Pakistan warns of more rains, floods as monsoon death toll hits 105 since June

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Updated 14 July 2025
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Pakistan warns of more rains, floods as monsoon death toll hits 105 since June

Pakistan warns of more rains, floods as monsoon death toll hits 105 since June
  • Third spell of seasonal rains expected to begin July 14, meteorological department says
  • Punjab reports highest number of fatalities, followed by Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Sindh

ISLAMABAD: The Pakistan Meteorological Department (PMD) warned on Monday heavy monsoon downpours are likely to trigger flash floods and landslides across several regions of the country this week, as the death toll from rain-related incidents since June 26 rose to 105.

The toll includes 40 deaths in Punjab, Pakistan’s most populous province, followed by 31 in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP), 17 in Sindh, 16 in Balochistan, and one reported fatality in Azad Kashmir, according to official figures.

A total of 211 people have been injured in rain-related incidents, with Punjab again reporting the highest number (111), followed by KP (54), Sindh (7), Azad Kashmir (5), and Balochistan (4).

The National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA) has warned that a third spell of monsoon rains is expected to begin across the country from today, Monday, July 14.

“A low-pressure area (LPA) presently located over northwest Madhya Pradesh (India) is likely to affect Pakistan during next 24 to 72 hours,” the PMD said in its forecast.

“Under the influence of this weather system, strong monsoon currents are expected to penetrate central and upper parts [of the country]. A westerly wave is also present over upper parts of the country.”

The PMD said heavy rains with wind and thunderstorms are likely in most parts of KP, Punjab, Kashmir, Gilgit-Baltistan, Islamabad and northeast and southern Balochistan on Monday.

“Scattered heavy falls (at times very heavy) are likely in Islamabad, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Kashmir, Punjab, and northeastern Balochistan,” it added.

Authorities have warned of possible landslides and mudslides in hilly areas such as Murree, Galliyat, KP, Kashmir, and Gilgit-Baltistan, which could result in road closures and blockades.

“Heavy downpour may cause urban flood in low-lying areas of Islamabad/Rawalpindi, Gujranwala, Lahore, Sialkot, Sargodha, Faisalabad, Nowshera, and Peshawar,” the PMD said. “Caution is advised for the public.”

The NDMA has called on provincial and district administrations to prepare emergency response teams, ensure the availability of rescue machinery, and clear drainage systems in urban areas. Tourists have been advised to avoid high-altitude areas during the period of heavy rainfall.

Pakistan, a country of more than 240 million people, is among the nations most vulnerable to climate change. In 2022, record monsoon rains combined with glacial melt caused catastrophic flooding that affected 33 million people and killed more than 1,700.


Saudi business delegation holds talks in Islamabad as PM hails Riyadh’s ‘unwavering’ support

Saudi business delegation holds talks in Islamabad as PM hails Riyadh’s ‘unwavering’ support
Updated 08 October 2025
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Saudi business delegation holds talks in Islamabad as PM hails Riyadh’s ‘unwavering’ support

Saudi business delegation holds talks in Islamabad as PM hails Riyadh’s ‘unwavering’ support
  •  Prime minister hosts Saudi delegation as Saudi-Pakistan Joint Business Council meets in Islamabad
  • Sharif says new defense pact formalizes decades of brotherly cooperation between the two nations

ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif on Wednesday hosted a Saudi business delegation led by Prince Mansour bin Mohammed bin Saad Al Saud, chairman of the Saudi-Pakistan Joint Business Council, as both sides held talks in Islamabad to expand trade and investment ties.

The delegation’s visit under the framework of the Saudi-Pakistan Joint Business Council will guide expanded economic cooperation and follows the Strategic Mutual Defense Agreement signed between the two countries on Sept. 17.

Speaking at a luncheon in honor of the delegation, Sharif praised Saudi Arabia’s “unwavering and eternal” support for Pakistan, saying the recently signed defense pact had formalized decades of strategic partnership between the two nations and opened the door to deeper economic collaboration.

“And the agreement which we have signed, it’s basically a formalization of our brotherly arrangements which were there in an informal fashion for decades and that has been formalized and I think since we are brothers and brothers has always come to help brothers and that is what this agreement all about,” Sharif said.

