‘Tomato has vanished’: Floods devastate Sindh crops, threatening Pakistan’s food supply

Special ‘Tomato has vanished’: Floods devastate Sindh crops, threatening Pakistan’s food supply
Women farmers working in their tomato fields which have been devastated by monsoon rains in Badin district of southern Sindh province on September 20, 2025. (AN Photo)
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Updated 10 min 38 sec ago

‘Tomato has vanished’: Floods devastate Sindh crops, threatening Pakistan’s food supply

‘Tomato has vanished’: Floods devastate Sindh crops, threatening Pakistan’s food supply
  • Up to 80% tomato farms in Sindh’s Badin wiped out as monsoon toll nears 1,000 deaths nationwide
  • PM declares agricultural emergency as farm losses fuel fears of food inflation and supply disruptions

BADIN: The sight of arrays of withered tomato plants comes into view as soon as one arrives at a 50-acre farm in Sindh’s Badin district in southern Pakistan.

One farmer, Najma Habibullah, said will be forced to switch to more climate-resilient crops next season. Like other tomato farmers in Badin, she rues the effects of heavy monsoon rains that have damaged all the tomato crops her family cultivated this season.

According to the Sindh Rural Support Organization (SRSO), farmers in Badin grew about 15,000 acres of tomatoes between June 15 and Augyst 15 this year, of which 70 to 80 percent have been destroyed by rains and floods.

The devastation comes as Pakistan reels from monsoon flooding since June 26 that has killed 998 people nationwide, inundated 4,700 villages in Punjab and washed away crops and homes across the agricultural heartland. Alongside high river flows, Badin itself received 200 millimeters of rain this season — double its average — compounding the damage to vegetable crops.

“The normal rainfall remains limited to 100 (millimeters) which, if crossed, brings vulnerability,” SRSO District Manager Ahmed Khan Soomro said.

“The vegetable crop has been damaged very much, especially tomato. Tomato has vanished.”

The State Bank of Pakistan has warned the floods are expected to weigh heavily on inflation and economic growth through June next year. Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif and his cabinet have declared an “agricultural emergency” in response, while President Asif Ali Zardari has directed urgent measures to safeguard food security and promote climate-resilient farming.

On the ground, farmers say their livelihoods have collapsed. Habibullah, who cultivates a landlord’s 50-acre plot her family has worked on for years, pointed to fields strewn with withered plants.

“I live in this village,” she told Arab News. “All our tomato and other crops have perished because of rains.”

She said her family had spent Rs80,000 ($284) per acre on the crop.

“We won’t get flour and other stuff that the landlord gives us anymore,” she lamented. “We will have to do a lot of labor to meet our expenses.”

Myesha Sohail, an analyst at Topline Securities Ltd., said flood-related crop damage could push consumer prices up by as much as seven percent in September, the highest monthly inflation in 26 months.

Tomatoes top the list of key contributors to inflation with a 122 percent surge in prices, followed by wheat, wheat flour, onions, potatoes, rice, chicken, eggs, and sugar, which rose by as much as 49 percent, she said in a research note on Wednesday.

“The resurgence in food inflation is primarily on the back of supply side effect on food products due to ongoing floods in the country, ” Sohail said.

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While the Provincial Disaster Management Authority has calculated Sindh’s crop losses at 350 acres of sugarcane, rice and maize, the Sindh Chamber of Agriculture (SCA) said tomato damage alone stretched across multiple districts, including Badin, Thatta, Sajawal, Mirpurkhas, Umer Kot and Tando Muhammad Khan.

“The tomato losses in all these districts are 60 to 70 percent,” said Wafa Lateef Jokhio, general secretary of the SCA’s Badin chapter.

“Not only ketchup companies, but this tomato crop will not even fulfil the requirement of our household consumers,” he said.

The SCA official expressed disappointment with the Sindh government, urging it to “think about climate change.”

“It should improve the canal, drainage system and specially activate its agriculture department to create awareness among the people,” he added.

Tomatoes are a staple in Pakistani households and vital for food processors. Multinationals such as ITT Foods (Private) Limited, National Foods Limited (NFL) and Shangrila Foods use large quantities to manufacture ketchups and sauces.

“There is a major impact to our business because we predominantly operate on tomato, chilly, and sugar,” said Syed Zeeshan Haider, chief executive officer at ITT Foods. “These are being majorly hit by the floods, affecting our supply chain in the process.”

ITT supplies sausages and other processed foods to international markets. Haider said the firm’s teams were working to safeguard farmers as well as supply chains in Umer Kot, Kunri and Badin districts.

NFL has noted on its website that Pakistan already spends about $10 million annually importing tomato paste to bridge shortfalls.

