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Tag: Pakistan

  • ‘We lost everything twice’: Afghan returnees struggle after earthquake

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    Noorgal, Kunar, Afghanistan – Four months ago, Nawab Din returned to his home village of Wadir, high in the mountains of Afghanistan’s eastern Kunar province, after eight years as a refugee in Pakistan.

    Today, he lives in a tent on his own farmland. His house was destroyed nearly three weeks ago by the earthquake that has shattered the lives of thousands of others in this region.

    “We are living in tent camps now,” the 55-year-old farmer said, speaking at his cousin’s shop in the nearby village of Noorgal. “Our houses were old, and none were left standing … They were all destroyed by big boulders falling from the mountain during the earthquake.”

    Din’s struggle captures the double disaster facing a huge number of Afghans. He is among more than four million people who have returned from Iran and Pakistan since September 2023, according to the International Organization for Migration (IOM).

    The August 31 earthquake killed about 2,200 people and destroyed more than 5,000 homes, compounding a widespread economic crisis.

    Tents housing people displaced by the magnitude 6.0 earthquake that struck Afghanistan on August 31, in Diwa Gul valley in Kunar province [Sorin Furcoi/Al Jazeera]

    “We lost everything we have worked for in Pakistan, and now we lost everything here,” Din adds.

    Until four months ago, he had been living in Daska, a city in Pakistan’s Sialkot District, for eight years after fleeing his village in Afghanistan when ISIL (ISIS) fighters told him to join them or leave.

    “I refused to join ISIL and I was forced to migrate to Pakistan,” he explains.

    His exile ended abruptly this year as the Pakistani government continues its nationwide crackdown on undocumented foreign nationals.

    He describes how Pakistani police raided his house, taking him and his family to a camp to be processed for deportation. “I returned from Pakistan as we were told our time there was finished and we had to leave,” he says.

    “We had to spend two nights at Torkham border crossing until we were registered by Afghan authorities, before we could return to our village.”

    58-year-old Sadat Khan in the village of Barabat, in Afghanistan's Kunar province [Sorin Furcoi/Al Jazeera]

    Sadat Khan, 58, in the village of Barabat, in Afghanistan’s Kunar province [Sorin Furcoi/Al Jazeera] (Al Jazeera)

    This struggle is echoed across Kunar. Some 12km from Noorgal, in the village of Barabat, 58-year-old Sadat Khan sits next to the rubble of the home he had been renting until the earthquake struck.

    Khan returned from Pakistan willingly as his health was failing and he could no longer find work to support his wife and seven children. Now, the earthquake has taken what little he had left.

    “I was poor in Pakistan as well. I was the only one working and my entire family was depending on me,” he tells Al Jazeera. “We don’t know where the next meal will come from. There is no work here. And I have problems with my lungs. I have trouble breathing if I do more effort.”

    He says his request to local authorities for a tent for his family has so far gone unanswered.

    “I went to the authorities to request a tent to install here,” he says. “We haven’t received anything, so I asked someone to give me a room for a while, for my children. My uncle had mercy on me and let me stay in one room in his house, now that the winter is coming.”

    One crisis out of many

    The earthquake is only the most visible of the crises that returnees from Iran and Pakistan are facing.

    “Our land is barren, and we have no stream or river close to the village,” says Din. “Our farming and our life depend entirely on rainfall, and we haven’t seen much of it lately. Other people wonder how can we live there with such severe water shortage.”

    Dr Farida Safi, a nutritionist working at a field hospital set up by Islamic Relief in Diwa Gul valley after the quake, says malnutrition is becoming a major problem.

    “Most of the people affected by the quake that come to us have food deficiency, mostly due to the poor diet and the lack of proper nutrition they had access to in their village,” she explains. “We have to treat many malnourished children.”

    The destroyed mud brick house that 58-year-old Sadat Khan was renting in Barabat village [Sorin Furcoi/Al Jazeera]

    The destroyed mudbrick house that 58-year-old Sadat Khan was renting in Barabat village [Sorin Furcoi/Al Jazeera]

    Kunar’s Governor, Mawlawi Qudratullah, told Al Jazeera that the Kunar authorities have started building a new town that will include 382 residential plots, according to the plan.

    This initiative in Khas Kunar district is part of the national programmes directed by the Ministry of Urban Development and Housing, with an objective of providing permanent housing for Afghan returnees. However, it is unclear how long it will take to build these new homes or if farmland will also be given to returnees.

    “It will be for those people who don’t have any land or house in this province,” Qudratullah said. “And this project has already started, separate from the crisis response to the earthquake.”

    But for those living in or next to the ruins of their old homes, such promises feel distant. Back in Noorgal, Nawab Din is consumed by the immediate fear of aftershocks from the earthquake and the uncertainty of what comes next.

    “I don’t know if the government will relocate us down in the plains or if they will help us rebuild,” he says, his voice heavy with exhaustion. “But I fear we might be forced to continue to live in a camp, even as aftershocks continue to hit, sometimes so powerful that the tents shake.”