The prime minister described his recent visit to Riyadh on last month as “exceptional,” saying it reflected a “new level of warmth” from Saudi Crown Prince and Prime Minister Mohammed bin Salman, whose leadership, he said, had transformed the Kingdom’s society and economy.

Sharif said both sides were now ready to translate the defense pact’s spirit of cooperation into joint ventures across trade, agriculture, food security, construction, and research, pledging to personally work with Saudi leaders and investors to deliver results.

The Saudi delegation, comprising prominent business figures, was in Islamabad to follow up on investment and trade opportunities identified during Sharif’s visit to Riyadh last month. Prince Mansour told participants that Saudi Arabia’s government and private sector were keen to invest in Pakistan’s food security, agriculture, meat processing, construction, and pharmaceutical industries.

“We have lots of interest from our government and from our leadership and also for the private sector to be invested in Pakistan,” Prince Mansour said, adding that the visit aimed to “deliver on strategic projects” under the business council’s framework.

The meeting is part of a broader diplomatic and economic reset between Islamabad and Riyadh, which have in recent months expanded cooperation across defense, investment, and labor mobility, as Pakistan seeks to strengthen ties with its largest source of remittances and one of its closest regional allies. 


AI-powered alert system brings life-saving disaster warnings to Pakistan’s deaf community

AI-powered alert system brings life-saving disaster warnings to Pakistan’s deaf community
Updated 51 min 38 sec ago
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AI-powered alert system brings life-saving disaster warnings to Pakistan’s deaf community

AI-powered alert system brings life-saving disaster warnings to Pakistan’s deaf community
  • ‘SUNO’ platform developed by ConnectHear, Ufone delivers sign language alerts via WhatsApp during disasters
  • Backed by the GSMA Innovation Fund, the initiative aims to make disaster communication more inclusive

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s ConnectHear, a social enterprise promoting disability inclusion, in collaboration with a telecom giant, on Wednesday launched an artificial intelligence-powered early warning system designed to deliver life-saving alerts in sign language to the deaf and hard-of-hearing community.

The system, called SUNO — meaning “listen” in Urdu — is funded by the GSMA Mobile for Humanitarian Innovation Fund and aims to close a critical gap in disaster communication by ensuring deaf individuals receive real-time alerts during emergencies such as floods and earthquakes.

Pakistan is among the world’s most climate-vulnerable countries, facing recurring floods, earthquakes and heatwaves that endanger millions each year. More than 1,700 people were killed in the catastrophic 2022 floods, which submerged a third of the country and displaced over 8 million others, according to official figures. Floods this year have killed over 1,000 people and displaced millions. 

In such crises, emergency warnings can mean the difference between life and death, yet people with disabilities are often excluded from mainstream alert systems. Initiatives like SUNO aim to bridge that gap, ensuring that every citizen, regardless of ability, can receive timely, life-saving information during disasters.

Estimates for the number of deaf and hard-of-hearing people in Pakistan vary, with the World Health Organization (WHO) citing approximately 10 million people. 

“Our collaboration with ConnectHear reflects our belief that true digital inclusion leaves no one behind,” said Hatem Bamatraf, President and Group CEO of PTCL and Ufone 4G. “Through our partner ConnectHear, we are using technology with purpose to create impact that truly matters.”

Through SUNO, sign language video alerts are instantly broadcast via telecom company Ufone’s WhatsApp bot, reaching at-risk individuals across Pakistan free of charge. ConnectHear produces the sign language content using AI technology, while Ufone provides nationwide network distribution.

Azima Dhanjee, Co-founder of ConnectHear, whose parents are both deaf, said the initiative addresses a long-standing exclusion in emergency communication.

“In an emergency, communication isn’t just important, it’s a matter of life and death,” she said at the launch event. 

“For far too long, deaf individuals have been cut off from urgent alerts and forced to rely on others during disasters. With this project, we’re finally changing that.”

Kimberly Brown, Head of Mobile for Humanitarian Innovation at GSMA, said the initiative demonstrates how inclusive technology can save lives.

