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. 


Pakistan launches digital cash aid for low-income families during Ramadan, PM says

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Pakistan launches digital cash aid for low-income families during Ramadan, PM says

  • Ramadan relief moves from state-run Utility Stores to targeted digital wallet transfers
  • Government to transfer financial assistance through wallets to support sehri, iftar expenses

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan will provide financial assistance to low-income households through digital wallets during the fasting month of Ramadan, Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif said on Thursday, announcing a government relief initiative aimed at helping families afford daily meals.

The support program comes as many Pakistanis continue to face elevated food and utility costs despite easing inflation, with Ramadan traditionally increasing household spending on staple foods, fruits and energy consumption.

For decades, government-run Utility Stores Corporation outlets were central to Ramadan relief in Pakistan, selling subsidized flour, sugar, ghee and pulses through special “Ramzan packages” that drew long queues in low-income neighborhoods. In recent years, however, authorities have steadily scaled back the system amid mounting losses, corruption complaints and logistical inefficiencies, shifting instead toward targeted cash transfers delivered through digital wallets and banking channels. 

The change reflects a broader policy move away from state-managed commodity distribution toward direct financial assistance intended to give households flexibility while reducing leakages in subsidy programs.

“The Government of Pakistan has launched a Ramadan package under which financial assistance will be transferred to deserving individuals through digital wallets so that households can maintain sehri and iftar meals,” Sharif said in a message issued by his office.

The prime minister said Ramadan encourages compassion and collective responsibility toward vulnerable segments of society, adding that welfare support was part of the state’s duty during the holy month.

Officials say the digital cash transfers approach improves transparency and reduces corruption risks while enabling faster payments nationwide, particularly in urban low-income communities.

But the shift to fully digital assistance also brings challenges. 

Access to smartphones and reliable mobile Internet remains uneven, particularly in rural areas and among older recipients, while many low-income households use SIM cards registered to someone else, complicating verification.