    Villages damaged by the eartquake in Nurgal valley, Afghanistan's Kunar province [Sorin Furcoi/Al Jazeera]

    Villages damaged by the earthquake in Nurgal valley, Afghanistan’s Kunar province [Sorin Furcoi/Al Jazeera]

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  • Five people dead as rescue boat overturns in Pakistan floods

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    At least five people have lost their lives and more than a dozen had to be rescued in Pakistan’s flood-affected southern Punjab province after a boat carrying evacuees capsized.

    According to the disaster management authority, the boat overturned on Saturday in Multan district because of strong currents, but the majority of passengers were saved.

    Flooding from the Ravi, Sutlej and Chenab rivers has affected more than 4,100 villages, forcing over two million people to flee their homes, according to figures shared on Saturday by Punjab Relief Commissioner Nabil Javed.

    Authorities have set up 423 relief camps, 512 medical facilities and 432 veterinary posts to protect both people and livestock after more than 1.5 million animals were relocated.

    Nearly 900 people have been killed in monsoon floods in Pakistan since June, according to figures from the United Nations.

    Al Jazeera’s Kamal Hyder, reporting from Multan, said entire villages in the region have been abandoned due to the floods.

    “People have left their belongings and are trying to save their lives,” he said. “Most people have no protection. Tens of thousands of acres of land with standing crops are lost. Mango orchards are all submerged.”

    Hyder said that by September, the monsoon season would typically have ended but the Meteorological Department was predicting a 10th monsoon spell to arrive soon.

    Global warming has worsened monsoon rains this year in Pakistan, one of the countries most vulnerable to climate change, according to a new study. Downpours and cloudbursts have triggered flash floods and landslides across the mountainous north and northwest in recent months.

    Punjab, home to 150 million people, is a vital part of Pakistan’s agricultural sector and is the country’s main wheat producer.

    Flooding in 2022 wiped out huge swaths of crops in the east and south of Pakistan, leading Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif to warn that the country faced food shortages.

    While South Asia’s seasonal monsoon brings rainfall that farmers depend on, climate change is making the phenomenon more erratic and deadly across the region.

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  • Thai posts mock Cambodia with misattributed Pakistan flooding video

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    A video of a man being swept away by floodwaters on a road in Karachi, Pakistan has resurfaced in social media posts falsely claiming it was filmed after recent storms in Cambodia. The footage was previously shared in posts saying it was filmed during heavy downpours in Pakistan’s largest city.

    “Cambodian flood,” reads the Thai-language caption of a Facebook clip shared on September 1, 2025.

    The footage shows a flooded road and a person falling over before they are swept away by the current.

    The same clip was also shared in another Facebook post, with its superimposed Thai text reading: “After Cambodian people mocked Thailand, the storm went back to them.”

    It  adds that Cambodia is facing severe flooding and begging Thailand for help.

    Screenshots of the false Facebook posts captured on September 4, 2025, with red Xs added by AFP

    The posts surfaced following heavy rain in northwestern Cambodia; The Phnom Penh Post reported the deluge triggered flooding, though officials said the damage was not severe (archived link).

    The footage, however, does not show flooding in the Southeast Asian nation.

    Users from both countries have continued to sling insults at one another and misattribute disaster footage from other countries weeks after their respective governments agreed a ceasefire to halt their bloody border clashes (archived link).

    Cyber warriors have also daubed official websites with obscenities, deluged opponents with spam and taken pages down (archived link).

    A reverse image search on Google using keyframes from the falsely shared video led to the same footage, flipped horizontally, posted on August 20 on the Instagram page of Dialogue Pakistan, a citizen journalism platform (archived link).

    Its English-language caption reads, “Tuesday’s heavy rainfall in Karachi led to a man being swept away by rainwater on Shahrah-e-Faisal” —  referring to a major road in Pakistan’s largest city.

    <span>Screenshot comparison of the falsely shared video (left) and the Dialogue Pakistan clip (right)</span>

    Screenshot comparison of the falsely shared video (left) and the Dialogue Pakistan clip (right)

    AFP reported on August 20 that more than 20 people were killed during a fresh spell of monsoon rain in Pakistan, which is among the world’s most vulnerable countries to the effects of climate change and is increasingly facing extreme weather events (archived link).

    Karachi’s crumbling pipes and sewer system reportedly struggled to cope with the downpours (archived link).

    In the background of the video is a billboard advertising a meal deal from KFC, which the fast food chain’s Pakistan franchise promoted on its official Instagram account on August 6 (archived link).

    <span>Screenshot showing the advertisement visible in the falsely shared video, magnified by AFP</span>

    Screenshot showing the advertisement visible in the falsely shared video, magnified by AFP

    Elements of the video also match Google Street View imagery of Shahrah-e-Faisal, near to the Nursery Flyover, taken in April 2021 and drone video of the situation at the intersection posted on YouTube on August 19, 2025  (archived here and here).

    <span>Corresponding elements highlighted by AFP on the Dialogue Pakistan video (left) and drone footage and Google Street View imagery of the Nursery Flyover in Karachi (right)</span>

    Corresponding elements highlighted by AFP on the Dialogue Pakistan video (left) and drone footage and Google Street View imagery of the Nursery Flyover in Karachi (right)

    The footage was previously misrepresented as showing flooding in India’s Jammu City, which was debunked by fact-checking organisations Fact Crescendo and Factly (archived here and here).

