Pakistan flood death toll tops 1,500 as aid continues to pour in

Internally displaced people wade through floodwaters after heavy monsoon rains in Jaffarabad district in Balochistan province on September 8, 2022. (AFP)
Short Url
Updated 25 September 2022
Follow

Pakistan flood death toll tops 1,500 as aid continues to pour in

  • Pakistan has so far received relief aid via 101 flights from UAE, Saudi Arabia and other countries
  • Officials say floodwater may take up to six months to recede, estimating around $40 billion losses

ISLAMABAD: The death toll from torrential rains and floods in Pakistan has exceeded 1,500, authorities said on Thursday, amid the arrival of relief aid flights in the South Asian country.

Pakistan has witnessed unprecedented rains since the onset of monsoon season that triggered massive floods, which have so far killed 1,508 people and washed away livestock, crops, homes and key infrastructure countrywide, according to the National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA).

Pakistani officials say the floodwater, particularly in parts of Sindh and Balochistan provinces, could take up to six months to recede, while the losses from floods could run as high as $40 billion.




The National Disaster Management Authority on September 15 reported 22 more deaths in the last 24 hours, pushing the total fatalities in the devastating floods since mid-June to 1,508.

Many countries, including Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates (UAE), Turkey, China, and the United States (US), have been dispatching aid for the 35 million Pakistanis who have been directly affected by the disaster.

“101 International Relief Assistance Flights have landed in #Pakistan to aid in alleviating suffering caused by unprecedented #FloodsInPakistan,” a public diplomacy account run by the Pakistani foreign ministry said on Thursday.

“The help and support extended to the people of Pakistan in this time of need is deeply appreciated.”

The ministry said the UAE had sent 55 relief flights, the US 15, Turkey 13 and four each came from China and Qatar. UNICEF and Saudi Arabia have sent two planeloads of relief aid, while the UK, Nepal, Jordan, Uzbekistan, Turkmenistan and France have sent one each. The World Food Program has so far sent three planeloads and UNHCR 13.

Scientists on Thursday said the torrential monsoon that has submerged more than a third of Pakistan was a one in a hundred-year event likely made more intense by climate change.

Across the entire Indus River basin, the scientists found maximum rainfall was about 50 percent heavier during a two-month monsoon period due to climate change, while it was 75 percent more intense in the hardest-hit southern and southwestern regions of Pakistan.

They used 31 computer models in their analysis, combined with real-world observations.


Pakistani, Uzbek leaders urge business community to help achieve $2 billion trade target

Updated 06 February 2026
Follow

Pakistani, Uzbek leaders urge business community to help achieve $2 billion trade target

  • Pakistan and Uzbekistan have steadily increased economic ties in recent years, with bilateral trade volume reaching nearly $500 million
  • President Shavkat Mirziyoyev says business community is ‘most important bridge’ linking both nations, promising favorable business climate

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif and Uzbekistan President Shavkat Mirziyoyev on Friday urged businesspersons from both countries to help the two countries achieve a bilateral trade target of $2 billion within the next five years.

The two leaders made the call while addressing traders, industrialists from both countries at the Pakistan Uzbekistan Business Forum in Islamabad during President Mirziyoyev’s visit to the South Asian country.

Pakistan and Uzbekistan have steadily increased economic ties in recent years as Pakistan offers landlocked Central Asian states greater access to global markets, aiming to position itself as a regional transit hub.

Pakistan was the first Central Asian partner with which Uzbekistan signed a bilateral Transit Trade Agreement, along with a Preferential Trade Agreement in March 2022, covering 17 items, which became operational in 2023.

“We agreed that political goodwill must be matched by economic actions and words must be converted into implementation,” Sharif said, citing his visit to Tashkent last year which had helped brought annual bilateral trade to nearly $450 million.

“Today, ladies and gentlemen, we will strengthen last night’s protocol by signing another document today, which will give you vistas of opportunities to sit down together, B2B (business to business), have wonderful discussions with your counterparts and come to arrangements in terms of joint ventures, investments in Uzbekistan and Pakistan.”

Sharif was referring to the protocol signed between the two countries on Thursday to establish a joint working group to formulate a five-year action plan to take bilateral trade to $2 billion. Both sides also signed 28 agreements focused on areas such as defense cooperation, climate change, disaster risk reduction, disaster management, agriculture, exports of fruits, and mining and geosciences.

President Mirziyoyev said the increase in bilateral trade to half-a-billion dollars was an outcome of their talks held in Tashkent in Feb. last year.

“Over the course of very comprehensive and detailed discussions yesterday, we together decided that this is far [from] being enough,” he told businessperson from both countries.

The Uzbek president said business community is the “most important bridge” in linking the two nations and it was their job as heads of the state to ensure favorable conditions for them.

“Success of this agreement is in your hands,” he told the attendees, assuring them of eliminating any obstacles and bottlenecks in the process.

Later, Pakistan President Asif Ali Zardari conferred the Nishan-e-Pakistan, the highest civilian award of the country, on President Mirziyoyev at a televised ceremony.

The Nishan-e-Pakistan is awarded to individuals who have rendered services of highest distinction to the national interest of Pakistan and has often been conferred on visiting Heads of State as a mark of respect and friendship.