Mohenjo Daro, a famous 4,500-year-old archaeological monument in the southeast Sindh province that UNESCO has designated a World Heritage site, has suffered considerable damage as a result of Pakistan’s devastating floods.
One of the best preserved urban settlements in south Asia is Mohenjo-daro, a UNESCO world heritage site that is situated in southern Sindh province close to the Indus River. They were found in 1922, and the disappearance of its civilization, which coexisted with Mesopotamia’s and ancient Egypt’s, is still shrouded in mystery.
Although Mohenjo-daro was not directly affected by the recent flooding, the ruins were damaged by the record-breaking rainfall, according to Ahsan Abbasi, the site’s curator. He said the monsoon rains, “had caused the collapse of several large walls that were constructed approximately 5,000 years ago.”