Arabian Sea creeps inland, drowning sugar heartland of Pakistan’s Sindh 

The collage of screengrabs taken from a video shows a man cutting crops with a sickle in a field in Badin district of Sindh province, Pakistan, on September 15, 2025. (Screengrab/AN)
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Updated 20 September 2025
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Arabian Sea creeps inland, drowning sugar heartland of Pakistan’s Sindh 

  • Farmers in Pakistan’s coastal Badin shift from sugarcane to rice and wheat as seawater claims fields
  • Sindh Chamber of Agriculture says Badin, Thatta districts have lost nearly 2 million hectares to sea intrusion

BADIN, Sindh: Gul Muhammad Mandhro has watched three-quarters of his farmland in coastal Badin, southern Pakistan, disappear to the Arabian Sea over the past two decades, forcing a shift from sugarcane to salt-tolerant staples such as rice and wheat.

Once known as Pakistan’s “sugar state” for its cane fields and cluster of mills, Badin district is now at the forefront of a climate-driven crisis. Sea intrusion and shrinking freshwater flows from the Indus River have left soils too saline for sugarcane, accelerating a decline that farmers say is reshaping rural livelihoods and output along the coast.

“This area was very fertile, but it has been badly affected because of the sea and cyclones,” the 71-year-old farmer, who once worked as a schoolteacher, told Arab News.

“I owned nearly 200 acres of agricultural land which has now shrunk to 50 acres,” he added, saying he now plants more climate-resilient rice and wheat on what remains of his land.

According to the Sindh Chamber of Agriculture (SCA), Badin and neighboring Thatta district have lost nearly two million hectares (about 5 million acres) of farmland to sea intrusion over the past three decades. 

Sindh is Pakistan’s second-largest province, bordering the Arabian Sea and home to the lower Indus delta.

“Due to water shortage, the sea level is rising, its water is becoming more saline,” Wafa Lateef Jokhio, SCA general secretary, said. 

He argued that Sindh was not receiving its due share of Indus waters from upstream provinces.

He added that roughly 10 million acre-feet (12.3 billion cubic meters) of freshwater should reach the Arabian Sea each year to hold back seawater encroachment: “This is not happening.”

Agronomists say the changes are also altering the chemical balance of soil.

“The soil’s pH has been affected. The ideal pH for cultivation ranges from 5.5 to 7.6 and all the crops are grown within this range, including sugarcane,” said Ahmed Khan Soomro, an agricultural economics expert.

He said pH levels have climbed to as high as 8.4 in parts of Sindh, while the loss of indigenous seed varieties such as BL4 and Thatta 10 has compounded pressure on yields.

“The sweet water is not falling into the sea due to siltation in our rivers, that’s why the ecosystem is disturbed,” added Soomro, who manages Badin district for the Sindh Rural Support Organization.

‘SUGAR STATE’

The strain is also visible in Badin’s sugar industry, once a major contributor to Sindh’s role in producing about 30 percent of Pakistan’s national sugarcane output, according to government statistics.

“Badin was called sugar state because it used to have six sugar mills operating [until 2008],” said Jokhio. “Mirza Sugar Mill and Pangrio Sugar Mills have shut down, while Ansari Sugar Mills shifted out of the district entirely because of raw material shortages.”

Farmers say economics now favor rice.

“Earlier, we used to grow sugarcane, but it wasn’t giving us a good yield,” Mandhro said. “We started sowing rice which is resilient to salinity as well as floods.”

Large landowners have also cut back.

“We are not getting a good average [yield] which has decreased to 400 maund per acre,” said Hafeezullah Bhurgri, who plants cane on only 10 percent of his 600 acres, referring to a locally used unit of weight equal to 40 kilograms. 
“Previously the production was as high as 2,000 maunds per acre.”

That decline represents a drop from about 80 metric tons per acre to 16 metric tons.

Commodity experts say the crisis, while devastating for cane growers, has opened opportunities for rice cultivators.

“We are seeing a lot of potential for exports of rice in the upcoming period,” said Ahsan Mehanti, chief executive officer at Arif Habib Commodities. “On the flipside, however, the sugarcane production has been impacted.”

