Punjab farmers left in despair as floods wipe out fields and herds

Special Punjab farmers left in despair as floods wipe out fields and herds
Villagers lead their cattle through a flooded street in Wazirabad, Punjab, on August 29, 2025. (AN Photo)
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Updated 29 August 2025

Punjab farmers left in despair as floods wipe out fields and herds

Punjab farmers left in despair as floods wipe out fields and herds
  • Many say the deluge struck without warning, leaving no time to save livestock
  • Confusion grows over surviving animals as farmers struggle to prove ownership

WAZIRABAD, Pakistan: Farmers in Pakistan’s eastern Punjab province said Friday they had lost everything in sudden floods, from fields of rice and corn to the livestock they depended on, leaving them in despair and with no clear path ahead.

The floods began Monday when heavy rains triggered sudden water releases from Indian dams on the Sutlej, Chenab and Ravi rivers, making it the worst deluge for the region in about four decades. Nearly 300,000 people have since been evacuated, more than one million have been affected and at least 20 people have died in Punjab this week, according to officials statistics.

“Suddenly, so much water came with a great speed that we have never seen in our lives,” Asadullah Rizwan, a farmer in Wazirabad city, told Arab News. “We got the warning late, and our livestock was swept away. Everyone lost 10, 15, 20 animals.”

Rizwan said his entire year’s harvest had been destroyed.

“I cultivated rice on 117 acres and corn on 20 acres, but it’s all finished,” he said. “This is Allah’s will regarding what will happen.”

Others spoke of the same despair.

“Some of the buffalo are gone, and one of our cows has also been swept away,” Furqan Ahmed, another farmer, said. “People also drowned here. In Naeem colony, a woman drowned while trying to save her child. Rescue did not arrive on time.”

Farmers said disputes had already broken out over the few surviving animals since there was no way to prove ownership and no one knew which animal belonged to whom.

Local officials in Wazirabad said a large number of animals had been taken to shelters and would eventually be returned once the waters recede.

“The district government will start a mechanism for missing animals,” Veterinary Officer Dr. Hasan Munir told Arab News. “Any rescued animals will be kept at camp offices, given fodder, and then returned to their owners.”

Annual monsoon rains are crucial for Pakistan’s agriculture and water supply but in recent years have also unleashed devastation, intensified by shifting climate patterns.

The NDMA said in its latest situation report on Friday, 337 rescue operations had been carried out in Punjab in the last 24 hours, moving nearly 247,000 people to safety.

The agency has warned the rains could last until at least Sept. 10 and may rival the catastrophic floods of 2022, which killed more than 1,700 people and caused more than $30 billion in damage.

The government has sought to make urgent investments in climate adaptation amid fears that farmers will continue to bear the brunt of erratic weather patterns as their livelihoods are washed away year after year.


Salman Agha, Haris Rauf star as Pakistan beat Afghanistan in UAE tri-series opener

Salman Agha, Haris Rauf star as Pakistan beat Afghanistan in UAE tri-series opener
Updated 12 min 13 sec ago

Salman Agha, Haris Rauf star as Pakistan beat Afghanistan in UAE tri-series opener

Salman Agha, Haris Rauf star as Pakistan beat Afghanistan in UAE tri-series opener
  • Skipper Agha’s unbeaten 53 and late stand with Nawaz lift Pakistan to 182-7 in Sharjah
  • Rauf takes 4-31, including Rashid Khan’s wicket, as Afghanistan fall 39 runs short of target

SHARJAH: Skipper Salman Agha hit an unbeaten half century and fast bowler Haris Rauf grabbed four wickets as Pakistan upstaged Afghanistan by 39 runs in the tri-series opener in Sharjah on Friday.

Agha hit a 36-ball 53 not out with three sixes and as many boundaries which lifted Pakistan to 182-7 in their 20 overs.

Pacers Rauf took 4-31 and Shaheen Afridi 2-21, while spinners Mohammad Nawaz (2-23) and Sufiyan Muqeem (2-25) dismissed Afghanistan for 143 in 19.5 overs before a noisy capacity 16,000 crowd at the Sharjah stadium.

Afghanistan matched Pakistan with opener Rahmanullah Gurbaz, 27-ball 38 with a six and three boundaries, adding 51 for the second wicket with Sediqullah Atal, who made 23.

It was Rauf who changed the game with a two-wicket 12th over sending Atal and Karim Janat back without conceding a run.

Afghanistan skipper Rashid Khan smashed five sixes and a four in his whirlwind 16-ball 39 but fell to Rauf to end his team’s fight.

Earlier, Pakistan was lifted by Agha’s fourth T20I half century.

Agha anchored the innings admirably well after opener Sahibzada Farhan smashed two sixes and a boundary in his 10-ball 21 after Pakistan won the toss and batted.

Agha added 53 for the fifth wicket with Nawaz whose 11-ball 21 had two sixes and a boundary as the duo helped Pakistan get 51 runs in the last five overs.

