Pakistan floods kill 43, displaces 1.3 million in Punjab as rivers set to swell further

Special Pakistan floods kill 43, displaces 1.3 million in Punjab as rivers set to swell further
Pakistani soldiers ferry flood-affected villagers evacuated by boat from the Muzaffargarh district in Punjab province on September 3, 2025. (AFP)
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Pakistan floods kill 43, displaces 1.3 million in Punjab as rivers set to swell further

Pakistan floods kill 43, displaces 1.3 million in Punjab as rivers set to swell further
  • More than 3.6 million affected in breadbasket Punjab region, official says
  • 1.29 million evacuated, hundreds of camps set up across Punjab province

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan said on Wednesday that floods had killed at least 43 people in the past 10 days and displaced more than 1.3 million in the breadbasket Punjab province, as swollen rivers carried some of the heaviest volumes in years and officials warned the threat of further inundations remained.

Authorities said that more than 3.6 million people had been affected across 3,363 villages after days of heavy monsoon rains and dam releases from upstream India. Nearly 1.29 million people had been moved to safer areas, with hundreds of relief camps set up across inundated districts.

Nationwide, rains, floods and landslides have killed more than 880 people since late June, reviving memories of Pakistan’s catastrophic 2022 deluges when a third of the country was submerged, 30 million displaced and losses topped $35 billion.

“Severe flooding in the Ravi, Sutlej and Chenab rivers has affected more than 3.63 million people across 3,363 villages,” Punjab Relief Commissioner Nabeel Javed said in a statement.

“Around 1.29 million people trapped in floodwaters have been moved to safe places. Forty-three citizens have died in the recent flooding.”

The latest monitoring of river flows showed the Chenab carrying 549,000 cusecs at Marala Headworks, with levels at Khanki reaching 478,000 cusecs and Qadirabad 348,000 cusecs. At Trimmu, the river was flowing at nearly 294,000 cusecs. The Ravi at Jassar had climbed to almost 89,000 cusecs, while the Sutlej at Ganda Singh Wala was steady at 269,000 cusecs.

Punjab’s disaster authority said that the Chenab had swelled by more than 400,000 cusecs in the past eight hours, warning that flows in the Ravi, Chenab and Sutlej were expected to increase further through Sept. 5 due to continued rainfall in upstream catchments. Officials said that the situation remained critical for downstream districts, where embankments were being reinforced and evacuation teams pre-deployed.

“Lives and livelihoods are being protected through timely evacuations and relief efforts, but the situation remains critical,” Javed said.

Authorities said 405 relief camps had been established for displaced families, alongside 425 medical camps and 385 veterinary centers. Nearly 800,000 livestock have been shifted to higher ground.

Floodwaters have battered electricity distribution networks across Punjab, leaving tens of thousands without power in districts such as Jhang and Toba Tek Singh. Restoration work is continuing, with officials saying most repairs should be completed later this week if waters recede.

In Sialkot, a major export hub, the city’s international airport said that all flight operations had resumed after precautionary measures were taken.

“The airport is fully operational, and a new shuttle service has been launched for passengers,” spokesperson Muhammad Umair Khan said.

Pakistan is among the countries most vulnerable to climate change, where scientists say rising temperatures are making South Asian monsoon rains heavier and more erratic. Seasonal downpours provide up to 80 percent of the country’s annual rainfall but also cause regular devastation.


Netanyahu slams Belgium PM as ‘weak’ after move to recognize Palestinian state

Netanyahu slams Belgium PM as ‘weak’ after move to recognize Palestinian state
Updated 34 sec ago

Netanyahu slams Belgium PM as ‘weak’ after move to recognize Palestinian state

Netanyahu slams Belgium PM as ‘weak’ after move to recognize Palestinian state
  • Benjamin Netanyahu: ‘Belgian PM (Bart) de Wever is a weak leader who seeks to appease Islamic terrorism by sacrificing Israel’
  • Netanyahu: ‘He wants to feed the terrorist crocodile before it devours Belgium’