    AFP has also debunked other false claims about Thailand and Cambodia spread by rivals in the neighbouring countries.

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  • Has India ‘weaponised water’ to deliberately flood Pakistan?

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    Islamabad, Pakistan – For the second time in three years, catastrophic monsoon floods have carved a path of destruction across Pakistan’s north and central regions, particularly in its Punjab province, submerging villages, drowning farmland, displacing millions and killing hundreds.

    This year, India – Pakistan’s archrival and a nuclear-armed neighbour – is also reeling. Its northern states, including Himachal Pradesh, Uttarakhand and Indian Punjab, have seen widespread flooding as heavy monsoon rains swell rivers on both sides of the border.

    Pakistani authorities say that since late June, when the monsoon season began, at least 884 people have died nationally, more than 220 of them in Punjab. On the Indian side, the casualty count has crossed 100, with more than 30 dead in Indian Punjab.

    Yet, shared suffering hasn’t brought the neighbours closer: In Pakistan’s Punjab, which borders India, federal minister Ahsan Iqbal has, in fact, accused New Delhi of deliberately releasing excess water from dams without timely warnings.

    “India has started using water as a weapon and has caused wide-scale flooding in Punjab,” Iqbal said last month, citing releases into the Ravi, Sutlej and Chenab rivers, all of which originate in Indian territory and flow into Pakistan.

    Iqbal further said that releasing flood water was the “worst example of water aggression” by India, which he said threatened lives, property and livelihoods.

    “Some issues should be beyond politics, and water cooperation must be one of them,” the minister said on August 27, while he participated in rescue efforts in Narowal city, his constituency that borders India.

    Those accusations come amid heightened tensions between India and Pakistan, and the breakdown of a six-decade-old pact that helped them share waters for rivers that are lifelines to both nations.

    But experts argue that the evidence is thin to suggest that India might have deliberately sought to flood Pakistan – and the larger nation’s own woes point to the risks of such a strategy, even if New Delhi were to contemplate it.

    Weaponising water

    Flood-affected people walk along the shelters at a makeshift camp in Chung, in Pakistan’s Punjab province, on August 31, 2025. Nearly half a million people have been displaced by flooding in eastern Pakistan after days of heavy rain swelled rivers [Aamir Qureshi/AFP]

    Relations between India and Pakistan, already at a historic low, plummeted further in April after the Pahalgam attack, in which gunmen killed 26 civilians in Indian-administered Kashmir. India blamed Pakistan for the attack and walked out of the Indus Waters Treaty (IWT), the transboundary agreement that governs the Indus Basin’s six rivers.

    Pakistan rejected the accusation that it was in any way behind the Pahalgam attack. But in early May, the neighbours waged a four-day conflict, targeting each other’s military bases with missiles and drones in the gravest military escalation between them in almost three decades.

    Under the IWT, the two countries were required to exchange detailed water-flow data regularly. With India no longer adhering to the pact, fears have mounted in recent months that New Delhi could either try to stop the flow of water into Pakistan, or flood its western neighbour through sudden, large releases.

    After New Delhi suspended its participation in the IWT, India’s Home Minister Amit Shah in June said the treaty would never be restored, a stance that prompted protests in Pakistan and accusations of “water terrorism”.

    But while the Indian government has not issued a formal response to accusations that it has chosen to flood Pakistan, the Indian High Commission in Islamabad has, in the last two weeks, shared several warnings of possible cross-border flooding on “humanitarian grounds”.

    And water experts say that attributing Pakistan’s floods primarily to Indian water releases from dams is an “oversimplification” of the causes of the crisis that risks obscuring the urgent, shared challenges posed by climate change and ageing infrastructure.

    “The Indian decision to release water from their dam has not caused flooding in Pakistan,” said Daanish Mustafa, a professor of critical geography at King’s College London.

    “India has major dams on its rivers, which eventually make their way to Pakistan. Any excess water that will be released from these rivers will significantly impact India’s own states first,” he told Al Jazeera.

    Shared monsoon strain

    Both Pakistan and India depend on glaciers in the Himalayan and Karakoram ranges to feed their rivers. For Pakistan, the Indus river basin is a lifeline. It supplies water to most of the country’s roughly 250 million people and underpins its agriculture.

    A view of houses submerged in floodwaters.

    Pakistan’s monsoon floods have pushed the nationwide death toll past 800, with hundreds of thousands of people displaced from their homes due to surging water [A Hussain/EPA]

    Under the IWT, India controls the three eastern rivers – Ravi, Sutlej and Beas – while Pakistan controls the three western rivers, Jhelum, Chenab and Indus.

    India is obligated to allow waters of the western rivers to flow into Pakistan with limited exceptions, and to provide timely, detailed hydrological data.

    India has built dams on the eastern rivers it controls, and the flow of the Ravi and Sutlej into Pakistan has considerably reduced since then. It has also built dams on some of the western rivers – it is allowed to, under the treaty, as long as that does not affect the volume of water flowing into Pakistan.

    But melting glaciers and an unusually intense summer monsoon pushed river levels on both sides of the border dangerously high this year.

