‘Tomato has vanished’: Floods devastate Sindh crops, threatening Pakistan’s food supply

Women farmers working in their tomato fields which have been devastated by monsoon rains in Badin district of southern Sindh province on September 20, 2025. (AN Photo)
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Updated 17 September 2025
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‘Tomato has vanished’: Floods devastate Sindh crops, threatening Pakistan’s food supply

  • Up to 80% tomato farms in Sindh’s Badin wiped out as monsoon toll nears 1,000 deaths nationwide
  • PM declares agricultural emergency as farm losses fuel fears of food inflation and supply disruptions

BADIN: The sight of arrays of withered tomato plants comes into view as soon as one arrives at a 50-acre farm in Sindh’s Badin district in southern Pakistan.

One farmer, Najma Habibullah, said will be forced to switch to more climate-resilient crops next season. Like other tomato farmers in Badin, she rues the effects of heavy monsoon rains that have damaged all the tomato crops her family cultivated this season.

According to the Sindh Rural Support Organization (SRSO), farmers in Badin grew about 15,000 acres of tomatoes between June 15 and Augyst 15 this year, of which 70 to 80 percent have been destroyed by rains and floods.

The devastation comes as Pakistan reels from monsoon flooding since June 26 that has killed 998 people nationwide, inundated 4,700 villages in Punjab and washed away crops and homes across the agricultural heartland. Alongside high river flows, Badin itself received 200 millimeters of rain this season — double its average — compounding the damage to vegetable crops.

“The normal rainfall remains limited to 100 (millimeters) which, if crossed, brings vulnerability,” SRSO District Manager Ahmed Khan Soomro said.

“The vegetable crop has been damaged very much, especially tomato. Tomato has vanished.”

The State Bank of Pakistan has warned the floods are expected to weigh heavily on inflation and economic growth through June next year. Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif and his cabinet have declared an “agricultural emergency” in response, while President Asif Ali Zardari has directed urgent measures to safeguard food security and promote climate-resilient farming.

On the ground, farmers say their livelihoods have collapsed. Habibullah, who cultivates a landlord’s 50-acre plot her family has worked on for years, pointed to fields strewn with withered plants.

“I live in this village,” she told Arab News. “All our tomato and other crops have perished because of rains.”

She said her family had spent Rs80,000 ($284) per acre on the crop.

“We won’t get flour and other stuff that the landlord gives us anymore,” she lamented. “We will have to do a lot of labor to meet our expenses.”

Myesha Sohail, an analyst at Topline Securities Ltd., said flood-related crop damage could push consumer prices up by as much as seven percent in September, the highest monthly inflation in 26 months.

Tomatoes top the list of key contributors to inflation with a 122 percent surge in prices, followed by wheat, wheat flour, onions, potatoes, rice, chicken, eggs, and sugar, which rose by as much as 49 percent, she said in a research note on Wednesday.

“The resurgence in food inflation is primarily on the back of supply side effect on food products due to ongoing floods in the country, ” Sohail said.

“VULNERABILITY”

While the Provincial Disaster Management Authority has calculated Sindh’s crop losses at 350 acres of sugarcane, rice and maize, the Sindh Chamber of Agriculture (SCA) said tomato damage alone stretched across multiple districts, including Badin, Thatta, Sajawal, Mirpurkhas, Umer Kot and Tando Muhammad Khan.

“The tomato losses in all these districts are 60 to 70 percent,” said Wafa Lateef Jokhio, general secretary of the SCA’s Badin chapter.

“Not only ketchup companies, but this tomato crop will not even fulfil the requirement of our household consumers,” he said.

The SCA official expressed disappointment with the Sindh government, urging it to “think about climate change.”

“It should improve the canal, drainage system and specially activate its agriculture department to create awareness among the people,” he added.

Tomatoes are a staple in Pakistani households and vital for food processors. Multinationals such as ITT Foods (Private) Limited, National Foods Limited (NFL) and Shangrila Foods use large quantities to manufacture ketchups and sauces.

“There is a major impact to our business because we predominantly operate on tomato, chilly, and sugar,” said Syed Zeeshan Haider, chief executive officer at ITT Foods. “These are being majorly hit by the floods, affecting our supply chain in the process.”