Pakistan play hosts United Arab Emirates on Saturday.

All three teams face other each other twice with the top two playing the September 7 final.


Pakistan PM to leave Saturday for six-day China visit to meet President Xi, attend regional summit

Pakistan PM to leave Saturday for six-day China visit to meet President Xi, attend regional summit
Updated 35 min 3 sec ago

Pakistan PM to leave Saturday for six-day China visit to meet President Xi, attend regional summit

Pakistan PM to leave Saturday for six-day China visit to meet President Xi, attend regional summit
  • Visit includes addressing business-to-business conference in Beijing to boost trade, investment ties
  • Sharif will also meet PM Li Qiang, attend the Shanghai Cooperation Organization summit in Tianjin

ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif will leave on Saturday for a six-day visit to China, from Aug. 30 to Sept. 4, to attend a regional summit and hold meetings with President Xi Jinping and Premier Li Qiang, with political, economic and investment ties topping the agenda, the foreign ministry said Friday.

The visit underscores the strong and multifaceted partnership between the two countries, which spans defense, diplomacy and economic cooperation.

China has long been Pakistan’s largest investor and its closest strategic ally, anchored by the multibillion-dollar China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC). Both sides are working to advance into “CPEC 2.0,” focused on industrialization, agriculture, energy and connectivity.

“In China, the Prime Minister would hold meetings with President Xi Jinping and Premier Li Qiang during which multifaceted dimensions of Pakistan-China bilateral cooperation would be discussed,” the foreign office said.

“He would also attend the military parade with President Xi and other world leaders being held in Beijing to commemorate the 80th anniversary of the World’s Anti-Fascist War,” it added, using a term widely employed in China to describe World War II.

The statement said Sharif would also interact with Chinese business leaders and corporate executives to discuss trade and investment and address a Pakistan-China Business-to-Business (B2B) Investment Conference in Beijing.

Sharif’s engagements are part of leadership-level exchanges that both governments describe as vital to maintaining their “all-weather strategic cooperative partnership.”

The foreign office said the visit will reaffirm support on core interests, strengthen bilateral cooperation and ensure regular consultations on regional and global developments.

The prime minister will also attend the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) Council of Heads of State Summit in Tianjin during the trip, alongside other regional leaders.

Sharif also visited China in June 2024, when he held talks with Xi and Li in Beijing, toured cultural and educational sites in Xi’an, and announced that 1,000 Pakistani students would receive agricultural training in China.

That five-day trip included meetings with leading Chinese companies in the energy and technology sectors, as the government strives to encourage foreign investors to explore manufacturing and other opportunities in Pakistan.


Pakistan threatens action against resorts, housing societies on riverbeds

Pakistan threatens action against resorts, housing societies on riverbeds
Updated 29 August 2025

Pakistan threatens action against resorts, housing societies on riverbeds

Pakistan threatens action against resorts, housing societies on riverbeds
  • Climate minister vows to assert state authority over wealthy tycoons
  • He says government deploying satellites, drones and AI to track floods

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s Climate Change Minister Musadik Malik on Friday warned wealthy business tycoons of action against resorts, hotels and housing societies built on riverbeds after floods inundated the northern and eastern parts of the country.

Swollen rivers in Pakistan’s most populous province, Punjab, have submerged more than 1,600 villages and displaced over 1.1 million people, with about 40 deaths reported in the region since Aug. 15, according to the National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA).

Mass evacuations began after heavier-than-usual monsoon rains and the release of water from overflowing dams in India triggered flash floods in low-lying border areas of Pakistan.

Media footage showed water from the Ravi River entering a lavish private housing society in the eastern city of Lahore last night as police urged residents to evacuate immediately.

“This monsoon is our declaration of war. We will not stop now and will remove every obstacle from the river’s path,” Malik said while addressing a televised news conference in Karachi during his visit.

“The prime minister has said no one is stronger than the state and this year you will see it,” he continued. “Now we will see who is stronger — the state or a handful of tycoons.”

He pleaded with the country’s elite to “have some fear” while building housing colonies along riverbanks.

“These are the very places where we should have been preserving water and where rivers should have been allowed to spread and be stored,” he added.

“Every district should have designated wetland zones and protected areas.”

Malik urged people to grow mangroves, wetlands and forests to absorb carbon dioxide from the air.

He lamented that resorts, hotels and housing societies built along riverbanks by wealthy people had become a source of death for the poor.

“When the mansions and illegal complexes of the wealthy collapse, their concrete and timber turn into missiles,” he said.

“Huge boulders, flying like pebbles, come crashing down with the water hitting poor settlements and destroying everything in their way.”

Calling the settlements on riverbanks an “agent of destruction” for the poor, Malik urged the wealthy elite to reconsider their actions and stop building along riverbanks.