    In Pakistan, glacial outbursts followed by heavy rains raised levels in the western rivers, while surging flows put infrastructure on the eastern rivers in India at serious risk.

    Mustafa of King’s College said that dams – like other infrastructure – are designed keeping in mind a safe capacity of water that they can hold, and are typically meant to operate for about 100 years. But climate change has dramatically altered the average rainfall that might have been taken into account while designing these projects.

    “The parameters used to build the dams are now obsolete and meaningless,” he said. “When the capacity of the dams is exceeded, water must be released or it will put the entire structure at risk of destruction.”

    Among the major dams upstream in Indian territory are Salal and Baglihar on the Chenab; Pong on the Beas; Bhakra on the Sutlej; and Ranjit Sagar (also known as Thein) on the Ravi.

    These dams are based in Indian-administered Jammu and Kashmir, Indian Punjab and Himachal Pradesh, with vast areas of Indian territory between them and the border.

    Blaming India for the flooding in Pakistan makes no sense, said Shiraz Memon, a former Pakistani representative on the bilateral commission tasked under the IWT to monitor the implementation of the pact.

    “Instead of acknowledging that India has shared warnings, we are blaming them of water terrorism. It is [a] simple, natural flood phenomenon,” Memon said, adding that by the end of August, reservoirs across the region were full.

    “With water at capacity, spillways had to be opened for downstream releases. This is a natural solution as there is no other option available,” he told Al Jazeera.

    Politics of blame

    Rescuers search for missing flash flood victims in remote Kashmir village

    Stranded pilgrims cross a water channel using a makeshift bridge the day after flash floods in Chositi village, Kishtwar district, in Indian-administered Kashmir last month [Channi Anand/AP Photo]

    According to September 3 data on India’s Central Water Commission website, at least a dozen sites face a “severe” flood situation, and another 19 are above normal flood levels.

    The same day, Pakistan’s Ministry of Water Resources issued a notification, quoting a message from the Indian High Commission, warning of “high flood” on the Sutlej and Tawi rivers.

    It was the fourth such notice by India after three earlier warnings last week, but none contained detailed hydrological data.

    Pakistan’s Meteorological Department, in a report on September 4, said on the Pakistani side, two sites on the Sutlej and Ravi faced “extremely high” flood levels, while two other sites on the Ravi and Chenab saw “very high” levels.

    The sheer volume of water during an intense monsoon often exceeds any single dam or barrage’s capacity. Controlled releases have become a necessary, if dangerous, part of flood management on both sides of the border, said experts.

    They added that while the IWT obliged India to alert Pakistan to abnormal flows, Pakistan also needs better monitoring and real-time data systems rather than relying solely on diplomatic exchanges.

    The blame game, analysts warn, can serve short-term political purposes on both sides, especially after May’s conflict.

    For India, suspending the treaty is framed as a firm stance against what it sees as Pakistan’s state-sponsored terrorism. For Pakistan, blaming India can provide a political scapegoat that distracts from domestic failures in flood mitigation and governance.

    “Rivers are living, breathing entities. This is what they do; they are always on the move. You cannot control the flood, especially a high or severe flood,” academic Mustafa said.

    Blaming India won’t stop the floods. But, he added, it appears to be an “easy way out to relinquish responsibility”.

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  • Passenger van swept away by flood in Iran, not in Pakistan

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    Intense monsoon downpours have killed hundreds in Pakistan’s northwest Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and eastern Punjab provinces in August but dramatic footage of floodwaters sweeping away a passenger van first surfaced online more than three years ago. News reports published similar footage about the passengers drowning in northeastern Iran in July 2022.

    “Latest: A huge tragedy. The entire school van along with children became victim of flood,” reads the Urdu-language caption of a Facebook reel published on August 28.

    The clip shows a green van being swept by muddy floodwater as passengers cry for help and people rush along the bank. After some time, the van is seen overturned along the embankment.

    The post also contained the hashtags #Ravi #flood #indian #IndiaFloods #rescue #lahore.

    Three transboundary rivers in the east of Pakistan have swollen to exceptionally high levels in August as a result of heavy rains across the border in India (archived link). 

    It has triggered flood alerts throughout Punjab province, home to nearly half of Pakistan’s 255 million people. The army was also deployed to help evacuate people and livestock near the Chenab, Ravi and Sutlej rivers.

    Screenshot of the false Facebook reel taken on August 28, 2025, with a red X added by AFP

    The same clip along with similar claims also appeared on Instagram, X and TikTok.

    But the video first circulated in news reports about floods that hit neighbouring Iran three years ago.

    reverse image search on Google using keyframes from the falsely shared clip led to similar footage used in a July 31, 2022, report by the news outlet The Independent Persian on its verified YouTube channel entitled: “Van passengers trapped in deadly flood” (archived link).

    Persian language description on the video reads: “On July 30, the occupants of a van were caught in the middle of flooding on the road from the village of Meyami to the village of Chenarak in Razavi Khorasan province. According to the governor of Mashhad, the 13 passengers in the van were Iraqis, seven of whom died as a result of the accident.”