For Mandhro, the pivot is pragmatic: rice keeps his fields productive as the sea inches inland.


Pakistan, Afghanistan trade heavy casualty claims, battlefield losses as cross-border fighting escalates

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Pakistan, Afghanistan trade heavy casualty claims, battlefield losses as cross-border fighting escalates

  • Pakistan says 133 Afghan Taliban killed in counter-strikes, Kabul says 55 Pakistani soldiers dead
  • Both sides report destruction, capture of military posts as escalation deepens, signaling widening conflict

Islamabad/Karachi: Pakistan and Afghanistan traded claims of heavy battlefield losses early Friday as cross-border fighting intensified along their shared frontier, marking the most serious escalation in hostilities between the bitter neighbors in recent months.

The fighting follows Pakistani airstrikes earlier this week targeting what Islamabad said were Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) and Daesh militant camps inside Afghanistan. Pakistan said those strikes killed more than 100 militants, while Kabul said women and children were killed and condemned the attacks as violations of Afghan sovereignty.

With both governments now announcing retaliatory operations and publishing sharply conflicting casualty figures, the confrontation signals a rapid deterioration in relations between the two countries.

Pakistani officials said the latest strikes were in response to what they described as unprovoked firing by Afghan forces along multiple sectors of the border late Thursday. The Pakistani prime minister’s spokesman Mosharraf Zaidi said at 0345 hours Friday counter-strikes were continuing.

“A total of 133 Afghan Taliban are confirmed killed, more than 200 wounded,” Zaidi said in an X update. “Twenty seven (27) Afghan Taliban posts have been destroyed, and nine (9) have been captured.”

He added that strikes had targeted military positions in Kabul, Paktia and Kandahar, and that corps headquarters, brigade headquarters, ammunition depots, logistics bases and other installations had been destroyed.

Pakistan’s Information Minister Attaullah Tarar described the military action as “Operation Wrath for the Sake of Truth,” saying Pakistan’s “effective counter operations are ongoing.”

Defense Minister Khawaja Asif adopted sharply escalatory language on X, declaring: “Now it is open war between us and you.”

On the Afghan side, Taliban government spokesperson Zabihullah Mujahid accused Pakistan of bombing major cities. 

“The cowardly Pakistani army has bombed some places in Kabul, Kandahar, and Paktia. Praise be to God, no one was harmed,” Mujahid said on X.

In a separate statement, Afghanistan’s Ministry of National Defense said its forces had conducted retaliatory operations along the shared border. 

The ministry claimed 55 Pakistani soldiers were killed, two garrisons and 19 posts captured and military equipment seized. It said eight Afghan fighters were killed and 11 wounded in the clashes, and alleged that 13 civilians were injured in Nangarhar.

Pakistani officials said no Pakistani posts had been damaged or captured. 

None of the casualty figures or battlefield claims from either side could be independently verified.

Cross-border violence has intensified in recent weeks, with Pakistan blaming a surge in suicide bombings and militant attacks on insurgents it says are based in Afghanistan. Kabul denies providing safe havens to anti-Pakistan militant groups.

The latest clashes mark the third major escalation between the neighbors in less than a year. Similar Pakistani strikes last year triggered weeklong fighting before Qatar, Türkiye and other regional actors mediated a ceasefire in October.

The 2,600-kilometer (1,600-mile) frontier, a key trade and transit corridor linking Pakistan to landlocked Afghanistan and onward to Central Asia, has faced repeated closures amid tensions, disrupting commerce and humanitarian movement. Trade and movement of people between the two nations has remained closed since October 2025.

The confrontation also unfolds against a backdrop of growing friction over Afghanistan’s regional alignments. Pakistan has repeatedly accused the Taliban authorities of allowing Indian influence to expand in Afghanistan, an allegation Kabul has rejected.

Pakistan’s defense minister Asif renewed that accusation on Friday, saying the Taliban government had turned Afghanistan into “a colony of India.”

Islamabad has long accused India of using Afghan territory to support anti-Pakistan militant groups, a charge New Delhi denies.