Meanwhile, the Pakistan Business Forum (PBF) has written to Finance Minister Muhammad Aurangzeb urging a relief package, calling the situation a “national emergency.” In a September 9 letter, the group proposed a guaranteed wheat support price, temporary electricity bill waivers, interest-free loans and fertilizer subsidies to help farmers recover.

“The proposed measures are not merely compensatory — they are essential for triggering a revival of agricultural productivity and restoring confidence among farming communities,” PBF President Khawaja Mehboob ur Rehman said in the letter.

But for farmers in Badin, recovery feels far off.

Noor Muhammad from Badin’s Valieri village said heavy rains had destroyed 10 acres of his tomato crop. He estimated his family suffered losses of Rs200,000 ($710) per acre this season, leaving him unsure if he could sow again.

“How would we feed our children if we will already be under debt while growing the next crop,” he asked. “The landlord will ask for his money.”


PCB to decide on Asia Cup participation today amid referee row

PCB to decide on Asia Cup participation today amid referee row
Updated 9 sec ago

PCB to decide on Asia Cup participation today amid referee row

PCB to decide on Asia Cup participation today amid referee row
  • Green Shirts scheduled to face the UAE today under the tournament format
  • Pakistan objected to match referee Andy Pycroft’s conduct after India game

KARACHI: The Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) will decide on Wednesday whether to continue competing in the Asia Cup in the United Arab Emirates, the board said, amid an ongoing row with the International Cricket Council (ICC) over replacing a match referee at the center of a Pakistan-India handshake dispute.

The PCB lodged a complaint with the ICC earlier this week, accusing Andy Pycroft of breaching the “Spirit of Cricket” by asking the Pakistan and India captains not to shake hands at the toss during Sunday’s match, seeking his removal.

The ICC has not issued an official statement yet, though some media reports suggest it has decided not to entertain Pakistan’s request.

“The PCB has not yet taken a final decision regarding the Asia Cup,” the board’s spokesperson, Aamir Mir, said in a statement late Tuesday.

“Consultations are underway and a final decision will be made by tomorrow,” he continued. “The decision will be taken keeping Pakistan’s interest in view.”

Pakistan is scheduled to face the United Arab Emirates (UAE) at the Dubai International Stadium today, but uncertainty looms over the decision to be taken by the PCB.

The Pakistan team canceled its pre-match press conference at the Asia Cup on Tuesday, though it attended the practice session.

According to AFP, the Pakistan team is still awaiting a response from the ICC regarding its complaint.
Pakistani media, citing Press Trust of India reports that quoted an unnamed ICC source, said yesterday that the ICC informed Pakistan that Pycroft would not be replaced.

Pycroft is scheduled to be the match referee for Pakistan’s game against the UAE as well.

Pakistan will again face arch-rival neighbor India if they beat the home side in Dubai today.

The Green Shirts suffered a seven-wicket defeat to India in their last match, which was the first played since the nuclear-armed countries fought a brief but deadly conflict in May.


Pakistan floods leave three million people affected, 300,000 still in tents

Pakistan floods leave three million people affected, 300,000 still in tents
Updated 2 min 48 sec ago

Pakistan floods leave three million people affected, 300,000 still in tents

Pakistan floods leave three million people affected, 300,000 still in tents
  • Nearly 1,000 killed nationwide since monsoon season began in late June
  • Relief camps, rescue operations continue as new rains forecast this week

ISLAMABAD: At least three million people have been affected by floods across Pakistan and 300,000 remain in tents, according to figures shared at a Senate briefing on Wednesday, underscoring the scale of devastation caused by this year’s monsoon season.

Heavy rains and excess water released from Indian dams caused rivers in Punjab province to swell late last month, inundating more than 4,700 villages in the country’s agricultural heartland, destroying crops and homes and forcing millions to flee.

Since the onset of the monsoon season on June 26, Punjab has reported 296 deaths out of a nationwide toll of 998, according to the National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA). Other casualties include 504 deaths in northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, 80 in Sindh, 41 in Gilgit-Baltistan, 38 in Azad Kashmir, 30 in Balochistan and nine in Islamabad.

At a meeting of the Senate Standing Committee on Climate Change, chaired by Senator Sherry Rehman, a former climate minister, participants were told that three million people have been affected by the floods and 300,000 remain in tents.

Rehman urged the government to speed up cash assistance for flood victims through the Benazir Income Support Programme (BISP), Pakistan’s main social safety net.

“The government should immediately transfer BISP assistance to flood-affected areas, any delay in this regard is unacceptable,” she said.

“Pakistan should appeal to the United Nations for assistance instead of a mini-budget.”

Rehman also called for transparency in aid distribution and improvements in camp conditions.