“Through the GSMA Innovation Fund for Humanitarian Challenges, supported by the UK Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office, we are proud to back ConnectHear’s AI-powered platform, which brings life-saving information to deaf communities in Pakistan,” she said. 

“By harnessing mobile voice services and low-bandwidth tools, this initiative shows how mobile can break barriers in disaster preparedness.”


Pakistan provincial chief minister resigns on Imran Khan’s orders amid surge in militancy

Pakistan provincial chief minister resigns on Imran Khan’s orders amid surge in militancy
Updated 08 October 2025
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Pakistan provincial chief minister resigns on Imran Khan’s orders amid surge in militancy

Pakistan provincial chief minister resigns on Imran Khan’s orders amid surge in militancy
  • PTI Secretary-General Salman Akram Raja says Sohail Afridi to replace Gandapur as CM
  • Gandapur confirms resignation, saying has returned “trust” to Imran Khan on his instructions

ISLAMABAD: Ali Amin Gandapur, the chief minister of Pakistan’s northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, said on Wednesday he had stepped down on the instructions of party leader and former prime minister Imran Khan, ending weeks of speculation about a leadership change.

The news comes amid mounting criticism of the provincial government’s handling of law and order. Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, governed by Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party since 2013, has faced a sharp resurgence of militant activity in recent months, with officials reporting record casualties among security forces.

In a statement, Gandapur said he had resigned on Khan’s direction. 

“The position of chief minister was a trust given to me by Imran Khan,” he said. “On his instructions, I am returning that trust to him and submitting my resignation.”

Gandapur’s departure marks a major internal shake-up in Khan’s party, which continues to dominate Khyber Pakhtunkhwa politics despite facing crackdowns and leadership challenges since Khan’s ouster as prime minister in 2022. Khan himself has been in jail since 2023 and faces a slew of legal challenges he says are politically motivated to keep him away from public office.

Speaking to reporters on Wednesday, PTI Secretary General Salman Akram Raja said Gandapur had been removed by Khan, linking it to the deteriorating security situation in KP.

“It is true, Sohail Afridi will be the chief minister of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa in place of Ali Amin Gandapur,” Raja told reporters.

Afridi is a PTI lawmaker from Khyber district, part of Pakistan’s northwestern tribal belt bordering Afghanistan. A longtime loyalist of Khan, Afridi was elected to the provincial assembly in 2024 and is considered part of PTI’s younger leadership circle. 

He has maintained close ties with the party’s central leadership and has been an advocate for stronger provincial oversight of law and order in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, where security forces are battling a resurgence of militant activity. Afridi’s expected elevation is seen within PTI as a move to restore control and stability in the province after months of political friction.

Raja said Gandapur’s removal was linked to the worsening security situation in the province, particularly a deadly assault in Orakzai district in which 11 security personnel, including a lieutenant colonel and a major, were killed during an intelligence-based operation on Wednesday.

“Khan sahib is very sad,” Raja said. “The incident that happened in Orakzai … there is no choice for him now but to do the change.”

Gandapur, a senior PTI figure and former federal minister, had been serving as chief minister since March last year. His tenure was marked by friction with both the federal government and factions within his own party, particularly over administrative control and political appointments. He had also publicly sparred with Aleema Khan, the former premier’s sister, over party influence in the province. 


Afghan music collector fears for cassette legacy as Pakistan intensifies deportations

Afghan music collector fears for cassette legacy as Pakistan intensifies deportations
Updated 08 October 2025
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Afghan music collector fears for cassette legacy as Pakistan intensifies deportations

Afghan music collector fears for cassette legacy as Pakistan intensifies deportations
  • Muhammad Hassan has preserved thousands of Afghan folk cassettes in Peshawar’s “Mini Kabul” since the 1990s
  • Pakistan’s ongoing refugee crackdown has forced many Afghans to abandon businesses and decades of cultural heritage

PESHAWAR: A faint Pashto melody drifts through the dense alleyways of Board Bazaar in the northwestern Pakistani city of Peshawar, growing clearer as one leaves behind the clatter of shopkeepers and motorbikes.

