Many displaced by Pakistan’s flood-hit Punjab return to find homes, crops destroyed

Many displaced by Pakistan’s flood-hit Punjab return to find homes, crops destroyed
A flood-affected woman boards a boat as she evacuates her flooded house in Jalalpur Pirwala of the Multan district in Punjab province on September 8, 2025, after the Chenab River overflowed following heavy monsoon rains. (AFP)
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Updated 18 September 2025
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Many displaced by Pakistan’s flood-hit Punjab return to find homes, crops destroyed

Many displaced by Pakistan’s flood-hit Punjab return to find homes, crops destroyed
  • Floods triggered by monsoon rains, overflowing dams in India have damaged 2.5 million acres of farmland in Punjab
  • Punjab relief commissioner says authorities will begin survey next week to assess damage to crops, homes, infrastructure

KHANEWAL, Pakistan: Most of the 2.6 million people displaced by record floods in Pakistan’s Punjab province have returned home to find their houses damaged and their crops destroyed, as authorities promised Thursday to compensate all victims.

Flooding triggered by heavy monsoon rains and water from overflowing dams in India since August has damaged 2.5 million acres of farmland and killed 118 people, according to Punjab relief commissioner, Nabil Javed.

In a statement, the Punjab Disaster Management Authority said August brought the province’s worst flooding on record.

Displaced families are returning now that the water is receding, he said, adding said authorities will begin a survey next week to assess damage to crops, homes and infrastructure in Punjab.

Many survivors said they learned about their losses only upon returning to the flood-hit villages. In Qatalpur village in Punjab, 45-year-old Mohammad Mohsin broke down after returning from a relief camp with his family. His house is still standing but is riddled with cracks.

“The flood destroyed us, our crops are gone,” he told The Associated Press. “We survived the waters, but I fear one day the roof will fall on us. My house needs urgent repair, but so far we have received no government aid.”

In the same village, Parveen Bibi, 39, showed the remains of her broken home where she now sleeps with her children.

“During the flood, we stayed on the riverbank and got food from the government,” she said. Bibi said so far, no official has visited to assess their losses.

Along a roadside in Khanewal district in Punjab, Sajjad Hussain, 52, said he spent a week under the open sky with his family after his village was submerged earlier this month.

“Now that the water has gone, I am going back,” the farmer said. “Even if the government only gives me a tent, I will thank God.”

The swelling of the Ravi, Chenab and Sutlej rivers in recent weeks was “unprecedented,” said Irfan Ali Kathia, the authority’s director general. “Water has receded in most areas,” he said.

Kathia said the waters are now moving south toward Sindh province.

Pakistan witnessed its most devastating monsoon season in 2022 when floods killed 1,739 people and caused an estimated $40 billion in damage.


Pakistan says import duty revenues up 25 percent despite tariff cuts, PM pushes for faster tax reforms

Pakistan says import duty revenues up 25 percent despite tariff cuts, PM pushes for faster tax reforms
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Pakistan says import duty revenues up 25 percent despite tariff cuts, PM pushes for faster tax reforms

Pakistan says import duty revenues up 25 percent despite tariff cuts, PM pushes for faster tax reforms
  • Government says tariff reforms did not reduce revenue, with duty-free imports of raw materials rising over 40 percent
  • Sharif says effective administrative measures must be taken to eliminate weaknesses in the tax collection system

ISLAMABAD: The government on Saturday said revenue collection from import duties and taxes had risen by 25 percent this year despite tariff reductions, as Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif chaired a weekly review meeting on tax reforms and directed officials to accelerate modernization of the country’s revenue system.

The Federal Board of Revenue (FBR), Pakistan’s chief tax authority, has been at the center of the government’s reform drive, which includes automation, digital monitoring and the use of artificial intelligence to curb leakages and meet ambitious tax targets.

Officials told the meeting that tariff reforms carried out this year had been supported by improvements in customs processes, while duty-free imports of raw materials and intermediate goods had increased sharply under measures aimed at boosting manufacturing and exports.

“Tariff reforms this year have had no negative impact on revenue collection,” officials said during the briefing, according to a statement released by the Prime Minister’s Office. “Instead, duties and taxes at the import stage have increased by 25 percent.”

“This rise has come despite only a 3.6 percent increase in the volume of dutiable goods, disproving the concern that lower tariffs would reduce revenue,” they added.

The briefing maintained that duty-free imports jumped 41.5 percent, driven mainly by raw materials and intermediate items, a trend described as “a sign of improved productivity at the industrial level.”

The prime minister said the latest economic indicators had validated the government’s reform agenda and reflected “steadily improving” economic activity.

“Our tariff reforms and efforts to modernize and make the FBR transparent are producing concrete results,” he continued.

Officials also told the meeting that the purpose of tariff rationalization and tax system improvements was to lower manufacturing costs, strengthen exports and create a more competitive investment environment.

Sharif also instructed authorities to intensify efforts against tax evasion and plug gaps in major sectors such as tobacco, tiles and other high-revenue industries.

“Effective administrative and institutional steps must be taken to eliminate weaknesses in the tax collection system,” he said.

Last month, the FBR also reported a “significant increase” in income tax return filings, saying 5.9 million returns had been submitted by the end of October, up from five million in the same period last year, a 17.6 percent rise.

Of these, 3.6 million taxpayers filed returns with tax payments, an 18.6 percent increase over 2024.