Death toll from factory boiler blast in eastern Pakistan surges to 20

Rescuers search for survivors after an explosion at a glue-manufacturing chemical factory in Faisalabad on November 21, 2025. (AFP)
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Updated 22 November 2025
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Death toll from factory boiler blast in eastern Pakistan surges to 20

  • Boiler explosion in eastern city of Faisalabad on Friday killed at least 20, injured others, prompting search and rescue effort
  • Boiler explosions are recurring industrial hazard in Pakistan, especially in Punjab’s textile manufacturing belt

ISLAMABAD: The death toll from a boiler blast in Pakistan’s eastern city of Faisalabad on Friday has risen to 20, state media reported as Punjab Chief Minister Maryam Nawaz took notice of the incident. 

Rescue officials said on Friday at least 15 people were killed and seven injured in what they described as a boiler explosion in the industrial city of Faisalabad in Pakistan’s Punjab province, prompting a large-scale urban search and rescue operation.

Boiler explosions are a recurring industrial hazard in Pakistan, particularly in Punjab’s textile manufacturing belt, where outdated equipment, poor maintenance and weak regulatory enforcement have caused major accidents over the past decade. Faisalabad, a key textile hub, has seen several industrial fires and structural collapses linked to unsafe industrial practices.

According to the state-run Associated Press of Pakistan (APP), the blast took place in Crystal Chemical Factory near Shahab Town’s Kabaddi Stadium Ground, flattening part of a building and trapping multiple families beneath the rubble. Rescue teams later recovered more bodies from the rubble. 

“Death toll in factory explosion has risen to 20 after expiry of 6 more victims here on Friday while Chief Minister Punjab Maryam Nawaz took notice of the incident and sought an urgent report,” the APP said. 

The government or police have not confirmed the cause of Friday’s explosion but Rescue Punjab spokesperson Farooq Ahmed said the Rescue 1122 state-run service received a call about a “boiler accident.”

Initial Rescue 1122 findings indicate the blast was caused by a gas leak inside a chemical factory. Rescue officials said the explosion also damaged nine nearby houses.

A police spokesperson told APP that the explosion caused the roof of the factory and adjacent houses to cave in. 

A Rescue 1122 spokesperson said search and rescue teams used advanced equipment to extract 27 victims from the debris. Twenty were found dead while seven were rescued with injuries.

“More than 145 rescuers and over 31 emergency vehicles including ambulances and fire units, participated in the operation,” the spokesperson was quoted as saying. 

The factory is owned by a person named Muhammad Qaisar Chughtai while another named Bilal Ali Imran worked as its manager. Police have launched a manhunt to arrest both individuals, the state media reported. 

In April 2024, a steam boiler blast at Sargodha Cloth Mills on Sargodha Road in Faisalabad injured a dozen workers and caused part of the factory roof to cave in, with several later dying of burns. Rescue 1122 data cited at the time showed the city had recorded 20 boiler explosions or major fire incidents between June 2019 and May 2024, killing 13 workers and injuring 20 others. 

Elsewhere in Punjab, at least two people were killed and more than a dozen injured when a boiler exploded at a factory on Multan Road in Lahore in October 2021, underscoring longstanding concerns over weak enforcement of industrial safety standards in Pakistan’s most populous province.


JazzCash signs deal with Binance in UAE to explore regulated crypto adoption in Pakistan

Updated 10 December 2025
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JazzCash signs deal with Binance in UAE to explore regulated crypto adoption in Pakistan

  • MoU focuses on awareness and development of compliant virtual-asset solutions in Pakistan
  • Pakistan introducing licensing regime for crypto firms as it formalizes digital-asset oversight

ISLAMABAD: Pakistani financial-technology platform JazzCash has signed a memorandum of understanding with global cryptocurrency exchange Binance in the United Arab Emirates to explore cooperation on virtual-asset use and education in Pakistan, the company said on Wednesday.

The agreement sets a framework for discussions on awareness campaigns and future digital-asset products that would comply with Pakistan’s emerging crypto regulations. The move signals growing engagement between global blockchain companies and Pakistani fintechs as authorities shift toward formal licensing of the sector.

Pakistan has spent the past year drafting rules to regulate the fast-expanding market for digital coins and tokens, requiring virtual-asset service providers to obtain government approval. Officials say the transition is aimed at curbing money-laundering and terror financing risks, boosting transparency and encouraging responsible innovation.

“JazzCash has always championed technologies that expand financial access while promoting secure and inclusive participation in the digital economy," JazzCash Chief Executive Officer Murtaza Ali said. 

“By entering into this exploratory MoU with Binance, we are advancing our efforts to understand how global digital-asset trends can support Pakistan’s evolving regulatory landscape. We aim to engage responsibly, support regulatory progress, and advance opportunities that build trust, transparency and innovation for our customers.”

The MoU does not establish a commercial partnership, but marks one of the most high-profile engagements between Pakistan’s fintech sector and a global crypto exchange as the country moves toward regulated digital-asset adoption.

Binance welcomed the cooperation, framing it as part of Pakistan’s shift toward regulated digital-asset activity.

"With regulatory frameworks like [Pakistan Virtual Assets Regulatory Authority] PVARA paving the way, this collaboration represents a significant step toward expanding financial inclusion and empowering more people to access the benefits of blockchain technology in a secure and compliant environment," Binance Chief Marketing Officer Rachel Conlan said.

Earlier this month, Binance executives met Pakistani finance officials to discuss digital-payments reform, blockchain-skills training and the potential for Web3-linked jobs. Pakistan also set up the Pakistan Crypto Council and formed PVARA this year to license and supervise crypto-asset service providers.