Saudi Arabia expresses solidarity with Pakistan after massive floods kill nearly 1,000

Residents wade through a flooded street after heavy monsoon rainfalls in Sukkur of Sindh province, southern Pakistan on August 26, 2022. (AFP)
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Updated 25 September 2022
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Saudi Arabia expresses solidarity with Pakistan after massive floods kill nearly 1,000

  • The kingdom extends condolences to the families of 982 people who have died in recent rains, floods so far
  • Saudi Arabia’s KSRelief this week also sent emergency relief aid to 17 flood-ravaged districts across Pakistan

ISLAMABAD: The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia has expressed solidarity with Pakistan, the Saudi foreign ministry said on Saturday, after monsoon downpours and floods killed nearly 1,000 people and submerged large swathes of land across the South Asian nation.

At least 982 people, including 316 children, have died in different rain-related incidents across Pakistan since mid-June, according to the National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA) data issued late Friday. 

More than half of these casualties are from southwestern Balochistan and southern Sindh provinces, where 234 and 339 people have died respectively amid record rains that have affected millions of people across the country. 

“The Ministry of Foreign Affairs expresses the solidarity of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia’s solidarity with the brotherly Republic of Pakistan, due to the heavy rains, floods and torrential rains that resulted in deaths, injuries and missing persons,” the Saudi foreign ministry said on Twitter. 

“The Ministry expresses the Kingdom’s sincere condolences to the families of the deceased and to the Government of Pakistan due to this painful incident, wishing the injured a speedy recovery and those missing would survive.” 

 

 

Pakistan has strong political, cultural, economic and defense ties with Saudi Arabia. The kingdom is also home to more than 2.5 million Pakistani expatriates and a key source of remittances and oil supply to Islamabad. 

Earlier this week, Saudi Arabia’s KSRelief sent 100 trucks that carried 950 tons of food items for flood-ravaged districts of Pakistan. The consignment, the third from the aid agency since the monsoon began, included 10,000 food packages. 


Evictees of slum near Islamabad’s diplomatic quarter claim abandonment as city cites security, illegal settlement

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Evictees of slum near Islamabad’s diplomatic quarter claim abandonment as city cites security, illegal settlement

  • Authorities say evictees were compensated in the early 2000s, settlement built later illegally
  • Evictees, for whom historical and emotional costs outweigh legal arguments, say they feel abandoned

ISLAMABAD: Muzaffar Hussain Shah bends down, picks up a brick from the rubble and cleans it with a hammer. Until a few weeks ago, the brick had been part of a home where Shah had lived for nearly five decades, since his birth.

The house in an informal settlement in Islamabad, which came to be known as Muslim Colony, was demolished in an anti-encroachment drive. Shah said he has spent past three weeks sleeping under the open sky and has been collecting the last remaining bricks to get by for a few more days.

Shah, 48, is one of nearly 15,000 people evicted by the Capital Development Authority (CDA) from the settlement, which was established in the 1960s to house laborers who built Pakistan’s capital of Islamabad, during a drive that began in November.

The decades-old settlement, located near the prime minister’s official residence and the Diplomatic Enclave, a specially designated area within the city that houses foreign embassies, high commissions and international missions, has now been reduced to a 712-kanal (89-acre) stretch of dust and debris.

“It feels as if there is neither a sky over our heads nor anyone behind our backs,” Shah told Arab News on Tuesday, surrounded by the rubble of his demolished home. “Nor is there anything ahead of us. We cannot see anything at all.”

Man collecting rubble from a demolished colony in Islamabad, Pakistan, on December 30, 2025. (AN photo)

While evacuated residents recount a tale of what they described as broken political promises and affiliation with the place, authorities say there were “obviously security concerns”, and that claims to the land were settled two decades ago. 

During an interview with Arab News, Dr. Anam Fatima, director of municipal administration at the Islamabad Metropolitan Corporation, showed satellite images of the “informal settlement” from 2002.

The images showed significant population growth over the years, which she said indicated that most current residents arrived after 2002, when the government negotiated the resettlement of original residents in return for compensation.

“In 2002, it was decided that these people will be compensated, and they were accordingly compensated,” Fatima said.

“Seven hundred and fifty [residents] were found eligible. They were given plots in Farash Town,” she said about a neighborhood on Islamabad’s outskirts. “Some of them moved, some of them did not, but the original settlement was not removed, unfortunately.”

Man cutting tree trunk in Islamabad, Pakistan, on December 30, 2025. (AN photo)

The official attributed the survival of the settlement and its subsequent growth to “enforcement failure” and “changing policies” over the years, insisting that all legal formalities were met before the latest operation.

“Notices were given first to vacate and then after the evacuations had been done... people had completely moved their belongings, only then bulldozers were sent into the area,” Fatima said.

For the evacuated residents, the historical and emotional costs outweigh the legal arguments, they say. Many claim their families moved there more than six decades ago and were promised permanent housing in exchange for their labor.

Muhammad Hafeez, whose father arrived in 1972, lamented that the ones who had helped built Islamabad were being rewarded in the form of eviction from the same city.

“Allah will definitely question you about this,” he said.

Man collecting rubble from a demolished colony in Islamabad, Pakistan, on December 30, 2025. (AN photo)

Muhammad Khalil, 62, another evictee, blamed CDA officials for allowing the settlement not just to exist but also to grow over the years.

“We did not bring these houses down from space and place them here. CDA officials were present here, they were aware of the developments taking place every single minute, every moment,” he said.

“Their vehicles would come daily. We built these houses right in front of them.”

As bulldozers cleared the land this month, many residents of Muslim Colony said they felt abandoned by the city they once helped build.

“All of this Islamabad that has been built was built by our elders,” Shah said. “Laborers used to live here. And today, after having built Islamabad, today, we have become illegal.”

Authorities, however, say the evictees had been residing illegally and had been compensated, maintaining that they had to be relocated.

“It was entirely illegal because whatever right that they had, it was already compensated in 2003 by the authority,” Dr. Fatima said.