Pakistan’s Sindh says floodwaters rushing downstream from Punjab pose no imminent threat

Pakistan’s Sindh says floodwaters rushing downstream from Punjab pose no imminent threat
View of the Sukkur Barrage, as flood water passes through, following monsoon rains and rising levels of the Indus River in Sukkur district of Sindh province, Pakistan, on September 12, 2025. (REUTERS)
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Updated 13 September 2025
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Pakistan’s Sindh says floodwaters rushing downstream from Punjab pose no imminent threat

Pakistan’s Sindh says floodwaters rushing downstream from Punjab pose no imminent threat
  • Rains, floods have killed at least 97 people and affected over 4,500 villages in Punjab since late August
  • Sindh official says there are 1,651 villages that can be partially inundated if flows reached 700,000 cusecs

KARACHI: Authorities in Pakistan’s Sindh said on Saturday that floodwater rushing downstream from the eastern Punjab province pose no major threat to the southern province.

The floodwaters have been rushing southwards to Sindh after devastating Punjab, where 97 people have been killed and submerging over two million acres of farmland has been submerged since late August.

The inflow of water was 537,220 cusecs at Guddu Barrage on the Indus river, 460,490 cusecs at Sukkur Barrage and 261,234 cusecs at Kotri Barrage in Sindh, according to the provincial information department.

Syed Salman Shah, head of the Sindh Provincial Disaster Management Authority (PDMA), acknowledged that some villages in Sindh’s Dadu district have been inundated, but the situation is “not alarming.”

“The situation in Sindh is not alarming... We have identified 1,651 such villages across Sindh that could be partially inundated in case of a water flow of 700,000 cusecs,” he told Arab News.

“The residents of these villages have already been evacuated and shifted to safe locations, where they are being provided with health care, food, and other facilities.”

Shah said riverside villages in Sindh were likely to be affected if the water flows reached 700,000 cusecs.

“But since these homes are built at height after the last floods [in 2010], there may be no damages to these villages,” he said.

The floods resulted from unusually high rains and India’s release of excess water that swelled Chenab, Ravi and Sutlej rivers in Punjab, which travel southwards to merge in the Indus river in Sindh.

The deluges have affected more than 4,500 villages and over 4.4 million people in Punjab, the country’s breadbasket province, according to Relief Commissioner Punjab Nabeel Javed. Rescuers have so far transported 2.4 million people and 19.1 million livestock to relief camps after rescuing them from marooned villages in several districts.

On Saturday, the Pakistani military, which has been engaged in rescue and relief activities, said Army Chief Field Marshall Asim Munir visited flood-affected areas of Kasur and Jalalpur Pirwala in Punjab to review the prevailing flood situation and ongoing relief efforts.

“The visit to flood affected areas of Kasur and Multan focused on enhancing synergy between the civil administration and the military to ensure effective assistance for the affected population,” the Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR), the military’s media wing.

Monsoon season brings Pakistan up to 80 percent of its annual rainfall, but increasingly erratic and extreme weather patterns are turning the annual rains, which are vital for agriculture, food security and the livelihoods of millions of farmers, into a destructive force.

Rains, floods, landslides and similar incidents have killed at least 946 people nationwide since June 26, according to the National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA). The disaster has revived memories of the 2022 deluges, when a third of the country was submerged, over 1,700 people were killed and losses exceeded $35 billion.


Biggest supermoon of 2025 to light up skies in Pakistan tonight, says space agency

Biggest supermoon of 2025 to light up skies in Pakistan tonight, says space agency
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Biggest supermoon of 2025 to light up skies in Pakistan tonight, says space agency

Biggest supermoon of 2025 to light up skies in Pakistan tonight, says space agency
  • Beaver Supermoon to appear 7.9 percent larger, 16 percent brighter as it reaches its closest point to Earth
  • SUPARCO says event marks the second in a trio of consecutive supermoons visible worldwide

ISLAMABAD: The biggest and brightest supermoon of 2025 will illuminate skies across the world, including Pakistan, today, Wednesday, said the country’s space agency, calling it a rare celestial alignment when the full Moon comes closest to Earth in its orbit.

According to the Space and Upper Atmosphere Research Commission (SUPARCO), the so-called Beaver Supermoon will reach peak illumination at 6:18 p.m. in Pakistan.

“At its nearest point, the Moon will be 356,980 km (221,817 miles) from Earth, making it 7.9 percent larger and 16 percent brighter than a typical full Moon,” the space agency said. “It is the second in a trio of consecutive supermoons (October, November, December 2025) and will be visible worldwide ... offering a breathtaking view.”

SUPARCO explained that a supermoon occurs when a full Moon coincides with its perigee, the point at which it is closest to Earth in its elliptical orbit, causing it to appear unusually large and bright.

Supermoons typically occur three to four times a year, though exceptionally close alignments between Earth and the Moon are uncommon.

This year’s sequence of supermoons is among the most striking in recent years, with favorable viewing conditions expected across South Asia, including Pakistan.