Flood survivors begin to return home in Pakistan's eastern Punjab as water recedes

Flood survivors begin to return home in Pakistan's eastern Punjab as water recedes
Villagers wade through the floodwaters as they make their way to safer places in Alipur, a town of Muzaffargarh district in Punjab province of Pakistan on September 12, 2025. (AFP/File)
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Updated 15 September 2025
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Flood survivors begin to return home in Pakistan's eastern Punjab as water recedes

Flood survivors begin to return home in Pakistan's eastern Punjab as water recedes
  • Swollen rivers in Pakistan’s Punjab displace over 2.5 million, killed 104 during weeks of monsoon deluges
  • Punjab carried out one of its largest rescue, relief operations with provincial teams helped by the military

MULTAN, Pakistan: Displaced families began returning home as floodwaters significantly receded across much of Pakistan’s eastern Punjab province, where swollen rivers displaced more than 2.5 million people and killed about 100 during weeks of monsoon deluges, officials said Monday.

Photos and videos posted on social media show lush fields that once swayed with crops are now only sand and silt. Returning residents said they will have to replant while rebuilding their homes.

Floodwater levels are decreasing at Panjnad, where the Jhelum, Chenab, Ravi, Beas and Sutlej rivers all converge before flowing into the Indus, said Irfan Ali Kathia, the authority’s director general.

Rescue and relief operations in some districts are ongoing, officials said.

Nargis Bibi, 46, from a village in Kasur district, said the Sutlej river swept into her village home, forcing her to flee with her husband, daughter and two sons.

“We waded through 5 to 6 feet of water to reach a safe place, but the flood came so suddenly that we couldn’t take even a needle with us,” she said. “When we returned, everything was destroyed.”

Muhammad Sajjad, a 43-year-old farmer from an orchard-owning family, said floodwaters from the Chenab river had receded by about 6 feet near Multan, allowing his family to return home.

More than 4,500 villages in Punjab were inundated during weeks of torrential rains and repeated water releases from overflowing dams in neighboring India, according to the Punjab Disaster Management Authority.

The flow of water in the Ravi and Chenab rivers has returned to normal and levels on the Sutlej river is falling, the agency said.

India shared at least six flood alerts with Pakistan in recent weeks and the water releases swelled rivers in Punjab, causing significant damage, according to Pakistan’s National Disaster Management Authority.

The agency directed returning residents to follow instructions from local administrators so they can receive government assistance or stay in camps if their villages remain unsafe.

The flooding would not have been as severe if India had released water from its dams gradually, Pakistani officials said.

The floodwaters are moving south toward Pakistan’s Sindh province, which bore the brunt of Pakistan’s catastrophic 2022 floods that killed more than 1,700 people nationwide.

Punjab carried out one of its largest rescue and relief operations with provincial teams assisted by the military, Kathia said.

Stranded families in the remote villages of Liaquatpur and Jalalpur Pirwala continue to receive aid. Many displaced residents have returned to their homes in Narowal, Okara, Kasur, Bahawalpur and Bahawalnagar, Kathia said.

More than 950 people have died nationwide in flooding since late June.


Pakistan KP province chief minister booked over remarks against state institutions

Pakistan KP province chief minister booked over remarks against state institutions
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Pakistan KP province chief minister booked over remarks against state institutions

Pakistan KP province chief minister booked over remarks against state institutions
  • Case accuses Chief Minister Sohail Afridi of making “false, derogatory” statements
  • Complaint says remarks were recorded, circulated online to malign state institutions

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s cybercrime authorities have registered a case against Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) Chief Minister Sohail Afridi over remarks he made about state institutions, accusing him of issuing “false, misleading and derogatory” statements, according to a police report reviewed by Arab News on Monday.

The case was filed on Sunday after Afridi spoke to reporters outside Rawalpindi’s Adiala Jail, where he had gone to meet Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) leader and jailed former prime minister Imran Khan. During the exchange, Afridi criticized Pakistan’s security forces and their conduct in the province.

The complaint says Afridi “knowingly and deliberately with malafide intentions and ulterior motives uttered false, misleading, derogatory and intimidating words against State Institutions,” and that the remarks were recorded and shared online.

“In the aforementioned video, the accused made statement containing offensive, profane, false, misleading, and unfounded allegations, with the intent to malign, defame, and cause harm to the reputation and integrity of the State Institutions of Pakistan,” the police report states.

The complaint says the remarks were promoted through political social media channels as an “organized attempt” to undermine public trust and “create unrest in the country and destabilize national security.”

Afridi has been booked under sections relating to hate speech, offenses against the dignity of a person and false or fake information under Pakistan’s electronic crimes law. The investigation has been assigned to a sub-inspector at the cybercrime agency.

Responding to the charges, KP Governor Faisal Karim Kundi said the statements “undermine the honor and sacrifices of security forces” fighting militancy in the region, where violence has surged in recent months.

Afridi became chief minister last month after replacing Ali Amin Gandapur. His PTI party has repeatedly accused the federal government and the military of restricting its political space, allegations officials deny.

Pakistan has increasingly pursued defamation and cybercrime cases in response to criticism of the military, which continues to wield significant influence in national politics. The government and army deny political persecution.