JERUASALEM: Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu called his Belgian counterpart a “weak leader” on Wednesday, slamming his decision to recognize Palestine as a state.
“Belgian Prime Minister (Bart) de Wever is a weak leader who seeks to appease Islamic terrorism by sacrificing Israel. He wants to feed the terrorist crocodile before it devours Belgium,” Netanyahu’s office said in a post on its official X account.
Belgium on Tuesday became the latest Western country to say it will recognize the State of Palestine at the UN General Assembly this month, following similar announcements by Australia, Canada and France.
In a post on X, Belgian Foreign Minister Maxime Prevot said that the decision came “in view of the humanitarian tragedy” unfolding in Gaza, adding that “firm sanctions are being imposed against the Israeli government.”
Israel’s far-right Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich called Wednesday for the annexation of swathes of the occupied West Bank following the international moves to recognize a Palestinian state.
Despite mounting pressure at home and abroad to end its nearly two-year campaign in Gaza, Israel has recently been stepping up operations as it lays the groundwork for seizing Gaza City, where the UN has declared a famine.
The war was sparked by Hamas’s October 7, 2023 attack on Israel which resulted in the deaths of 1,219 people, mostly civilians, according to an AFP tally based on Israeli figures.
Israel’s retaliatory offensive has killed at least 63,746 Palestinians, most of them civilians, according to figures from the health ministry in Hamas-run Gaza that the United Nations considers reliable.


Influx of Somali regional forces sparks fear in Kenya

Influx of Somali regional forces sparks fear in Kenya
Updated 12 min 27 sec ago

Influx of Somali regional forces sparks fear in Kenya

Influx of Somali regional forces sparks fear in Kenya
  • The southern Somali state of Jubaland has long clashed with the federal government based in Mogadishu
  • Kenya’s interior secretary Kipchumba Murkomen said there was “no cause of alarm”

NAIROBI: Kenyans in a border region expressed fear on Wednesday over an influx of Somali regional fighters, pushed over the border following clashes with the central government.
The southern Somali state of Jubaland has long clashed with the federal government based in Mogadishu.
Last month, federal forces seized a key town in Jubaland, forcing local fighters to flee across the border into Kenya’s northeastern Mandera County.
“There is a lot of fear in the area... Most people have run away,” Urgus Shukra, a local elder in Mandera, told AFP by phone.
He said armed Somali forces have been present for four weeks and had occupied “the most important farm area.”
“They are always firing their guns. They have even trained there,” said Shukra.
Ali Ibrahim Roba, a senator for Mandera, wrote on X: “Jubaland forces are now inside Mandera town. Schools have been shut down, businesses paralyzed, and families displaced in fear of stray bullets, RPGs (rocket-propelled grenades) and unexploded ordnance.”
Kenya’s interior secretary Kipchumba Murkomen said there was “no cause of alarm” and that such comments were an exaggeration for political gain.
“We cannot confirm now what kind of people they are... if forces or civilians,” Murkomen told reporters.
Mandera governor Mohamed Adan Khalif raised the alarm over the presence of Somali fighters last week, saying that it compromised national sovereignty, and locals held a protest over the issue on Tuesday.
Opposition politicians in Kenya have criticized President William Ruto’s silence and called for action to expel the forces.
Kenya has troops in Jubaland — a lush, relatively prosperous part of Somalia — as a buffer against the Islamist insurgent group Al-Shabab, which has staged several bloody attacks on Kenyan territory.
Jubaland’s regional president Ahmed Madobe — a political ally of Nairobi — faces opposition from Mogadishu, which has refused to recognize his administration.


With brooms, Indonesian women protest for sweeping police reforms after deadly crackdown

With brooms, Indonesian women protest for sweeping police reforms after deadly crackdown
Updated 03 September 2025

With brooms, Indonesian women protest for sweeping police reforms after deadly crackdown

With brooms, Indonesian women protest for sweeping police reforms after deadly crackdown
  • At least 10 people killed, more than 1,000 injured and 20 are missing since protests broke out last week, rights groups say
  • Police, military were deployed for patrols in Jakarta and other Indonesian cities after demonstrations turned violent

JAKARTA: Hundreds of Indonesian women, dressed in symbolic pink and black, and carrying brooms, rallied in Jakarta on Wednesday to demand sweeping reforms in the country’s security forces after a violent crackdown on nationwide protests.

At least 10 people have been killed, over a thousand injured, more than 3,300 arrested, and 20 remain missing, rights groups say, after a wave of demonstrations that started in Jakarta last week.

