Saudi Arabia’s KSrelief sends 360 tons of dates to flood-hit Pakistan

The handout photograph released on December 4, 2025, shows people receiving dates distributed by the King Salman Humanitarian Aid and Relief Center (KSrelief) in Pakistan. (Photo Courtesy: KSrelief)
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Updated 04 December 2025
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Saudi Arabia’s KSrelief sends 360 tons of dates to flood-hit Pakistan

  • Aid covers 17 flood-affected districts in KP and Balochistan amid ongoing food insecurity
  • Death toll from June–Oct monsoon rains reached 1,037, national disaster agency says

ISLAMABAD: Saudi Arabia’s King Salman Humanitarian Aid and Relief Center (KSrelief) on Thursday distributed 360 tons of dates to communities affected by floods in northwestern and southwestern Pakistan, as authorities continue to support households facing food shortages after months of severe monsoon damage.

The distribution comes after torrential rains and cloudbursts triggered widespread flooding across the provinces of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) and Balochistan in June. Between June 26 and Oct. 1, floods killed 1,037 people, including 509 in KP and 38 in Balochistan, according to Pakistan’s National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA).

KSrelief said 180 tons of dates were sent to nine districts in KP — Buner, Swat, Kolai Palas, Mansehra, Charsadda, Peshawar, Bannu, Bajaur and Kurram — while the remaining 180 tons reached eight districts of Balochistan: Khuzdar, Surab, Kachhi, Pishin, Killa Saifullah, Ziarat, Jhal Magsi and Quetta.

“KSrelief in collaboration with NDMA, Provincial Disaster Management Authority (PDMA) and its implementing partners Peace and Development Organization and the Balochistan Rural Support Program has successfully distributed a total of 360 tons of dates to flood-affected, internally displaced and food-insecure communities across KP and Balochistan provinces of Pakistan,” the organization said in a statement.

“This initiative aims to provide immediate nutritional support to households affected by floods, displacement, and chronic food insecurity.”

Dates are a key emergency food source in humanitarian response efforts due to their long shelf life and concentration of energy, nutrients and natural sugars, critical for families recovering from disaster-related losses of crops, income and access to food.

KSrelief said the aid reflects Saudi Arabia’s “sustained commitment to standing in solidarity with the people of Pakistan,” where the Kingdom has funded multiple relief, health, food security and education programs in recent years.

Pakistan’s annual monsoon season provides essential water for agriculture, the backbone of the national economy, but extreme rainfall in recent years has also triggered deadly floods, landslides and crop destruction. Scientists have linked the intensification of seasonal weather swings to global climate change, leaving rural households more vulnerable to food scarcity.


TV reporter dies after falling from rooftop during Pakistan kite-flying festival

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TV reporter dies after falling from rooftop during Pakistan kite-flying festival

  • Pakistan's Lahore marked the Basant festival on Feb. 6-8 after the Punjab government lifted an 18-year-old ban on kite flying
  • Malik Zain, a reporter affiliated with GNN news channel, fell from a four-storey building while flying a kite, Lahore police say

ISLAMABAD: A television reporter died after falling from a rooftop while flying a kite during the Basant spring festival in the eastern Pakistani city of Lahore, police and hospital authorities confirmed on Sunday.

Pakistan's Lahore marked the Basant festival on Feb. 6-8 after the Punjab provincial government this year lifted a ban on kite flying after 18 years, with extensive safety measures in place.

The festival, which marks the onset of spring, was banned in 2008 after deaths and injuries to motorcyclists and pedestrians from stray kite strings, sometimes coated with metal to make them more formidable in mid-air battles.

Malik Zain, a reporter affiliated with private news channel GNN, fell from the rooftop of a building during the final day of Basant celebrations in the eastern Pakistani city, according to police.

"Lahore journalist Malik Zain died after falling from the fourth floor while flying a kite in Gulshan-e-Ravi during Basant," the Lahore police said in a statement.

The reporter was shifted to the government-run Mian Munshi District Headquarters Hospital where he was pronounced dead, with cardiopulmonary arrest mentioned as the cause of death.

"Head injury due to fall from height," hospital authorities diagnosed in their report into Zain’s death.

The development came hours after Punjab Chief Minister Maryam Nawaz extended timings for Basant till early Monday morning.

“I am pleased to announce that Basant celebrations timings are being extended till 5:00 AM tomorrow morning,” CM Nawaz said in an X post on Sunday, highlighting the festivity, unity and joy across Lahore.

“This extension is a reward for the people of Lahore for celebrating Basant with great discipline and for responsibly following all safety SOPs (standard operating procedures).”

The Punjab government ‍banned the use of metallic or chemical-coated strings during the festival. Kites ‍and strings had to bear individual QR codes so they could be traced, and ‍motorcyclists had to attach safety rods to their bikes to fend off stray thread.

Some 4,600 producers had registered with the authorities to sell kites and strings ahead of the festival. Authorities had made it mandatory for owners to register rooftops with 30 or more revelers, while dozens of roofs ​had been declared off-limits after inspections.