shoaib Hasan says.
People were also killed by fallen trees and sign boards blown down by the winds.
Other deaths were caused by roofs or walls collapsing from the rain.
The overburdened infrastructure of
Municipal workers have begun to clear up the debris, but
"We are doing our best to restore the power supply, but... the situation is very bad," said a company spokesman told Reuters news agency.
The power grid has already been under terrible strain and another storm is brewing off the coast.
"We have declared an emergency at all government hospitals and cancelled the vacations and leave of doctors and paramedics," AFP news agency quoted Syed Sardar Ahmed, health minister for Sindh province, as saying.
The storms came after temperatures reached 40C (104F) in
Angry residents staged street protests after having to spend the night without power to run fans or air conditioners.
Every year thousands of people are killed and hundreds of thousands made homeless across
PHOTO CAPTION
Destroyed billboards,