Initially sparked by controversial perks and housing allowances for lawmakers, the protests turned violent and spread across the country after an armed police vehicle ran over and killed a 21-year-old delivery driver at a protest site.

As military and security forces remained deployed on the streets, women protesters gathered at the parliament complex on Wednesday morning, shouting “Reform the police” and “Stop state violence,” with some hoisting traditional brooms found in every Indonesian household.

“Women are always part of social and democratic movements. We believe that the broom symbolizes a tool that can sweep away greed and evil in this country,” Nabila Tauhida, spokesperson for the Alliance of Indonesian Women, which organized the demonstration, told Arab News.

“We are symbolically using the broom to sweep away the state’s repression ... The government has responded to civil society members who voiced their criticism and demands, how we have now become the victims of state repression and violence. Many civilians were arrested, and some were even killed while protesting.”

The women protesters wore black — the color of mourning — and pink, in honor of Ana, a middle-aged woman in a bright pink hijab who became a protest icon last week after stepping ahead of student demonstrators to confront the police alone.

As protests escalated across the country, with incidents of burning and looting of state property and homes of several politicians, President Prabowo Subianto has deployed more military and police to the streets, who set up checkpoints. Troops have been patrolling the capital and other major cities such as Surabaya, Bandung, Yogyakarta and Makassar.

The militarization of public space and fears of a new violent crackdown have already forced Indonesian students and civil society groups to call off some of the protests planned for earlier this week.

Holding banners reading “Protesting is a right,” the women who gathered in front of parliament called on the president to protect their basic freedoms.

“The Alliance of Indonesian Women is calling on President Prabowo Subianto to stop all forms of state violence, including by withdrawing the military and police,” representatives of the alliance said, as they read their demands aloud together.

“We demand the full guarantee of our constitutional rights as citizens to gather, unite and protest in public without intimidation or violence.”


Suicide bombing at political rally kills 15 in Pakistan’s southwestern Balochistan province

Suicide bombing at political rally kills 15 in Pakistan’s southwestern Balochistan province
Updated 03 September 2025

Suicide bombing at political rally kills 15 in Pakistan’s southwestern Balochistan province

Suicide bombing at political rally kills 15 in Pakistan’s southwestern Balochistan province
  • Blast targeted Balochistan National Party rally in Quetta, no group claims responsibility
  • BNP-M chief Akhtar Mengal announces three days of mourning after deadly attack

QUETTA, Pakistan: A suicide bombing ripped through a political rally in Pakistan’s restive southwestern province of Balochistan on Tuesday night, killing at least 15 people and injuring 32, a senior administration official said on Wednesday, in one of the deadliest attacks in recent months.

No group immediately claimed responsibility for the bombing, but Balochistan, Pakistan’s largest yet most impoverished province, has been grappling for decades with a separatist insurgency that has escalated in recent years. Militants frequently target security forces, officials and non-local residents they accuse of exploiting the province’s resources. The province is also of strategic importance for Beijing’s Belt and Road Initiative, with China investing heavily in ports, roads and energy projects.

Police said the blast was caused by a suicide bomber who detonated about 10 kilograms of explosives as supporters and senior leaders of the Balochistan National Party-Mengal (BNP-M) left a stadium after a rally to mark the fourth death anniversary of party founder Attaullah Mengal.

“The suicide attack occurred at 9:40 p.m. outside the Shahwani Stadium when people were coming out,” Hamza Shafqaat, Additional Chief Secretary Home, said during a news conference wherein he confirmed the latest toll.

“A total of 112 policemen were deployed to protect the venue of Balochistan National Party Mengal’s rally,” he continued. “The body of the suicide bomber was recovered from the crime scene. His age was less than 30, but his ethnicity is yet to be confirmed as investigations continue.”

Shafqaat added the provincial government had already imposed Section 144 in the province following the high-level threat alert until September 15.

“Despite the threat alert, the government allowed BNP-Mengal to hold a public rally and issued a no-objection certificate with 17 to 18 clauses, including maintaining time restrictions,” he continued.

Shafqaat said law enforcement agencies had shared 22 threat alerts with the Balochistan administration related to processions marking the birth anniversary of Prophet Muhammad (PBUH), which will be observed on Saturday.

“We are on high alert,” he added.

