At least 150 dead, 233 injured as monthlong monsoon rains pound Pakistan

Motorcyclists drive through a flooded road caused by heavy monsoon rainfall in Karachi, Pakistan, on July 24, 2023. (AP)
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Updated 26 July 2023
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At least 150 dead, 233 injured as monthlong monsoon rains pound Pakistan

  • Pakistan to receive monsoon rains in various parts within next 48 hours, says disaster management authority
  • Easter Punjab province reports highest number of total deaths at 66, KP reports 41 casualties since June 25

ISLAMABAD: At least 150 people have been killed and 233 injured in rain-related incidents across Pakistan since June 25, the National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA) said on Wednesday, as the South Asian country continues to reel from heavy monsoon rains that have triggered landslides and flooding. 

Unusually heavy rains and melting glaciers last year wreaked havoc across Pakistan, killing over 1,700 people and destroying large amounts of crops and critical infrastructure. Already reeling from an economic crisis, Pakistan had estimated damages from the floods to be around $30 billion. 

Pakistan, which ranks high among the list of countries that are impacted by climate change disasters, has received heavy monsoon rains this year, causing its rivers in the eastern Punjab province to rise to dangerous levels, forcing authorities to relocate people in low-lying areas to safer ones. The NDMA said on Tuesday heavy monsoon rains would lash various areas of the country in the next 48 to 72 hours. 

"The threat of flash floods, seasonal flooding, and landslides will remain in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Gilgit-Baltistan, and Azad Kashmir," the disaster management authority said on Twitter. 

In its daily situation report, the NDMA said cumulative deaths from rain-related incidents have reached 150 across Pakistan since June 25, with Punjab reporting the largest number of deaths at 66, followed by KP with 41 casualties, Sindh with 15 deaths, and Islamabad reporting 11 dead.

Pakistan's southwestern Balochistan province and Azad Kashmir reported six deaths each while the northern Gilgit-Baltistan region has reported five deaths since June 25. 

The South Asian country reported 12 deaths and 10 injuries from rain-related incidents over the past 24 hours, the NDMA report said, with KP reporting the highest figure of six across all provinces. 

At least 468 houses have been partially and fully damaged across Pakistan, with the highest number reported in KP at 184.


Pakistani PM seeks faster reform implementation in talks with World Bank chief 

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Pakistani PM seeks faster reform implementation in talks with World Bank chief 

  • 10-year World Bank framework announced last year will focus $20 billion in lending to Pakistan over the coming decade on development issues 
  • Ajay Banga is on his first official visit to Pakistan as head of World Bank Group and as Islamabad works to advance multi-year reform agenda 

ISLAMABAD: Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif and World Bank Group President Ajay Banga agreed on Monday on the need to accelerate implementation and strengthen oversight of development priorities, as Islamabad seeks to deliver reforms “at speed and scale” under the World Bank’s Country Partnership Framework (CPF), Sharif’s office said.

Banga is on his first official visit to Pakistan as head of the World Bank Group and as the country works to advance a multi-year reform agenda supported by international financial institutions, including the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund.

According to a statement issued by the Prime Minister’s Office, Sharif welcomed Banga and acknowledged the World Bank Group’s long-standing partnership with Pakistan, particularly its support through the 10-year CPF announced last year. The one-of-a-kind plan will focus $20 billion in lending to the cash-strapped nation over the coming decade on development issues like the impact of climate change as well as boosting private-sector growth.

The prime minister said Pakistan was pursuing a comprehensive, domestically driven reform program aimed at achieving sustainable economic stability, the statement said, adding that the government was working across multiple sectors, including energy, agribusiness, digital development, fiscal reforms and job creation.

“Prime Minister and Mr.Banga reiterated the need to fast-track implementation and ensure strong oversight to deliver impact at speed and scale on CPF-aligned priorities,” a statement from Sharif’s office said.

“These measures would duly assist Prime Minister’s initiative to address and resolve Implementation bottlenecks in development projects.”

Sharif also reaffirmed the government’s commitment to structural reforms aimed at unlocking job-rich growth and strengthening investor confidence, according to the statement.

According to the statement, Banga welcomed Pakistan’s ongoing reform efforts and reaffirmed the World Bank Group’s commitment to deepening cooperation through what he described as a “One World Bank Group” approach, the statement said. 

“Greater leverage of private resources, in addition to strong coordination with development partners, is necessary to meet the ambition of the government’s reform agenda,” the statement quoted Banga as saying.

Pakistan has relied heavily on multilateral financing and development support in recent years as it navigates balance-of-payments pressures, high inflation and the need for deep-seated structural reforms to boost growth and resilience.

The South Asian nation is currently under a $7 billion International Monetary Fund bailout program, which requires the country to boost government revenues and shore up external sources of financing, much of which comes from loans from China and Gulf nations.

Announcing the CPF last January, Sharif said in a post on social media platform X that the new plan would focus the global institution’s pledge of $20 billion in areas including clean energy and climate resilience in the ten years from 2026.

The World Bank said in a statement at the time that policy and institutional reforms to boost private sector growth and expand fiscal space for government investment in crucial areas would also be key to the CPF.

“We are focused on prioritising investment and advisory interventions that will help crowd-in much needed private investment in sectors critical for Pakistan’s sustainable growth and job creation, including energy and water, agriculture, access to finance, manufacturing and digital infrastructure,” said Zeeshan Sheikh, the World Bank’s International Finance Corporation Country Manager for Pakistan and Afghanistan in a statement.

The World Bank has currently committed about $17 billion to Pakistan for 106 projects.