Pakistan to use satellites to gauge crop losses, compensate farmers after Punjab floods

This aerial photograph shows houses submerged with floodwater at Chak Ali Sher village in Wazirabad district of Punjab province, Pakistan, on August 28, 2025. (AFP/File)
Short Url
Updated 31 August 2025
Follow

Pakistan to use satellites to gauge crop losses, compensate farmers after Punjab floods

  • Punjab health minister says river levels are easing but rehabilitation will begin once waters recede
  • Over 45,000 people evacuated in Kasur as floodwaters breach Indian embankment, swamp villages

KASUR, Pakistan: The administration of Pakistan’s eastern Punjab province will use satellite imagery to assess crop losses from this week’s devastating floods and compensate farmers, a provincial minister said on Saturday, as raging rivers submerged farmland and forced tens of thousands to flee their homes.

The flooding began on Monday after India released water into the Chenab, Ravi and Sutlej rivers following several heavy monsoon spells, swelling their flows and inundating vast tracts of land. As the rivers surged into Pakistan, they destroyed rice fields and fodder crops, swept away herds and submerged entire settlements, uprooting farming families and leaving them without food or income.

In Punjab’s Kasur district, which borders India, more than 45,000 people were evacuated on Friday night alone after powerful floodwaters broke an embankment on the Indian side of the Sutlej.

On Saturday, flocks of people were still seen moving out of their villages near Ganda Singh Headworks with livestock, many struggling in heavy rain.

“We have information on the [damaged] crops through satellite,” Punjab Health Minister Khawaja Salman Rafique told Arab News while visiting the area.

“The satellite will tell us that water entered one field and not another,” he continued. “So, on the basis of facts, data and analysis, [people will be] compensated.”

Rafique’s statement came at a time when thousands of farmers in the province had expressed despair amid impending financial pressures after losing much of their crops this year.

He said water levels in the Sutlej, Ravi and Chenab had begun to ease but large-scale rehabilitation would only begin once the rivers receded.

People, mostly women and children, continued to leave their houses, many of them saying they fear more floodwater could flow from India.

“I have come to take my children to safety but we have left three men behind to take care of animal,” Ismail Ahmad, an uprooted villager, told Arab News.

District Emergency Officer Dr. Nayyar Alam said 81 rescue teams were operating in the area and had helped evacuate residents and save more than 4,500 animals.

“Many people did not want to leave their homes and animals [even after floods], but last night the rising water level forced them to make calls for help,” he said.

Deputy Commissioner Kasur Imran Ali said around 127 villages had been hit by floodwaters in the district.

He said out of more than 45,000 people evacuated Friday night, only about 500 opted to go to government relief camps set up in schools.

“Most of the people want to stay with their relatives for a few days until the flood is over,” he said.

Meanwhile, at a camp in District Public School, some evacuees had already developed scabies and diarrhea, underscoring fears of water-borne diseases.

Authorities said medical camps were established in advance and medicine stocks had been dispatched to vulnerable areas.

Rice fields in Kasur were seen submerged in up to 13 feet of water, in what officials described as the worst flooding in nearly four decades.


Pakistan urges equal application of international law, flags Indus treaty at UN debate

Updated 4 sec ago
Follow

Pakistan urges equal application of international law, flags Indus treaty at UN debate

  • Pakistani envoy says silence over violations of international law are fueling conflicts from South Asia to Gaza
  • He urges the UN secretary-general to use the Charter’s preventive tools more proactively to help avert conflicts

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s UN ambassador on Monday called for equal application of international law in resolving global conflicts, warning that India’s decision to hold the 1960 Indus Waters Treaty in abeyance and the unresolved dispute over Kashmir continued to threaten stability in South Asia.

Speaking at an open debate of the UN Security Council on “Leadership for Peace,” Ambassador Asim Iftikhar Ahmad said selective enforcement of international law and silence in the face of violations were fueling conflicts worldwide, undermining confidence in multilateral institutions.

His remarks come months after a brief but intense military escalation between India and Pakistan in May, following a gun attack on tourists in Indian-administered Kashmir. India blamed the attack on Pakistan, a charge Islamabad denied while calling for a transparent international probe.

The attack triggered a military standoff between the two South Asian nuclear neighbors and prompted New Delhi to suspend the World Bank-brokered Indus Waters Treaty, a move Pakistan says has no basis in international law and has described as “an act of war.”

“India’s unilateral suspension of the Indus Waters Treaty — a rare and enduring example of successful diplomacy — is yet another blatant breach of international obligations that undermines regional stability and endangers the lives and livelihoods of millions,” Ahmad told the council.

He said Jammu and Kashmir remained one of the oldest unresolved disputes on the Security Council’s agenda and required a just settlement in line with UN resolutions and the wishes of the Kashmiri people, a position India has long rejected.

Ahmad broadened his remarks to global conflicts, citing Gaza, Ukraine, Sudan and other crises, and said peace could not be sustained through “selective application of international law” or by sidelining the United Nations when violations occur.

The Pakistani envoy also referred to the Pact for the Future, a political declaration adopted by UN member states this year aimed at strengthening multilateral cooperation, accelerating progress toward the 2030 development goals and reforming global governance institutions.

While welcoming the pact, Ahmad warned that words alone would not deliver peace, pointing to widening development financing gaps, rising debt distress and climate shocks that he said were reversing development gains across much of the Global South.

He called for a stronger and more proactive role for the UN Secretary-General, including earlier use of preventive tools under the UN Charter, and urged the Security Council to demonstrate credibility through consistency, conflict prevention and greater respect for international court rulings.

“No nation can secure peace alone,” Ahmad said. “It is a collective endeavor, requiring leadership, cooperation and genuine multilateralism.”