    <span>Screenshots comparison of false post (left) and the Independent Persian video (right): </span>

    Screenshots comparison of false post (left) and the Independent Persian video (right):

    Iranian media outlets Mehr News and Hamshahri Online also reported the same incident embedding similar images (archived here and here).

    Landslides and floods triggered by heavier-than-usual monsoon rains have killed more than 850 people across Pakistan since June. The latest downpour has killed at least 32 people as of August 31, 2025 (archived link).

    AFP has fact-checked other false claims about the monsoon rains affecting South Asia.

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  • Pakistan’s Punjab faces biggest floods in its history, affecting 2 million people

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    LAHORE, Pakistan — Pakistan’s eastern Punjab province is dealing with the biggest flood in its history, a senior official said Sunday, as water levels of rivers rise to all-time highs.

    Global warming has worsened monsoon rains this year in Pakistan, one of the countries most vulnerable to climate change. Downpours and cloudbursts have triggered flash floods and landslides across the mountainous north and northwest in recent months.

    Residents in eastern Punjab have also experienced abnormal amounts of rain, as well as cross-border flooding after India released water from swollen rivers and overflowing dams into Pakistan’s low-lying regions.

    The senior minister for the province, Maryam Aurangzeb, told a press conference on Sunday: “This is the biggest flood in the history of the Punjab. The flood has affected two million people. It’s the first time that the three rivers — Sutlej, Chenab, and Ravi — have carried such high levels of water.”

    Local authorities are using educational institutions, police, and security facilities as rescue camps, and evacuating people, including by boat, she said.

    “The Foreign Ministry is collecting data regarding India’s deliberate release of water into Pakistan,” added Aurangzeb. There was no immediate comment from India.

    India alerted its neighbor to the possibility of cross-border flooding last week, the first public diplomatic contact between the two countries since a crisis brought them close to war in May.

    Punjab, home to some 150 million people, is a vital part of the country’s agricultural sector and is Pakistan’s main wheat producer. Ferocious flooding in 2022 wiped out huge swaths of crops in the east and south of the country, leading Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif to warn that his country faced food shortages.

    Figures from Pakistan’s national weather center show that Punjab received 26.5% more monsoon rain between July 1 and August 27 compared to the same period last year.

    The country’s disaster management authority said 849 people have been killed and 1,130 injured nationwide in rain-related incidents since June 26.

    Pakistan’s monsoon season usually runs to the end of September.

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  • Pakistan’s farmers battle floods, debt and climate-driven crisis

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    Islamabad, Pakistan – As a new wave of cloudbursts, monsoon rains and floods cause havoc across Pakistan, Iqbal Solangi sits in his small house in the southern coastal city of Karachi, feeling the pain of those who lost their loved ones, land and livestock.

    Since late June, a heavier-than-usual monsoon, followed by floods and landslides, has killed more than 800 people, damaged at least 7,225 houses, and washed away over 5,500 livestock in addition to the widespread destruction of crops across the country.

    While the exact cause of the floods is yet to be determined, several factors could have contributed to the deluge, including climate change. Pakistan ranks among the top 10 most climate-vulnerable nations, but it contributes less than 1 percent of global emissions.

    Solangi had ended his climate-change-forced exile from farming in 2022, but ended up losing his rice crop due to the flooding for a third time after the 2010 and 2012 floods, and found himself under a huge pile of debt yet again.

    In 2012, he had moved from a tiny village on the border of the Sindh and Balochistan provinces to Karachi because climate change had made the profession of his forefathers unsustainable. The displacement brought to a temporary end three decades of farming.

    “When my house and land were flooded and I was sitting high up watching it all being washed away, I decided I would never go back to it,” Solangi told Al Jazeera, talking about the 2022 floods, which affected 33 million people and inundated 4 million hectares (9.9 million acres) of agricultural land.

    Locals collect wood from Noseri Dam near Muzaffarabad a day after flash floods [File: Sajjad Qayyum/AFP]

    The Climate Rate Index report in 2025 placed Pakistan at the top of the list of the most affected countries based on 2022 data. Extensive flooding then submerged approximately a third of the country, killed more than 1,700 people, caused $14.8bn worth of damage, as well as $15.2bn of economic losses, and pushed nine million people into poverty.

    In an article in August, Pakistan’s Dawn newspaper wrote: “In today’s Pakistan, the monsoon has transformed from a symbol of beauty and renewal into a harbinger of chaos and despair. What was once awaited with excitement is now approached with dread.”

    Last year, more floods affected thousands, and a heatwave killed almost 600 people. The gradual rise in temperatures is also forcing the melting of the 13,000-plus glaciers in Pakistan, increasing the risk of flooding, damage to infrastructure, loss of life and land, threat to communities, and water scarcity.

    Agriculture remains a key contributor to Pakistan’s economy, contributing approximately 24 percent of its gross domestic product (GDP), according to Pakistan’s Bureau of Statistics (PBS). The livelihood of some 40 million people is also linked with agriculture, which employs more than 37 percent of the labour force.

    In an interview with Al Jazeera earlier this year, Pakistan’s climate change minister warned that the effect of melting glaciers on the river and canal networks “would have catastrophic consequences for Pakistan’s agricultural economy”.