At the far end of a narrow five-foot lane in this neighborhood long known as Mini Kabul, the song becomes distinct: Afghan folk tales echoing from an old cassette player inside a mud-brick shop with wooden gates flung wide.

Inside, shelves are stacked with hundreds of cassette tapes, some cracked, others faded, alongside battered televisions and radios that fill every corner. Bent over an old radio under the glow of a small lamp is Muhammad Hassan, known locally as Azmari, or “tiger” in Pashto. The 50-year-old Afghan refugee has spent thirty-five years collecting and repairing what may be one of Pakistan’s largest archives of Afghan folk music.

In the small shop he rents, Hassan has preserved around 2,000 master cassettes featuring legendary Afghan musicians like Shah Wali, Nawab, Munawar, Said Alam, many of whom are no longer alive. 

“All these cassettes are of Afghans [musicians],” he said as he carefully adjusted a stack of cassettes at his shop earlier this month. “They are Afghan folk music.”

His devotion to the collection has turned the shop into an informal archive of Afghan cultural memory — a treasure now at risk as Pakistan presses ahead with its most aggressive deportation campaign in decades.

The government began expelling undocumented foreigners in November 2023, after ordering all Afghans without valid documents to leave by October 31 that year. The UN estimates more than 800,000 Afghans have since returned to Taliban-ruled Afghanistan, many under duress. 

Thousands more remain in limbo, fearing detention or forcible repatriation as Pakistan widens the crackdown in 2025.

For Hassan, deportation would mean the loss not only of his livelihood but of his life’s work.

“A lot of people tell me not to abandon this work and not to sell it,” he said. “I have a passion for it myself. If I were to sell it, I would have done it before, as some people came from Jalalabad [Afghanistan] to purchase it.”

When the Taliban seized Kabul in August 2021, they swiftly banned music, calling it un-Islamic. 

For Hassan, that decree turned his passion into potential evidence. The cassettes he treasures could be used against him under Taliban rule where he to return to Afghanistan with them:

“If I take all these cassettes to Afghanistan, they [the Taliban] will burn or destroy them and there is a threat to my life as well.”

Asked what he would do if forced to leave Pakistan, Hassan looked down at the radios and reels surrounding him. 

“I don’t know what I will do,” he said, his voice trailing. “I am not going to sell them even if I am forced to go to Afghanistan. I will see, I have some friends in Pakistan and I will keep these cassettes with them.”

“THESE SONGS WILL REMAIN”

Hassan’s story, like that of millions of Afghans in Pakistan, began in exile. 

He came to Pakistan in the early 1980s, when military ruler General Zia-ul-Haq’s government opened the border to millions of Afghans escaping the Soviet invasion of their homeland. He apprenticed under his uncle for three years to learn radio repair, but his life changed when a local merchant decided to sell off his entire cassette inventory before emigrating to Iran.

“A person who was in the cassette business had decided to go to Iran. He asked us to buy his cassettes,” Hassan recalled. “We didn’t have much money to buy them but thought it was a profitable business.”

That decision set him on a lifelong mission. Through the 1990s, Board Bazaar thrived as a hub for Afghan music, films, and trade and Hassan made a steady living from his cassettes.

“By God, I didn’t do anything great in my life but just managed my household expenses through this business for 35 years,” he said softly. “May god not be upset with us, but this is how we spent our life, whether you call it good or bad.”

Though modern technology and mobile phones have rendered the cassette business obsolete, Hassan still attracts loyal customers, mostly Afghan men in their fifties and sixties, who come to copy music onto tape. He charges around 250 rupees per recording.

Among them is Sher Ali, a 60-year-old refugee from Jalalabad now living in Nowshera, who has ordered a dozen cassettes. 

“I come at least once a month to pay salam and copy some cassette recordings from him [Azmari],” Sher Ali said. “If he is not present in the shop, I really get upset and return home sadly from Board Bazaar.”

For Hassan, such devotion affirms the worth of his work, even as time and politics conspire against it. 

“We have spent our lives in this,” he said, glancing at the wall of tapes that define his existence. “Whatever happens next, these songs will remain.”


