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Pakistani rescuers use drones to help evacuate thousands as floods devastate Punjab

September 1, 2025
in News
Pakistani rescuers use drones to help evacuate thousands as floods devastate Punjab
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JHANG, Pakistan (AP) — Emergency workers in Pakistan’s Punjab province used drones to find people stranded on rooftops by massive floods as the government expanded its rescue operation with more than 900,000 evacuated, officials said Monday.

The Pakistan Meteorological Department warned of more heavy rain in Punjab’s flood-hit districts and elsewhere in the country, where weeks of above-normal rainfall and the release of huge volumes of water from dams in neighboring India last week caused rivers to overflow into low-lying regions.

Authorities say Punjab, the country’s most populous province, is facing its biggest floods on record.

In Multan and Jhang districts, residents on Monday waded through floodwaters carrying their belongings to roadsides and higher ground. They said they had waited for rescuers before crossing on their own nearly 5-foot (1 1/2-meter) -deep water to reach safety, while many others remained stranded.

Since last week, rescuers, backed by the military and emergency services, have evacuated more than 900,000 people from more than 3,100 flood-hit villages, said Irfan Ali Kathia, director general of the Punjab Disaster Management Authority. More than 600,000 farm animals were also moved to safety, he told a news conference.

“We are handling an unprecedented situation, and we are responding to Punjab’s biggest-ever floods by using the latest technology and all available resources to save lives,” Kathia told The Associated Press. The Punjab government said drones were deployed this week in Multan, Jhang and other districts.

“Our priority is to save lives and ensure a steady supply of essential items to survivors,” Kathia said. The deluge has swamped Narowal, Sialkot and Kasur districts while entire villages have been submerged in Jhang and Multan.

‘Everything is gone’

On roadside embankments, displaced families complained of being abandoned.

“We have been destroyed. Everything is gone in the flood,” said Haleema Bibi, 54, who fled her damaged home in Jhang with seven relatives. They now shelter under the open sky without tents or food.

“Whatever we had to eat has nearly finished. You can see how miserably we are living,” she told The Associated Press.

Allah Ditta, a farmer from the same district, said he and his neighbors slept on plastic sheets and carts. “Rescuers came once by boat, but no one has brought us supplies. We keep looking to the road, hoping someone will come with help,” he said.

Farmer Malik Ramzan said authorities advised villagers to move to safer places, but no rescue camps were established. He said robbers often loot abandoned houses, another reason he chose to remain in his flooded home in Rajanpur district.

Authorities in Punjab say they had set up more than 1,000 relief camps, but government figures show that only about 36,550 evacuees are housed in them. It is unclear where the vast majority were staying.

Evacuations also took place in southern Sindh province, where Chief Minister Murad Ali Shah warned of a possible “super flood” of the Indus River if water levels top 900,000 cubic feet per second.

Heavy rains and a sudden cloudburst on Monday inundated several neighborhoods in Islamabad, leaving roads under water and vehicles stranded, according to local media reports. Television footage showed the main streets of the Pakistani capital transformed into streams as cars struggled to move through the floodwaters.

Deadly floods also hit northern Indian states

Officials blame the catastrophic flooding on weeks of heavier-than-normal monsoon rains, compounded by cross-border waters released from India’s swollen rivers and dams last week. The Ravi, Chenab and Sutlej rivers rose simultaneously, inundating swaths of farmland and villages.

India had alerted Pakistan about the water release, marking the rivals’ first public diplomatic contact since a military crisis brought them to the brink of war in May.

Punjab, home to some 150 million people and the country’s main wheat-growing region, has recorded 41 flood-related deaths in 10 days — far fewer than the catastrophic 2022 floods — but damage is widespread.

Pakistan’s weather center said Punjab received 26.5% more monsoon rainfall between July 1 and Aug. 27 compared with the same period last year. Nationwide, at least 854 people have died in rain-related incidents since late June.

In India, at least five people were killed in landslides triggered by torrential rain in northern Uttarakhand and Himachal Pradesh states, officials said Monday. Rains lashed several parts of India’s Punjab state that borders Pakistan, prompting authorities to shut schools and colleges until Wednesday.

Last month, at least 125 people were killed and scores injured in floods in Indian-controlled Kashmir.

Pakistan’s monsoon season typically lasts until the end of September.

___

Associated Press writers Munir Ahmed in Islamabad and Asim Tanveer in Multan, Pakistan and Sibi Arasu in Bengaluru, India, contributed to this report.

The post Pakistani rescuers use drones to help evacuate thousands as floods devastate Punjab appeared first on WHNT.

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