    “These people [working on agriculture] have no economic security, and given our current economic development stage, the government lacks the wherewithal to provide for such a large segment of the population if these gushing floods wash away our infrastructure and devastate agricultural lands. From an economic and agricultural standpoint alone, the potential for devastation is immense,” Musadiq Malik said.

    This year, the agriculture sector has posted a modest growth of 0.6 percent, falling well short of the 2 percent target and significantly below last year’s announced growth of 6.4 percent.

    A recent study published in the Nature journal says the Indus Plain in Pakistan experienced 19 flood disasters between 1950 and 2012, affecting an area of almost 600,000sq km (231,661.3sq miles), causing 11,239 deaths and resulting in economic damage exceeding $39bn. Half of those events took place after 2000.

    Figures shared by PBS show a rise in the number of farmlands across Pakistan over the last few years, from 8.6 million in 2010 to 11.7 million last year, increasing in all provinces bar Punjab. However, changes in rain patterns have also impacted farmers immensely.

    In the northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, Basharat Jamal still tills his land but says his crop has almost vanished over the past decade due to droughts.

    Jamal runs a small business to supplement his income but explains that the shift from agricultural practices has landed the region in double jeopardy. The income and produce have reduced significantly, with many farmers moving to urban centres for work. In addition, some farmers now own livestock, which, due to a lack of fodder, destroy their unprotected crops.

    According to the Pakistan Economic Survey 2024-25, major crops, such as wheat and cotton, contracted by 13.5 percent, restricting the overall GDP growth rate by 0.6 percent.

    Farming now is like ‘gambling with nature’

    For Muhammad Hashim, a farmer in Pakistan’s largest province, Balochistan, farming in an unpredictable climate is “like gambling with nature” due to the frequent floods and droughts that have forced him to migrate multiple times.

    He has stuck to farming despite “watching helplessly our crops withering and failing year after year”.

    “Ten years ago, we had no choice but to leave our ancestral land and migrate in search of survival,” said Hashim. “Then came the devastating floods of 2022. Everything we had rebuilt was washed away. Our fields were destroyed again. The next year, we moved again. For a brief time, we found some peace.

    “I worked on my farm and at a shop. Our children were back in school, and life started to feel normal.”

    According to the Migration Policy Institute, more than eight million people were displaced by the 2022 floods, including farmers who gave up on their lands and moved to cities.

    A United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) report on the 2022 floods said: “2022 will be remembered as a critical, trying year for Pakistan, with growing macroeconomic and fiscal concerns, a cost of living crisis impacting the most vulnerable, and cataclysmic floods whose threats were multiplied by climate change.”

    However, soon after, drought forced him to move again, but the “situation is worse than ever”.

    “One year it’s floods, the next it’s drought,” he said, adding that if this pattern continued, his farming days would be over.

    This story was produced in partnership with the Pulitzer Center.

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  • Dramatic mudslide clip filmed in Japan, not Pakistan

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    Relentless rains across northern Pakistan have triggered deadly flooding and landslides, but footage of thick mud crashing onto buildings does not show the recent situation in the South Asian nation. The clip, featured in a compilation with thousands of views, was shot in the Japanese town of Atami in July 2021.

    “May Allah protect all of us from natural calamities. Amen,” reads the Urdu-language caption of a Facebook video viewed more than 11,000 times since it was shared on August 16, 2025.

    The caption includes hashtags for areas in Pakistan’s mountainous Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province where torrential monsoon rains have triggered deadly flooding and landslides (archived link).

    The video comprises several clips, with the first showing mud and debris crashing down a hillside.

    Screenshot of the false Facebook post captured on August 18, 2025, with a red X added by AFP

    Similar compilations were also shared on Instagram and X posts, as northern Pakistan was ravaged by an unusually intense monsoon season that has left more than 400 people dead (archived link).

    The monsoon season brings about three-quarters of South Asia’s annual rainfall, which is vital for agriculture and food security but also causes widespread destruction.

    The rains that have battered Pakistan have caused flooding and landslides that have swept away entire villages, leaving many residents trapped in the rubble and hundreds missing.

    But the clip used at the beginning of the circulating compilation was not filmed in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa.

    A reverse image search on Google using keyframes from the clip led to the same footage shared by Japanese outlet Sankei News on YouTube on July 3, 2021 (archived link).

    The longer footage in the old report is credited to wire agency EyePress.

    Its caption indicates it shows a mudslide sweeping through the Izusan neighbourhood of Atami, a town in Japan’s Shizuoka prefecture, on July 3, 2021.

    <span>Screenshot comparison of the falsely shared clip (left) and the Sankei News video (right)</span>

    Screenshot comparison of the falsely shared clip (left) and the Sankei News video (right)

    The video corresponds to Google Street View imagery of the town, located around 90 kilometres (55 miles) southwest of Tokyo (archived link).

    AFP reported that torrents of mud crashed through part of the town following days of heavy rain (archived link). The devastating landslide killed 27 people.

    The video has been misrepresented several times on social media as showing unrelated disasters.

    Other clips in the compilation depict raging floodwaters and buildings being toppled over.

    While AFP was unable to verify if they all show the impact of the monsoon rains on northern Pakistan in August 2025, at least one of the clips is several years old.

