Heavy monsoon rains lash Islamabad, Rawalpindi, flood alert issued across Punjab

Heavy monsoon rains lash Islamabad, Rawalpindi, flood alert issued across Punjab
Workers remove a fallen tree from a road amid heavy rainfall in the Peshawar district of the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province of Pakistan on May 27, 2025. (AFP/File)
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Updated 25 June 2025

Heavy monsoon rains lash Islamabad, Rawalpindi, flood alert issued across Punjab

Heavy monsoon rains lash Islamabad, Rawalpindi, flood alert issued across Punjab
  • Twin cities record 80mm rain, WASA deploys teams, monitors Nullah Lai flow
  • PDMA warns of 25 percent above-normal rains, landslide risk in Murree and Galiyat

ISLAMABAD: Heavy monsoon rains lashed Pakistan’s twin cities of Rawalpindi and Islamabad early Wednesday, triggering urban flooding alerts as authorities issued warnings for continued thunderstorms across Punjab and parts of the northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province.

The Pakistan Meteorological Department (PMD) said the current weather system is expected to persist in Islamabad-Rawalpindi and surrounding areas, warning in a statement that “urban flooding may occur… during the forecast period.”

The public has been advised to take precautionary measures.

By 6:30am Wednesday, over 80 millimeters of rain had already been recorded across the two cities, according to Rawalpindi’s Water and Sanitation Agency (WASA). Specific rainfall totals included 52 mm in Saidpur, 66 mm in Bokra, 53 mm in Pir Wadhai, and 55 mm in Shamsabad, WASA Managing Director Muhammad Saleem Ashraf said.

Ashraf saaid a rain emergency had been declared, with WASA teams deployed alongside heavy machinery in low-lying areas.

“All city drains including Nullah Lai are being monitored… at present, the water flow remains within normal levels,” he said, noting the depth of the stream at key points stood at 9 feet at Katarian and 5 feet at Gawalmandi Bridge.

The PMD said the system producing the rain-thundershowers is active over Kashmir, Haripur, Abbottabad, and northeastern Punjab, and is likely to spread further across the province within the next 1–3 hours.

The Provincial Disaster Management Authority (PDMA) for Punjab, Pakistan’s largest province, also confirmed the onset of the monsoon season, saying the first spell is expected to continue until July 1.

A statement quoted PDMA Director General Irfan Ali Kathia as saying:

“This year’s monsoon rains are forecast to be 25 percent above normal. All district administrations have been alerted.”

Storms are forecast in Murree, Rawalpindi, Attock, Chakwal, Gujranwala, Lahore, and other parts of Punjab, with a warning of possible landslides in hilly areas like Murree and Galiyat.

Kathia urged citizens to “stay indoors during storms, avoid unnecessary travel, and follow safety protocols.”

The PDMA said all emergency departments, including Rescue 1122, WASA, irrigation and livestock authorities, had been placed on high alert. In case of emergency, the public has been advised to contact the PDMA helpline at 1129.


Pakistan says new assembly line to produce 500,000 Chromebooks by 2026

Pakistan says new assembly line to produce 500,000 Chromebooks by 2026
Updated 8 sec ago

Pakistan says new assembly line to produce 500,000 Chromebooks by 2026

Pakistan says new assembly line to produce 500,000 Chromebooks by 2026
  • Pakistan inaugurated its first Chromebook assembly line, located in Haripur, on Tuesday
  • Information ministry says initiative will empower students with digital skills, create jobs

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s information ministry said on Wednesday that the country’s new Chromebook assembly line is expected to produce half a million devices by 2026, stressing the move would empower students and create job opportunities. 

Chromebooks are a type of computer designed to help users get things done faster through the ChromeOS, an operating system that has cloud storage and multiple layers of security.

Pakistan on Tuesday launched its first Google Chromebook assembly line, which will be located at the National Radio & Tele­com­munications Corpora­tion’s (NRTC) facility in the northwestern city of Haripur. The facility was launched as a result of a public-private partnership involving the Pakistani government, Google and Tech Valley, along with the NRTC and Allied Corporation. 

 “The facility is expected to produce 500,000 Chromebooks by 2026,” the information ministry said in a statement. 

The ministry said the assembly line will provide students and educators in Pakistan with more affordable and high-quality Chromebooks, helping equip them with digital skills. 

It also said the assembly line will create valuable job opportunities for the local youth, adding that Google’s decision to deepen its presence in Pakistan will boost the South Asian country’s digital economy and strengthen its innovation experiences. 

“This local presence will bring Google closer to Pakistan’s developers, startups, and entrepreneurs, enabling direct collaboration, capacity-building, and access to global tools and platforms,” the information ministry said. 

The facility also underscores Pakistan’s growing partnership with Google. Under a strategic memorandum of understanding, Pakistan and Google will train 100,000 developers nationwide and work together on localized, AI-powered services such as Android tools for public safety.