Pakistan PM orders comprehensive flood loss survey as river levels ease downstream

Pakistan PM orders comprehensive flood loss survey as river levels ease downstream
Villagers wade through the floodwaters as they make their way to safer places in Alipur, a town of Muzaffargarh district in Punjab province on September 12, 2025, after the Head Panjnad overflowed following heavy monsoon rains. (AFP/ file)
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Updated 16 September 2025
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Pakistan PM orders comprehensive flood loss survey as river levels ease downstream

Pakistan PM orders comprehensive flood loss survey as river levels ease downstream
  • PM Sharif says full assessment needed before government can finalize recovery plan
  • Punjab death toll rises to 112 since late August, with 4.7 million people affected

KARACHI/ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif on Tuesday directed federal and provincial authorities to conduct a comprehensive and “realistic” assessment of the human, financial and agricultural losses caused by weeks of monsoon rains and floods, warning that rehabilitation efforts could only be planned once the full scale of damage was known.

Heavy rains and excess water released from Indian dams caused the rivers in the province of Punjab 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 290 deaths out of a nationwide toll of 992, 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.

Chairing a floods review meeting in Islamabad, PM Sharif said damages to crops, livestock, roads and communications must be counted alongside deaths and displacement and instructed agencies to seek satellite support from the Pakistan Space and Upper Atmosphere Research Commission (SUPARCO). He also called on authorities to prioritize crop protection and road restoration in inundated areas.

“Only after a complete estimation will the government formulate a comprehensive strategy for rehabilitation so that effective progress can be made in the restoration of affected areas and people,” Sharif said in a statement.

Earlier on Tuesday, the Punjab Provincial Disaster Management Authority (PDMA) said the provincial death toll had risen to 112 since late August and that a survey had been launched to assess household and crop losses.

More than 4.7 million people and 4,700 villages have been affected, according to the Punjab Disaster Management Authority, with 2.6 million people relocated to safer areas, the PDMA said. 

As stagnant floodwaters linger, officials have warned of an elevated risk of dengue fever in urban and rural centers, with the meteorological department cautioning of “unprecedentedly high risk” of outbreaks in at least ten major cities from Sept. 20.

Despite contributing less than one percent of global greenhouse gas emissions, Pakistan is among the countries most vulnerable to climate change. Catastrophic floods in 2022 killed nearly 1,700 people, submerged a third of the country at one point, and inflicted over $30 billion in damages, according to government estimates.

RIVERS FLOW DOWNSTREAM

After swelling in Punjab last month, the Ravi, Sutlej and Chenab rivers are now feeding into the Indus as floodwaters move south toward Sindh province. These rivers meet at Panjnad in southern Punjab before joining the Indus, Pakistan’s main waterway, which flows the length of the country before emptying into the Arabian Sea.

Latest flow readings on Tuesday evening showed levels easing or holding steady at most points.

On the Chenab, water remained stable at the Marala, Khanki and Qadirabad headworks — barrage-like control structures that regulate flows into Punjab’s canal system — while downstream at Trimmu inflows were measured at 78,756 cusecs.

On the Ravi, inflows were steady at Jassar near the Indian border, Shahdara on the outskirts of Lahore, and Balloki further south. The Sutlej also remained high but largely stable, with 89,060 cusecs at Ganda Singh Wala near Kasur, 90,593 at Sulemanki, and 65,224 at Islam Headworks. At Panjnad, where Punjab’s five rivers converge, inflows reached 219,434 cusecs.

Downstream in Sindh, the Indus continued to run high, with 609,137 cusecs recorded at Guddu Barrage and 502,667 at Sukkur, still classed as “high flood.” Kotri Barrage, the last major control point before the river enters the Arabian Sea, eased to around 293,000 cusecs in the “medium flood” range.

Authorities warned elevated levels would persist at Sukkur for several days before gradually receding toward Kotri.


Germany offers to pay Afghans stranded in Pakistan to drop relocation plans

Germany offers to pay Afghans stranded in Pakistan to drop relocation plans
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Germany offers to pay Afghans stranded in Pakistan to drop relocation plans

Germany offers to pay Afghans stranded in Pakistan to drop relocation plans
  • Move is part of conservative German government’s efforts to show voters it is tackling immigration
  • Around 2,000 Afghans approved for relocation to Germany remain stranded after Berlin backed out

BERLIN: Germany has offered cash to Afghan nationals stranded in Pakistan if they give up efforts to enter Europe’s biggest economy under a resettlement program, Interior Minister Alexander Dobrindt said on Wednesday.

The move is part of an effort by conservative Chancellor Friedrich Merz’s government to show it is tackling migration, a major concern for many German voters at a time when the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) tops several opinion polls.

Around 2,000 Afghans approved for relocation to Germany under a program for people at risk under Taliban rule or who had worked with German forces have been stranded in Pakistan for months after Berlin froze the scheme, set up by the previous government, to curb migration.

Individuals with binding approval to enter Germany will be allowed in, subject to security checks, said Dobrindt, but others will not, he said, without providing any numbers.

“It is logical that if we assume that people have no possibility of being admitted to Germany, we offer them some perspective and this is linked to making a financial offer for a voluntary return to Afghanistan or another third country,” Dobrindt said.

“These offers have been made to these people in recent days,” he said without saying what sum was available or how many people had been made an offer.

German media have reported the payments to amount to several thousand of euros, with a first instalment available in Pakistan and more on arrival in Afghanistan or a third country.