    The video of a muddy torrent furiously gushing across buildings has circulated on Facebook and YouTube since at least August 2022 (archived here and here).

    The latter post says it was taken in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa’s Swat district.

    <span>Screenshot comparison of the falsely shared clip (left) and the video posted in 2022 (right)</span>

    Screenshot comparison of the falsely shared clip (left) and the video posted in 2022 (right)

    Monsoon rains in 2022 submerged a third of the country and resulted in approximately 1,700 deaths.

    AFP reported at the time that many rivers in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa had burst their banks, demolishing scores of buildings including a 150-room hotel that crumbled into a raging torrent (archived link).

    Officials said that year’s monsoon flooding affected more than 33 million people — one in seven Pakistanis — destroying or badly damaging nearly a million homes.

    AFP earlier debunked another false claim about the recent monsoon flooding in Pakistan here.

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  • Photos of Pakistan honoring a Sufi saint with drumming, dancing, and bright lights

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    LAHORE, Pakistan (AP) — Drumming, dancing, and bright lights. Pakistan’s centuries-old tradition of honoring Sufi saints comes alive during annual festivals known as Urs.

    In the eastern city of Lahore, as many as one million people pour into a shrine complex that is the final resting place of Hazrat Ali Hajveri, known as Data Ganj Bakhsh or simply Data Sahib, for a three-day celebration of his life.

    Processions arrive in Lahore from across Pakistan, with devotees reciting Quranic verses and offering ceremonial cloths at Ali Hajveri’s grave. Some perform a dhamaal — a ritual dance accompanied by drumming. They spin around until they enter a trance-like state.

    Ali Hajveri, a mystic and scholar, was born in Ghazni, Afghanistan, in 990. He traveled through Iran, Iraq, and Syria to meet the leading Sufi masters of his era and stayed in Lahore until he died in 1077. He is the city’s patron saint.
    The shrine, Data Darbar, is already a landmark and one of the busiest Sufi pilgrimage sites in South Asia. But it transforms into a hub of faith, fraternity, and culture during Urs. A langar, or community kitchen, dishes out free meals around the clock to worshippers. Devotional singing, or qawwali, adds to the festive feel.

    “We have been coming here since my childhood, almost 40 years,” said Hussain Jilani, 57. “We feel spiritually fulfilled whenever we come. Data Sahib is a source of blessings. Whatever task we have gets resolved with his grace.”
    Saleem Tayyab, 63, is also a regular. “Our pockets have never been empty, and our hearts never without peace,” he said. “Whoever comes here takes blessings with him.”

    This is a photo gallery curated by AP photo editors.

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  • Brook and Root set batting records with 800-run England close to famous cricket win over Pakistan

    Brook and Root set batting records with 800-run England close to famous cricket win over Pakistan

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    MULTAN, Pakistan (AP) — England is on the verge of a famous cricket victory after Harry Brook smashed the second-fastest triple century in test history, Joe Root scored a career-best 262 and the tourists declared their first innings at an enormous 823-7 against Pakistan in the first test on Thursday.

    Pakistan, which scored 556 in its first innings, collapsed second time round to reach stumps on Day 4 at 152-6, needing another 115 runs to avoid an innings defeat.

    It was the fourth time a test team scored more than 800 runs — and the first time this century — as Yorkshire pair Brook and Root showed plenty of resilience and stamina to rewrite the record books in the heat of Multan.

    “It was an unreal wicket to bat on and I’ll probably roll it (the wicket) open and take it with me,” Brook said after his marathon seven-hour innings of 317 runs off 322 balls that featured 29 fours and three sixes.

    Brook raised his triple hundred off 310 balls, which was the second-fastest in test history after Virender Sehwag of India achieved the feat in 268 balls against South Africa in 2008.

    “Me and Rooty both were just trying to cash in on what was a good pitch,” Brook said. “We were both struggling with the heat for a while, (but) it makes you feel so comfortable when you watch him at the other end, he makes the game look so easy.”

    Brook was one of England’s key batters during its 3-0 sweep in Pakistan two years ago when he scored centuries at Rawalpindi, Multan and Karachi.

    Brook shared England’s highest-ever partnership of 454 runs with Root for the fourth wicket, taking the team from 249-3 to 703-4 in a marathon stand.

    Root was the first of the pair to be out — leg before wicket on the back foot to Salman Agha — and Brook top-edged a sweep and was caught at fine leg to give Saim Ayub one of his two wickets.

    Brook became England’s sixth test triple century-maker and first since Graham Gooch’s 333 against India in 1990 as Pakistan’s bowlers toiled for 150 overs before Ollie Pope declared the innings half an hour before tea.

    Pakistan then crumbled with its top-order stumbling against the pace of Gus Atkinson (2-28) and Brydon Carse (2-39) after Chris Woakes had uprooted the off stump of Abdullah Shafique on the first ball of the innings.

    England could have pressed for victory inside four days, but Shoaib Bashir dropped an easy chance from Aamer Jamal at deep backward square leg off Carse’s short delivery. One of Pakistan’s three first innings centurions, Agha was fighting a grim battle, unbeaten on 41, with Jamal not out on 27.

