Heavy rain, landslides kill seven people in northwest Pakistan

A street vendor carries umbrellas as he waits for customers along a road during a rain shower in Lahore on January 19, 2022. (AFP/File)
Short Url
Updated 30 March 2024
Follow

Heavy rain, landslides kill seven people in northwest Pakistan

  • Heavy rain and thunderstorm hit parts of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Punjab provinces as well as the federal capital on Friday
  • Another nine people were injured as the showers triggered landslides, damaged roofs of several homes in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa

ISLAMABAD: Torrential rain and landslides have killed at least seven people in Pakistan’s northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) province, a senior rescue official said on Saturday.

The deaths resulted from landslides and roof collapse incidents in Peshawar, Nowshera, Shangla, Bannu and Bajaur districts, according to Rescue 1122 Director-General Dr. Khateer Ahmed.

“Four of the deceased were aged under 10 years,” Ahmed said in a statement, adding that another nine individuals sustained injuries in various incidents.

Heavy rain and thunderstorm hit parts of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Punjab provinces as well as the federal capital on Friday, with intermittent showers continuing for hours.

Partial damages to property were also reported in several districts across KP, according to Ahmed.

The official said all Rescue 1122 control rooms in the province were fully functional and people could call their helpline in case of any emergency.

In a statement, KP Chief Minister Ali Amin Gandapur expressed regret over the death of two children in a landslide in Shangla. He directed district administration to take necessary steps to provide immediate relief to the affected family.

“The provincial government stands with the affected family in this hour of grief,” Gandapur said in a statement. “They will not be left alone and will be provided all possible assistance.”


Afghan trade resilient in 2025 as Iran, Central Asia routes offset Pakistan closures

Updated 40 min 18 sec ago
Follow

Afghan trade resilient in 2025 as Iran, Central Asia routes offset Pakistan closures

  • Tensions with Islamabad this year disrupted established transit corridors that connected Afghanistan to seaports for decades
  • Afghan traders ‌moved cargo ‌through Iran’s Chabahar port , expanded ​overland ‌shipments via Uzbekistan, Turkmenistan, Tajikistan

KABUL:  Afghanistan’s trade remained resilient in 2025 despite repeated closures of key border crossings with Pakistan, commerce ministry data ​showed, as exporters and importers increasingly relied on alternative routes through Iran and Central Asia.

The stability came even as tensions with Islamabad disrupted established transit corridors that have been landlocked Afghanistan’s main gateway to seaports for decades.

Traders instead ‌moved cargo ‌through Iran’s Chabahar port ‌and expanded ⁠their ​overland ‌shipments via Uzbekistan, Turkmenistan and Tajikistan, cushioning the impact of delays and political uncertainty.

Total trade — the value of exports and imports combined — rose from the previous year to nearly $13.9 billion in 2025, according to the ⁠commerce ministry. Exports stood at roughly $1.8 billion, broadly ‌steady year on year, ‍while imports increased to ‍just over $12.1 billion.

India, Pakistan and several ‍Central Asian states remained among Afghanistan’s largest export destinations with shipments dominated by dried fruit, coal, carpets, saffron and agricultural produce.

Imports continued to ​be led by fuel, machinery, food staples and industrial inputs, mainly from ⁠Iran, the United Arab Emirates, China and regional neighbors. Afghanistan is accelerating efforts to reduce its reliance on Pakistan in the wake of border closures linked to security disputes.

 While Pakistan remains its fastest route to the sea, Afghan officials say diversifying its trade corridors has enabled commerce to continue even while relations with its eastern neighbor ‌remain strained.