Pakistan landslide after heavy rain kills 5, with 15 missing

Monsoon season brings South Asia 70 to 80 percent of its annual rainfall, and runs from June until September in India and Pakistan. Above, people remove the wreckage of a van from a drainage after heavy monsoon rains in Islamabad on July 21, 2025. (AFP)
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Updated 22 July 2025
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Pakistan landslide after heavy rain kills 5, with 15 missing

  • Flash floods, collapsed buildings and electrocutions have killed 221 people nationwide
  • Nearly 100 homes have been destroyed in the floods, and rescue operations were ongoing

KHAPLU, Pakistan: A landslide triggered by torrential monsoon rains swept away cars in mountainous northern Pakistan, killing at least five people, with more vehicles buried under the debris, officials said Tuesday.

Flash floods, collapsed buildings and electrocutions have killed 221 people nationwide since the monsoon season arrived in late June with heavier rains that usual.

More than eight vehicles were swept away on Monday when heavy rains triggered a landslide on a highway in Diamer district, Gilgit-Baltistan region.

“One local resident and four tourists have died and among the deceased is an unidentified woman,” Atta-ur-Rehman Kakar, a senior official in Diamer, said in a video statement Tuesday.

Nearly 100 homes have been destroyed in the floods, and rescue operations were ongoing, he added.

The region is a popular tourist destination, marked by towering mountains, deep valleys and wide rivers.

Faizullah Faraq, spokesperson for the regional government, said hundreds of visitors have been rescued.

“Government teams cleared debris and escorted them off the mountain road, while local villagers provided emergency shelter and assistance,” Faraq added.

Floods and landslides in the area have blocked major highways, damaged communication signals, four bridges, a hotel and a school.

Washed out buses used by tourists were left abandoned on the side of the road after the destruction caused by the landslides.

Rescued families holding babies and carrying rucksacks sat on rocks while rescue teams handed them food at the scene of a landslide.

Nationwide, the death toll from monsoon-related incidents since June 26 includes 104 children, while more than 500 people have been injured, Pakistan’s National Disaster Management Agency said Tuesday.

A spokeswoman for the agency told AFP that the heavy rains usually start later in the monsoon season.

“Such death tolls are usually seen in August, but this year the impact has been markedly different,” she said.

Monsoon season brings South Asia 70 to 80 percent of its annual rainfall, and runs from late June until September in Pakistan.

The annual rains are vital for agriculture and food security, and the livelihoods of millions of farmers, but also bring destruction.

Sherry Rehman, the former climate change minister, pointed out “the absence of an effective, comprehensive disaster management system in the country,” in a statement released by her office.

In late June, at least 13 tourists were swept to their deaths while sheltering from flash floods on a raised river bank.

In 2022, monsoon floods submerged a third of the country and killed 1,700 people.


India moves closer to dengue vaccine as final trials underway

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India moves closer to dengue vaccine as final trials underway

NEW DELHI: As dengue surges globally, an Indian vaccine candidate has entered the final stage of testing, raising hopes for one of the world’s first single-dose shots against the deadly mosquito-borne disease.
Dengue, which causes severe flu-like symptoms and debilitating body aches, has exploded globally, fueled by rising temperatures and densely populated cities.
The World Health Organization (WHO) says that almost half the world’s population is now at risk, with 100-400 million infections every year. India alone has recorded over one million cases and at least 1,500 deaths since 2021.
Hoping to stem the global epidemic, Panacea Biotec has begun final Phase III trials of its vaccine, DengiAll, which has been pursuing for nearly 15 years.
More than 10,000 volunteers across the country are enrolled in the study, overseen by the Indian Council of Medical Research, with the vaccine on track for rollout as early as next year if the trial results are favorable.
“We will try to get this vaccine out there as soon as possible,” Syed Khalid Ali, chief scientific officer of Panacea, told AFP in New Delhi.
Doctor Ekta Gupta, professor of clinical virology at the Institute of Liver and Biliary Sciences in New Delhi, said dengue was now considered hyperendemic in India, with all four virus serotypes circulating simultaneously.
“This vaccine is very much needed right now to control the occurrence of these cases, or at least prevent the severity.”

- Climate change -

Monsoon outbreaks regularly push Indian hospitals to their limits, crowding urban wards and leaving rural regions grappling with late diagnoses and poor access to care.
Higher temperatures and changing rainfall patterns create ideal conditions for Aedes mosquitoes — the vectors of dengue — to reproduce and spread the virus.
Children are particularly vulnerable to the more severe form, called dengue hemorrhagic fever, as they are more likely to suffer low platelet counts and shock.
Participants in Phase III trials, which started in 2024, were randomly assigned to receive either the vaccine or a placebo, with the results expected later this year.
Vaccines against all four dengue serotypes have long posed a scientific challenge. Immunity to one strain does not protect against others, and secondary infections can be more severe.
Most existing candidates require multiple doses.
If approved, DengiAll would become one of the world’s first single-dose dengue vaccines, following Brazil’s approval of a similar shot last year.
It would also be the first such vaccine available in India, where no dengue shot is currently licensed for public use.
“We will be the second (single-dose) vaccine to come out... But in India and several lower-middle-income countries, we will be the first ones to roll out the dengue vaccine,” Ali said.
The candidate is based on a tetravalent strain originally developed by the US National Institutes of Health.

- ‘Hope for future’ -

Panacea is the most advanced of three Indian firms licensed to use the strain, having developed its own formulation and secured a process patent.
Inside the company’s research labs, doctor Priyanka Priyadarsiny, head of biological R&D, said vaccine development involves several steps, from proof-of-concept studies to regulatory checks.
“We are extremely cautious about purity, safety and adverse effects,” she said. “Only after meeting regulatory specifications can a product be considered safe for public use.”
At present, the WHO recommends only one dengue vaccine, Qdenga, produced by Japan’s Takeda for children aged six to 16 in high-transmission settings.
Qdenga, which requires two doses administered three months apart, is not currently available in India.
Ali said DengiAll could be given to people aged one to 60 and is expected to offer long-term protection.
In India, final approval would come from the Drug Controller General of India, while WHO prequalification would be required for large-scale international use.
Experts say a successful Indian-made vaccine could be key to affordability and mass rollout in lower-income countries.
Virologist and Oxford University fellow Shahid Jameel — who is not connected with the trial — warned dengue incidence could rise by 50-75 percent by 2050 under current climate change trends.
Still, he cautioned that only Phase III results would determine whether a candidate meets the criteria for a safe and effective dengue vaccine.
“Phase III testing and follow-up are needed to show if the above conditions are met,” he told AFP.
“Only then can we have a useful dengue vaccine. It is still early days, but there is hope for the future.”