He also disclosed that Pakistan was employing the best technology in the world including satellites, drones and artificial intelligence to monitor and tackle floods.

“Drones are hovering over the mountains, satellites are sending images, AI is mapping every possible route water could take next year.”

Around 842 people have been killed in the monsoon season since June 26, with the northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province recording the highest number of casualties.

Pakistani officials say the current spell is likely to last until at least Sept. 10 and could rival the 2022 floods, which killed more than 1,700 people and caused over $30 billion in damage.


Pakistan’s deputy PM says PIA to launch Manchester flights next month

Pakistan’s deputy PM says PIA to launch Manchester flights next month
Updated 29 August 2025

Pakistan’s deputy PM says PIA to launch Manchester flights next month

Pakistan’s deputy PM says PIA to launch Manchester flights next month
  • Barred from EU and UK after a deadly 2020 crash, PIA resumed flights to Paris in January
  • New Manchester route expected to boost revenue, aiding government’s privatization push

ISLAMABAD: Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Ishaq Dar on Friday announced Pakistan International Airlines (PIA) would launch three to four weekly flights to Manchester in the United Kingdom, saying the revival of the national carrier had been among the government’s top priorities.

Britain removed Pakistan from its Air Safety List earlier this year, clearing the way for Pakistani carriers to seek permits to operate in the UK.

Pakistani airlines were barred from flying to Europe and Britain after a 2020 PIA Airbus A320 crash in Karachi killed nearly 100 people and led to controversial claims about widespread irregularities in pilot licensing.

European regulators lifted their suspension last November after due diligence, enabling PIA to resume operations to Paris in January.

“As you know, just a few months ago, by the grace of God, the UK ... lifted its ban [on PIA flights],” Dar told reporters at a news conference.

“So, the final expected flights [to the UK] are due in the month of September,” he added. “They will start from Pakistan to Manchester, with three to four weekly flights. PIA is preparing for this.”

The deputy PM added flights to Britain would have resumed sooner had the UK still been bound by European Union aviation rules.

He said the government was encouraged by good feedback from the public, noting that at present only British Airways offers direct services, which were limited to Islamabad twice a week.

With more than 1.6 million people of Pakistani heritage living in the UK and thousands of British nationals residing in Pakistan, the Manchester route is expected to ease travel and stimulate bilateral trade.

Britain is Pakistan’s third-largest trading partner, with bilateral commerce worth £4.7 billion.

The new flights are likely to strengthen PIA’s balance sheet, potentially raising its value as the government pushes ahead with plans to privatize the loss-making airline.


Pakistan issues licenses to 24 tour operators for pilgrimages to Iran, Iraq and Syria

Pakistan issues licenses to 24 tour operators for pilgrimages to Iran, Iraq and Syria
Updated 29 August 2025

Pakistan issues licenses to 24 tour operators for pilgrimages to Iran, Iraq and Syria

Pakistan issues licenses to 24 tour operators for pilgrimages to Iran, Iraq and Syria
  • Move follows abolition of decades-old Salar system after reports of 40,000 Pakistanis overstaying abroad
  • Government barred overland travel for Arbaeen pilgrimage this year, citing militant threats in Balochistan

ISLAMABAD: Federal Minister for Religious Affairs Sardar Muhammad Yousaf on Friday issued certificates to 24 authorized Ziarat Group Organizers (ZGOs) for pilgrimages to Iran, Iraq and Syria, saying these companies would provide travel, accommodation, food and other facilities to devotees.

Thousands of Pakistanis, mostly Shias, travel to these countries annually to visit religious shrines. The government announced last month it would abolish the decades-old Salar system, under which private caravan leaders managed pilgrim travel.

The decision followed official confirmation that around 40,000 Pakistani citizens had overstayed or gone missing in Iran, Iraq and Syria over the past decade.

“From now on, pilgrims traveling to Iran, Iraq and Syria would only be allowed to do so through registered ZGOs,” the minister said. “Under the new system, pilgrims will be provided with better facilities, a transparent process and safer travel.”

Yousaf told representatives of newly registered companies at a ceremony in Islamabad they were responsible for ensuring pilgrims’ transport, housing and meals.

He congratulated the first batch of firms to be formally licensed under the government’s new Ziarat Policy, adding the existing Salar system would soon be completely phased out.

The religious affairs ministry said in a statement it had received 1,413 applications for registration, of which 585 had secured security clearance.

In the first phase, 24 companies that completed documentation were declared eligible, while the rest will be issued certificates after meeting requirements.

Earlier this year, the government barred overland travel for the Arbaeen pilgrimage, a major Shia religious observance held 40 days after the annual commemoration of Imam Hussain’s martyrdom in Karbala, Iraq, citing militant threats in the restive Balochistan province bordering Iran.

It also said the new Ziarat Policy aims to address long-standing security and migration concerns flagged by host governments, while restoring credibility to Pakistan’s management of religious tourism.