Woman with polio drowns in her home, becomes symbol of Karachi floods' devastation

Residents sit over the debris of their collapsed houses at a flooded residential area after heavy monsoon rains in Pakistan's port city of Karachi on Aug. 26, 2020. (AFP)
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Updated 31 August 2020
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Woman with polio drowns in her home, becomes symbol of Karachi floods' devastation

  • Nearly 50 people have died, according to official figures, but many remain missing as search efforts continue
  • Parts of Karachi remain submerged after thunderstorms started to lash Sindh province on Tuesday

KARACHI: When floodwaters started to enter homes in eastern Karachi on Thursday afternoon, Nusrat Aashiq was alone. Disability made it difficult for her to struggle to the surface. Nobody could hear her cries for help.
Nearly 50 people have died, according to official figures, since the worst thunderstorms hit the coastal city of 15 million on Tuesday. As search and rescue efforts are still underway, many more people remain missing, feared to have lost their struggle against the flood, like Aashiq.
“Suffering from the poliovirus, which had crippled her body, the woman might have made efforts and called for help. But no one was there to help,” Bilal Siddiqui, Aashiq’s neighbor in the Karachi Administration Employees Housing Society (KAEHS), one of the city’s most affected, told Arab News.
Police say the 42-year-old woman could not move as both her legs were paralyzed. Her husband was reportedly away when she drowned, but the case will be investigated, local police Inspector Shoaib-ur-Rehman said.




Residents sit alongside their houses at a flooded area after heavy monsoon rains in Pakistan's port city of Karachi on Aug. 26, 2020. (AFP)

Many others still remain unaccounted for and families of the missing are in anguish while footage circulated on social media fuels their fear. On Saturday evening, a widely shared video showed the body of a young man being recovered from a clogged sewage drain.
Hina Waseem, a resident of Karachi’s Jamshed town whose family was also torn apart by the flood, is still waiting for her husband who went missing when he was accompanying his mother. The mother’s body was found on Saturday. 
“Till yesterday Hina would ask about her husband and complain that we are not doing enough to find him, but since the body of her mother-in-law has been recovered, she is only crying,” Waseem’s cousin, Owais Ali, told Arab News.




People ride in a vehicle during heavy monsoon rains in Pakistan's port city of Karachi on August 27, 2020. (AFP)

As the provincial government has ordered a survey to determine the economic losses caused by the floods, after the business community claimed that Karachi alone had suffered damages of about Rs12 billion ($71.7 million) in the past few days, many ordinary people have lost their future and dreams.
Nusrat Jehan, a resident of Manzoor colony, said the items she had bought for her daughter’s dowry were all washed away by the flood. Years of saving for her child’s wedding vanished in no time. “I don’t know if I will be able to manage it again,” she said.
Shahid Rasam, a famous artist from the DHA area of the city, shared with Arab News a video showing all his paintings, books and furniture submerged in murky floodwaters. “This is DHA phase 4, a so-called posh area, with highest tax payers, and look at their suffering. In fact, the whole city has become a river of filth,” he said.
“See the condition of my studio, the canvases, the books, everything has been destroyed. The water has completely destroyed my work.”


Pakistan, Saudi Arabia resolve to strengthen economic cooperation during Davos summit 

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Pakistan, Saudi Arabia resolve to strengthen economic cooperation during Davos summit 

  • Pakistan finmin Muhammad Aurangzeb meets Saudi Arabia's Investment Minister Khalid bin Abdulaziz Al-Falih 
  • Al-Falih appreciated Pakistan's potential, particularly its natural resources, strategic location, says Pakistan Finance Division

KARACHI: Pakistan's Finance Minister Muhammad Aurangzeb and Saudi Investment Minister Khalid bin Abdulaziz Al-Falih met in Davos this week, resolving to strengthen ongoing bilateral cooperation by working closely together and maintaining high-level contact, Pakistan's Finance Division said. 

Islamabad and Riyadh have moved closer to broaden their cooperation in recent months, signing a landmark defense pact in September 2025 and agreeing to launch an economic cooperation framework a month later to strengthen bilateral trade and investment relations. 

Aurangzeb met Al-Falih during the sidelines of the 56th annual World Economic Forum (WEF) summit in Davos on Thursday, Pakistan's Finance Division said in a statement. The two sides reviewed ongoing cooperation and reviewed progress on existing and planned projects across various sectors, the statement added. 

"Both sides reiterated their strong resolve to expand bilateral collaboration by working closely together, strengthening institutional linkages and maintaining regular high-level contacts," Pakistan's Finance Division said on Thursday.

"They agreed that sustained engagement and mutual understanding would help translate shared objectives into concrete and mutually beneficial initiatives."

The Finance Division said Al-Falih appreciated Pakistan's importance and potential, particularly its natural resources, strategic location and emerging opportunities for investment.

"The meeting concluded in a positive and forward-looking spirit, with both ministers expressing confidence that closer partnership and continued dialogue would further strengthen economic and investment ties between Pakistan and the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia," the statement said. 

The two countries enjoy cordial relations dating back decades and firmly grounded in shared values, culture, faith and economic ties. The Kingdom is home to over two million Pakistani expats, making it the largest source of foreign remittances for cash-strapped Pakistan. 

Pakistan and Saudi Arabia signed 34 business agreements worth $2.8 billion across multiple sectors in 2024, further strengthening their economic cooperation. 

Riyadh has also bailed Pakistan frequently out of economic crises over the years, providing it crucial loans and oil on deferred payment basis.