“The government should ensure transparency in distribution of relief among flood victims,” she said. “Relief camps should be improved to meet humanitarian standards.”

According to the statement, which cited figures from the National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA), more than 2,000 relief camps were reported operational nationwide, with rescue operations continuing in Punjab and Sindh in coordination with the Pakistan Army and Navy.

Punjab alone had around 2.9 million people affected by floods, the Senate briefing was told.

Rehman linked the current disaster to climate change, noting that Pakistan has joined the top five countries most affected by global warming.

Meanwhile, in its daily situation report, the Provincial Disaster Management Authority (PDMA) in Punjab said the flow of water in most of the province’s rivers had returned to normal.

“The Indus, Jhelum and Ravi rivers are at normal levels,” the PDMA said, adding the Chenab had normalized at Marala, Khanki, Qadirabad and Trimmu, with only medium flooding in the Sutlej at Ganda Singh Wala and low flooding at Sulemanki and Islam headworks.

The PDMA said Panjnad currently carried 194,000 cusecs of water with a low-level flood, while torrents in Dera Ghazi Khan had also normalized.

The authority warned, however, that the monsoon’s 11th spell would persist until Sept. 19, with rain expected in Rawalpindi, Murree, Galiyat and other northern districts.

Flash floods could occur in streams around Rawalpindi, Murree and Galiyat on Sept. 18 and 19.


Pakistan seeks Saudi, Emirati investment to revamp aging railway track

Pakistan seeks Saudi, Emirati investment to revamp aging railway track
Updated 13 min 8 sec ago

Pakistan seeks Saudi, Emirati investment to revamp aging railway track

Pakistan seeks Saudi, Emirati investment to revamp aging railway track
  • Railways minister says $2.5 billion needed to modernize Multan–Lahore section
  • Pakistan offers 25-year build–operate–transfer model to attract Gulf investors

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan is seeking investment from and the United Arab Emirates (UAE) to modernize its aging railway network, with officials estimating that $2.5 billion is needed for an upgrade of the key Multan–Lahore section, Railways Minister Hanif Abbasi told Arab News this week.

The South Asian nation’s railway system, much of it dating back to the 19th-century British colonial era, has long awaited large-scale modernization. Successive governments have looked to foreign partners to finance improvements, with projects promised under the China–Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) still largely stalled.

An overhaul of more than 1,800 kilometers of track has been billed as the centerpiece of a $60 billion CPEC package first announced in 2015, but no financing deal has materialized. Meanwhile, the Asian Development Bank has separately signaled interest in funding rail upgrades, including a $2 billion Karachi–Rohri project, according to recent reports.

“I am going to for two days on October 19-20. I am going to the UAE from September 30 to October 2, and I am going to France on October 24. All these things are related to railways,” Abbasi said. “So, we will meet the Saudis there and try to have Saudi investment, because this is the right time for every country, for every investor to invest in Pakistan Railways.”

Asked what proposals Pakistan would extend to , Abbasi said:

 “I think that if they come to Multan–Lahore [route], or Lahore–Rawalpindi, it is an offer from us.”

He said Pakistan would present a build–operate–transfer model to potential Gulf investors.

“We have a model: built–operate transfer. We will give them that place for 25 years. We will give them that section. They will come and talk to us.”

Abbasi said similar proposals had been offered to the UAE.

“We have offered them to invest in Multan and Lahore. We need around $2.5 billion for Multan and Lahore,” he said.

The minister also confirmed meetings with officials of Mashreq Bank, a Dubai-based institution that recently launched Shariah-compliant digital services in Pakistan. While Mashreq’s immediate focus has been on digital banking, Abbasi said discussions had included possible rail sector opportunities.


Militants kill policeman, injure two Levies troops in overnight attack on Balochistan post

Militants kill policeman, injure two Levies troops in overnight attack on Balochistan post
Updated 32 min 44 sec ago

Militants kill policeman, injure two Levies troops in overnight attack on Balochistan post

Militants kill policeman, injure two Levies troops in overnight attack on Balochistan post
  • Officials suspect Pakistani Taliban in the Sherani assault that left one Levies officer missing
  • Gunmen also looted two armored vehicles carrying about $770,000 from Turbat to Gwadar

QUETTA: Militants killed a police officer and injured two Levies personnel in a coordinated overnight assault on a security post in Pakistan’s restive Balochistan province, officials said on Wednesday, in one of two violent incidents reported in the resource-rich region

The attack took place on Tuesday night when gunmen described by authorities as militants of “Fitna Al Khawarij” stormed the Levies Thana Headquarters and Police Thana in Sherani town, Deputy Commissioner Hazrat Wali Kakar told Arab News.