ITT supplies sausages and other processed foods to international markets. Haider said the firm’s teams were working to safeguard farmers as well as supply chains in Umer Kot, Kunri and Badin districts.

NFL has noted on its website that Pakistan already spends about $10 million annually importing tomato paste to bridge shortfalls.

Meanwhile, the Pakistan Business Forum (PBF) has written to Finance Minister Muhammad Aurangzeb urging a relief package, calling the situation a “national emergency.” In a September 9 letter, the group proposed a guaranteed wheat support price, temporary electricity bill waivers, interest-free loans and fertilizer subsidies to help farmers recover.

“The proposed measures are not merely compensatory — they are essential for triggering a revival of agricultural productivity and restoring confidence among farming communities,” PBF President Khawaja Mehboob ur Rehman said in the letter.

But for farmers in Badin, recovery feels far off.

Noor Muhammad from Badin’s Valieri village said heavy rains had destroyed 10 acres of his tomato crop. He estimated his family suffered losses of Rs200,000 ($710) per acre this season, leaving him unsure if he could sow again.

“How would we feed our children if we will already be under debt while growing the next crop,” he asked. “The landlord will ask for his money.”


Pakistan making diplomatic efforts to de-escalate Middle East tensions, FM says

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Pakistan making diplomatic efforts to de-escalate Middle East tensions, FM says

  • The statement came as Iran pressed on with a third day of strikes in the Gulf in response to US-Israeli air raids
  • Pakistan’s position is clear that all countries must abide by principles of UN Charter, international law, FM says

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan is making diplomatic efforts to de-escalate heightened tensions in the Middle East, Foreign Minister Ishaq Dar said on Monday, amid US-Israeli strikes on Iran and Tehran’s counterstrikes against US bases in Gulf countries.

Tensions escalated across the Middle East on Saturday after coordinated US-Israel strikes killed Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei among other senior Iranian officials. Tehran responded by targeting US military bases in the UAE, Bahrain, Qatar, Kuwait and Jordan. Saudi Arabia said Iran also launched attacks targeting Riyadh and the Eastern Province.

The Iranian missile and drone strikes continued on Monday in retaliation for the ongoing US-Israeli air raids, casting uncertainty over the future of the Islamic republic and heightening the risk of broader instability in the already volatile region.

Speaking at a press conference, FM Dar, who recently returned from Saudi Arabia where he attended an Organization of Islamic Cooperation OIC) meeting on Palestine, said Pakistan is very closely monitoring the evolving situation in Iran and the tensions which are building up in the region.

“These serious developments have taken place at a time when diplomatic efforts were underway to reach a peaceful and negotiated solution to [Iran nuclear program],” he said.

“We are making our full diplomatic efforts and, you know, requesting all parties to de-escalate and to refrain.”

Dar said Islamabad was concerned over a violation of the norms and international law, and the age-old tradition that the heads of state and the government should not be targeted.

“Post-World War II, we all know that these institutions were created to create some international, you know, law and order, and that’s why there was a UN Charter. There are certain conventions which we all are supposed to follow,” he said.

“But things are on ground moving very differently, which obviously is worrisome... The international law must prevail and the conventions must be respected.”

The statement came hours after the Ras Tanura oil refinery in Saudi Arabia sustained limited damage as a result of debris from the interception of two drones in its vicinity, the Saudi Press Agency reported, citing an official source at the Saudi Ministry of Energy.

Several American warplanes crashed in Kuwait on Monday morning but their crew survived, Kuwait’s defense ministry said, as Iran pressed on with a third day of strikes in the Gulf.

Dar said Pakistan’s position has been clear and persistent that all countries must abide by the principles of UN Charter and international law, including respect for the sovereignty and territorial integrity of other states as well as international humanitarian law.

“In my latest conversation with [Iranian] Foreign Minister Abbas Araqshi on 28th of February, I conveyed Pakistan’s condemnation of the attacks and called for restraint and diplomacy and dialogue, which he positively responded,” he shared.

“But on ground, we are seeing that things are not yet settling or easing out.”

Pakistan stands in full solidarity with all its brotherly countries and underscores the need to exercise maximum restraint, according to FM Dar.

“This is a message we have been giving to whosoever prime minister speaks, whosoever I speak, or whosoever Field Marshal Asim Munir speaks to, his counterparts on the defense side,” he said.