BNP-M, an ethnic Baloch nationalist party that campaigns for greater provincial autonomy and control over natural resources, is headed by former parliamentarian Sardar Akhtar Mengal and remains a key political force in Balochistan’s majority-Baloch districts.

Mengal said the explosion struck shortly after he escorted political allies out of the rally.

“After the rally, I was escorting our guests, including the opposition leader, Mehmood Khan Achakzai. As we left and moved a little ahead, the blast occurred,” Mengal told Arab News.

Mengal declared a three-day mourning period and a “black day” across Balochistan.

“The government didn’t inform us of any threat alert before the rally,” he said. “Further actions will be announced after discussions with our aligned political parties.”

Eyewitnesses described scenes of chaos.

“We looked back and saw flames rising up … several people were injured and some had already been martyred. We immediately picked up people and left for Civil Hospital,” Bilal Ahmed told Arab News.

Party member Agha Hassan Baloch said he and other leaders were just steps away when the bomber struck.

“We were approximately 15 to 20 feet away from the site of the explosion … it happened next to our party’s central leader Nawab Niyaz Zehri’s car, which was a suicide blast,” he said.

Provincial health officials said eight of the injured were in critical condition and had been shifted to the Combined Military Hospital.

“Teams are working around the clock to treat the wounded,” Dr. Waseem Baig, spokesperson for the provincial health department, said.


Australia moves to speed up third country deportation of non-citizens

Australia moves to speed up third country deportation of non-citizens
Updated 03 September 2025

Australia moves to speed up third country deportation of non-citizens

Australia moves to speed up third country deportation of non-citizens
  • The planned new law removes procedural fairness when Australia deports a non-citizen to a third country and is designed to limit court appeals, said the government

SYDNEY: Australia is expected to pass a law on Thursday making it easier to deport non-citizens to third countries, reviving criticism from human rights groups that it was “dumping” refugees in small island states and drawing comparisons with Trump policies.
As the United States seeks Pacific Island nations willing to accept deported non-citizens, Australia last Friday signed a deal with Nauru to resettle hundreds of people who have been denied refugee visas because of criminal convictions.
The planned new law removes procedural fairness when Australia deports a non-citizen to a third country and is designed to limit court appeals, said the government. It is expected to pass in Australia’s parliament after the opposition Liberal Party said it would support the move.
Australia will pay an upfront A$400 million to establish an endowment fund for the resettlement scheme, plus A$70 million a year in costs, Nauruan President David Adeang said in a budget speech last Friday.
Two-thirds of Nauru’s revenue last year, or A$200 million ($129.96 million), came from hosting an Australian-funded processing center for asylum seekers.
Nauru, which has a population of 12,000 and a land area of just 21 square km (eight square miles), is reliant on foreign aid, and faces a 2025 deadline to repay Taiwan A$43 million ($27.94 million) after switching diplomatic ties to Beijing, according to budget documents.
Under a decade-old policy to discourage people smuggling, Australia sends asylum seekers who arrive by boat to offshore detention centers to have refugee claims assessed, denying them Australian visas. The practice has been criticized by the United Nations Human Rights Committee.
The new Nauru resettlement scheme will cover a different group, whose visas were canceled by Australia because they served prison sentences or were refused visas on character grounds, and cannot return to countries including Iran, Myanmar and Iraq because of the risk of persecution.
Australia’s High Court ruled in 2023 that indefinite immigration detention was unlawful, resulting in around 350 non-citizens being released into the community, with a third subject to electronic monitoring.
One of this group, a 65-year-old Iraqi man, lost a High Court appeal against deportation to Nauru on Wednesday.
Law Council of Australia President Juliana Warner said on Wednesday the deportation law was “troubling” because it could put those sent to Nauru at risk of not receiving necessary health care, and is being rushed through parliament without adequate public scrutiny.
Several independent lawmakers said they were concerned it could be applied more widely than the 350 released by the High Court decision, with up to 80,000 people in the community without a visa.
Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke declined to comment on the 80,000 figure, and has said the law change is needed to maintain the integrity of the migration system.
The move was “absolutely Trump-like,” said Jana Favero, the deputy chief executive of the Asylum Seeker Resource Center.
Independent lawmaker Monique Ryan told parliament she was concerned stateless individuals and refugees who had never been convicted of a crime would be sent offshore without proper oversight, and Australia was “using a small island nation as a dumping ground.”