The term “khawarij,” rooted in early Islamic history, is used by officials for Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) fighters who mainly operate in northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province but have also staged attacks in Balochistan.

“Levies and police personnel retaliated, engaging the militants in a fierce gunbattle,” Kakar said. “One police official, Aftab Ur Rehman, was killed in the attack and two Levies personnel, Kalu Khan and Abdul Wahid, were injured.”

“One Levies official, Azam, is still missing, and a search operation is underway in the area,” he continued.

Kakar said the attackers set a Levies vehicle ablaze and destroyed Provincial Disaster Management Authority (PDMA) stocks stored at the compound before escaping under the cover of darkness.

No group immediately claimed responsibility, but the TTP has carried out attacks in Sherani, which borders Khyber Pakhtunkhwa’s Dera Ismail Khan district where the militant group frequently targets security forces.

In a separate incident on Tuesday afternoon, unidentified gunmen intercepted and robbed two armored vehicles carrying over Rs220 million ($770,000) for two private banks from Turbat to Gwadar, about 65 km from Turbat city, said Ilahi Bukhsh, a senior Levies officer in Dasht Khadan

“Six security guards with weapons were deployed with the money-carrying vehicles but the armed men intercepted and neutralized them,” Bukhsh said.

No group has claimed responsibility for the robbery.

Balochistan, Pakistan’s largest province by landmass and rich in mineral resources, has long faced an insurgency led by separatist groups who accuse Islamabad of exploiting its wealth while neglecting locals.

Pakistan denies the charge, saying it has invested in the province’s development.


Pakistan calls Israel’s Qatar strike an attack on Gaza peace mediation at UN rights debate

Pakistan calls Israel’s Qatar strike an attack on Gaza peace mediation at UN rights debate
Updated 17 September 2025

Pakistan calls Israel’s Qatar strike an attack on Gaza peace mediation at UN rights debate

Pakistan calls Israel’s Qatar strike an attack on Gaza peace mediation at UN rights debate
  • Pakistan’s envoy at UN Human Rights Council delivers statement on behalf of the OIC
  • He reaffirms support for all steps by Doha to protect its sovereignty under the UN Charter

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s envoy to the United Nations Human Rights Council in Geneva, Ambassador Bilal Ahmad, on Tuesday described Israel’s strike on Qatar this month as an attack on the mediation process the Gulf state has been facilitating to secure a Gaza ceasefire and the release of Israeli hostages held by Hamas.

Speaking during an urgent debate of the Council on behalf of the Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC), Ahmad said Israel’s Sept. 9 airstrike on a residential neighborhood in Doha, where Hamas leaders were discussing a US-backed Gaza ceasefire proposal, amounted to a blatant assault on international efforts to broker peace.

Qatar has played a pivotal role as a mediator in ceasefire and hostage negotiations between Israel and Hamas and hosts the Palestinian group’s political bureau to facilitate the process. However, Israel said it had targeted Hamas “terrorists” as the United States did when it killed Al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden in Pakistan in May 2011.

“The OIC Group condemns in the strongest terms the Israeli aggression against Qatar on 9 September 2025 in blatant violation of international law and the UN Charter,” the Pakistani diplomat said. “We strongly denounce this attack on the mediation process that Qatar has hosted commendably alongside regional and international countries to address the catastrophic humanitarian crisis in the OPT [Occupied Palestinian Territory], particularly Gaza.”

“This unjustifiable and unprovoked attack constitutes a dangerous escalation threatening the very foundation for the enjoyment of all human rights by all peoples in the region, as well as an attack on the sovereignty, security and territorial integrity of the State of Qatar under the pretext of countering terrorism,” he added.

Ahmad expressed solidarity with Qatar and supported all steps it may take to protect its security and sovereignty in accordance with the UN Charter.

His statement urged the international community to compel Israel to halt its “dangerous and ongoing attacks” in the region and called on the Council and its mechanisms to ensure accountability for what it described as serial violations of international law.

It said mediation efforts by Qatar and other countries offered “a starting point toward a just and lasting regional peace with equal rights and dignity for all peoples in the region, especially the people under occupation in Palestine.”

Ahmad’s statement came as a UN inquiry commission concluded on Tuesday Israel is committing genocide against Palestinians in Gaza.

The Israeli military launched a campaign in Gaza after Hamas attacked southern Israel in October 2023, killing nearly 1,200 people and taking about 250 hostages. Hamas said the assault was a response to the plight of Palestinians living under Israeli occupation.

Israel’s retaliation has since killed about 65,000 residents of Gaza and flattened civilian neighborhoods, while senior Israeli officials have spoken publicly about “erasing” Palestine and displacing its people to other Arab countries.