Pakistan PM seeks report on flood damages within a week to plan rehabilitation

Local residents walk on a damaged road following a cloudburst triggered landslide and flash flood on a highway near the Chilas district, northern Pakistan, on July 23, 2025. (AP/File)
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Updated 28 September 2025
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Pakistan PM seeks report on flood damages within a week to plan rehabilitation

  • Monsoon rains and floods killed over 1,000 people and affected millions, with Punjab and KP worst hit
  • Sharif instructed officials to ensure coordination between federal agencies and provincial authorities

ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif on Saturday directed officials to produce a comprehensive report within a week on damages caused by recent monsoon floods, saying the assessment was essential for planning relief and recovery operations.

Heavy rains and floods in Pakistan have killed more than 1,000 people since the monsoon began in late June. Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) reported over 500 fatalities, the highest number for any province, while Punjab suffered large-scale devastation in late August when torrential rains and water releases from Indian dams triggered floods that raised its cumulative death toll to more than 300.

Authorities said over 4,700 villages were inundated in Punjab, affecting 4.7 million people, and the province mounted its largest-ever search and rescue operation, evacuating 2.6 million people and 2.1 million animals.

“The assessment of damages to crops and infrastructure after the floods should be completed at the earliest to facilitate comprehensive planning for relief and rehabilitation,” Sharif said, according to a statement from his office.

He instructed officials to present a full report within a week.

Sharif, who chaired the meeting via video link from New York after addressing the United Nations General Assembly, ordered accelerated relief and rehabilitation measures, saying his government would “not rest until the people in the flood-affected areas are rehabilitated.”

He directed Planning Minister Ahsan Iqbal to closely monitor aid and recovery operations, convene regular review meetings and ensure coordination between federal agencies and provincial authorities.

Sharif also emphasized preventive steps against waterborne diseases, called for special measures to cultivate suitable crops in the flood-hit areas and instructed the National Highway Authority (NHA) to expedite work on repairing the damaged section of the M-5 motorway near Jalalpur Pirwala.

Officials briefed the prime minister that about 350,000 displaced people had already returned home, while others still in camps in Sindh were expected to return soon as floodwaters recede.


Medical team inspects ex-PM Imran Khan's eye condition at Rawalpindi prison — official

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Medical team inspects ex-PM Imran Khan's eye condition at Rawalpindi prison — official

  • Khan has suffered severe vision loss in his right eye due to central retinal vein occlusion, a court-appointed lawyer said this week
  • The ex-premier's party has rejected his medical examination 'behind closed doors, without the presence of personal physicians or family'

ISLAMABAD: A team of doctors on Sunday inspected jailed former prime minister Imran Khan's eye condition at Rawalpindi's Adiala prison, the jail superintendent said, after his lawyer reported a significant loss of sight in his right eye.

The development followed a report submitted to the Supreme Court by a lawyer appointed as amicus curiae who was asked to visit Khan at Rawalpindi’s Adiala jail earlier this month. The report said the 73-year-old had suffered severe vision loss in his right eye due to central retinal vein occlusion, leaving him with only 15 percent sight in the affected eye.

The findings triggered a sit-in by an opposition alliance, including members of Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party, demanding his immediate transfer to Islamabad’s Al-Shifa Hospital. Khan was also allowed to speak to his sons for about 20 minutes, according to his family, despite the former premier’s limited interactions with family and legal team in recent months due to restrictions that the PTI has challenged in court.

In a statement issued on Sunday evening, the Adiala Jail superintendent said a team of expert doctors from various hospitals had arrived at the prison with necessary medical equipment and medicines and was conducting a detailed examination of the ex-premier's eye.

"Detailed eye check-up is underway under the supervision of the Medical Board," the statement read. "Medical examination is being conducted under strict security arrangements. The report of the medical team is likely to be compiled soon."

The development comes a day after Pakistan’s government said on Saturday it has decided to transfer jailed former prime minister Imran Khan to a hospital and form a medical board for his eye treatment.

“Imran Khan has been provided the facility to speak with his sons on the phone and, in view of his health, it has also been decided to transfer him to hospital and constitute a medical board,” Parliamentary Affairs Minister Tariq Fazal Chaudhry said on X. “The government gives priority to humanitarian considerations and legal requirements.”

But Khan's PTI party rejected his medical examination "behind closed doors, without the presence of his personal physicians or even a family representative."

"A medical assessment carried out in secrecy does not restore public confidence; it deepens suspicion," Sayed Zulfiqar Bukhari, a PTI spokesman, said in a statement on Sunday evening.

"Access to independent medical professionals and family oversight is not a privilege, it is a fundamental right of any detainee. Denying that access undermines due process and fuels legitimate fears about the credibility of the findings."

Meanwhile, the opposition alliance continued its protest sit-in at parliament for a third consecutive day on Sunday to move the ex-premier to the hospital.

The former cricket star-turned-politician has been in prison since 2023 after being convicted in a graft case. He was removed from office in a parliamentary no-confidence vote in April 2022.