Pakistan army widens message from security to diplomacy, lauds Saudi defense pact

Pakistan army widens message from security to diplomacy, lauds Saudi defense pact
Updated 08 October 2025
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Pakistan army widens message from security to diplomacy, lauds Saudi defense pact

Pakistan army widens message from security to diplomacy, lauds Saudi defense pact
  • Army chief has taken unusually visible role in diplomacy, appearing in key foreign meetings and meeting Trump twice, once without PM Sharif
  • Army says pact with Riyadh reflects “shared values, mutual respect, joint vision for peace and security in Middle East and South Asia”

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s army leadership on Wednesday linked national security with diplomatic outreach as it welcomed a new Strategic Mutual Defense Agreement with Saudi Arabia, describing it as a step toward regional peace and joint defense cooperation.

Chaired by Field Marshal Asim Munir, the country’s army chief, the 272nd Corps Commanders’ Conference in Rawalpindi reviewed counterterrorism operations, the security environment and relations with neighboring countries and allies. In an unusual addition for a military statement, the communiqué issued after the meeting also referred to Pakistan’s “recent high-level diplomatic engagements,” underscoring the military’s growing and more transparent role in international affairs. 

In recent months, Field Marshal Munir has played an unusually visible role in Pakistan’s diplomatic outreach, appearing alongside Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif in meetings with foreign leaders and envoys. He has also met US President Donald Trump twice in a matter of months — once jointly with Sharif and once separately — underscoring the military’s direct involvement in shaping Pakistan’s external engagements.

“The participants acknowledged the significance of Pakistan’s recent high-level diplomatic engagements and reaffirmed the commitment to global and regional peace,” the Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR), the army’s media wing, said in a statement after the meeting.

“The Forum welcomed the landmark Strategic Mutual Defense Agreement between Pakistan and the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, aimed at strengthening strategic relations and enhancing multi-domain cooperation for a joint response to any external aggression.”

The ISPR said the pact with Riyadh reflected “shared values, mutual respect, and a joint vision for peace and security in the Middle Eastern and South Asian regions.” The agreement follows months of high-level exchanges between the two countries and comes amid growing defense and economic cooperation under Saudi Arabia’s Vision 2030 framework.

The statement said the forum carried out an extensive assessment of current counterterrorism operations and affirmed that the armed forces remain fully prepared to counter threats from Pakistan’s adversaries in every domain. 

Without naming Indian Army Chief Gen. Upendra Dwivedi, the statement took aim at recent remarks by Indian leaders, calling them provocative and aimed at stoking “war hysteria for political benefits.” 

Dwivedi told soldiers near the Pakistan border on Friday that Islamabad must stop “backing terror” if it wanted to “remain on the world map.” Dwivedi said India would not show the restraint it exercised during a brief war with Pakistan in May this year, in which, according to the Indian army, nine facilities inside Pakistan were hit and more than 100 Pakistani soldiers and militants killed.

The May 2025 hostilities — the most serious confrontation between the nuclear-armed neighbors in years — saw Pakistan and India exchange missile, drone and artillery strikes for four days before an uneasy ceasefire was restored through US mediation.

The Pakistan army and government have responded to Dwivedi’s remarks, saying any Indian aggression would be met with a swift and decisive military response.

Wednesday’s forum also reaffirmed support for “comprehensive counterterrorism operations across all domains” to dismantle networks of “Indian-sponsored terror proxies.” Islamabad has long accused neighbors like India and Afghanistan of backing militant groups that attack Pakistan, Both Kabul and New Delhi deny the allegations. 

The army also expressed solidarity with Palestinians and called for a ceasefire in Gaza, backing a two-state solution with “an independent Palestinian state based on pre-1967 borders and Al-Quds Al-Sharif as its capital.” It also reiterated Pakistan’s “uncompromising support” for the people of Kashmir in line with UN Security Council resolutions.

In closing remarks, Munir directed commanders to ensure “the highest standards of operational readiness, discipline, physical fitness, innovation and responsiveness,” expressing full confidence in the army’s capability to counter threats “across the entire spectrum, from conventional and sub-conventional to hybrid and asymmetric.”