    It was a tough day for the hosts after Brook and Root had destroyed the home team bowling with six bowlers conceding over 100 runs for only the second time in test history on a flat wicket. Leg-spinner Abrar Ahmed was hospitalized for fever and didn’t play on Day 4 but he had already cost 0-174.

    Ayub (2-101), Naseem Shah (2-157), Agha (1-118), Jamal (1-126), and Shaheen Shah Afridi (1-120) were ruthlessly treated.

    Root continued his sublime form and raised his career-best score a day after surpassing Alastair Cook’s record of most runs for England in test matches.

    Both batters scored freely as they toyed with pace and spin with ease on a benign wicket.

    “We got bashed up a little bit today, there’s no doubt about that,” said Pakistan assistant coach Tim Nielsen.

    ___

    AP cricket: https://apnews.com/hub/cricket

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  • Highest totals in test cricket history

    Highest totals in test cricket history

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    952-6d Sri Lanka vs. India, Colombo, 1997
    903-7d England vs. Australia, London, 1938
    823-7d England vs. Pakistan, Multan, 2024

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  • Which teams can qualify for the Women’s T20 World Cup semifinals and how?

    Which teams can qualify for the Women’s T20 World Cup semifinals and how?

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    What do India, Pakistan, Bangladesh and the other teams need to do in order to seal a spot? Al Jazeera breaks it down.

    The race for the semifinals at the ICC Women’s T20 World Cup is heating up as all 10 participant nations enter the second half of their group-stage matches and look to climb up the points table.

    After their huge win over Sri Lanka on Wednesday, India leapt up from fourth to second spot in Group A and removed the Asian champions from the reckoning.

    Sri Lanka are already out of semifinal contention; their final group game against New Zealand on Saturday is inconsequential.

    In Group B, debutants Scotland also made an early exit after losing all three games. On Sunday, they will attempt to finish the tournament on a high with an upset of their much higher-ranked British rivals, England.

    Which teams, then, can still qualify for the semifinals and what do they need to do in order to get there?

    Here’s Al Jazeera’s breakdown of the permutations:

    Which teams can qualify for the Women’s T20 World Cup semifinals?

    Group A:

    • Australia
    • India
    • New Zealand
    • Pakistan

    Group B:

    • England
    • South Africa
    • West Indies
    • Bangladesh

    How can Australia qualify for the semifinals?

    • Beat both Pakistan and India in their remaining two group games to finish on top of the table with eight points.
    • In case of a loss against Pakistan, Australia would need to beat India and hope New Zealand beat Pakistan and Sri Lanka beat New Zealand. This would result in six points for Australia and India, and four each for New Zealand and Pakistan.
    • If Australia beat Pakistan but lose to India, they would want New Zealand to lose against both Pakistan and Sri Lanka, resulting in six points for Australia and India and four each for Pakistan and New Zealand.
    • Should they lose both games, Australia will find themselves in a tricky situation – but their high net run rate may still save them. They will hope for two losses for New Zealand against Sri Lanka and Pakistan. Australia will still need their net run rate to be higher than Pakistan’s in order to secure the second qualifying spot from Group A.

    How can India qualify for the semifinals?

    • A win over Australia in their final group game and one loss each for New Zealand and Pakistan will ensure India’s qualification on points.
    • If India lose to Australia, they would require Australia to record a huge win over Pakistan – in order to eliminate Fatima Sana’s team on net run rate – and New Zealand to lose at least one of their games. Group A would then have Australia on top and India in second spot on net run rate.
    • Should India lose to Australia but New Zealand win both their matches, the Australasian teams will qualify for the semis with at least six points each – and Harmanpreet Kaur’s team will be eliminated.
    • If India lose to Australia but New Zealand lose to Pakistan, Australia will qualify as table toppers and leave the other three teams to fight it out on net run rate.

    How can New Zealand qualify for the semifinals?

    • Two wins in their last two matches against Sri Lanka and Pakistan will seal the deal for the White Ferns with six points.
    • Failing to win both games will lead to New Zealand’s removal on two points.
    • If New Zealand win one of their two games, they will hope their geographical neighbour Australia will hand big defeats to both India and Pakistan and help them finish second on a higher net run rate.

    How can Pakistan qualify for the semifinals?

    • In ideal circumstances, Pakistan need to pull off miraculous wins over both New Zealand and Australia and rely on India to defeat Australia. This improbable scenario would send India and Pakistan into the semifinals with six points each.
    • In a slightly more realistic situation, if Pakistan beat New Zealand but lose to Australia, they would need Australia to beat India with a huge margin and Sri Lanka to beat New Zealand in a similar manner. This would result in four points for both Pakistan and India and the team with the higher net run rate will qualify.
    • If Pakistan lose both their games, they will end yet another World Cup campaign at the group stage.
      Pakistan have never qualified for the semifinals of a World Cup [File: Giuseppe Cacace/AFP]

    How can England qualify for the semifinals?

    • England need two wins in their two games to finish on eight points and qualify as table toppers.
    • One win and one loss will see them finish on six points and enter a net run rate battle against South Africa, West Indies and Bangladesh.
    • Should England lose to both Scotland and West Indies, they can still qualify if their net run rate is higher than the other three teams.

    How can South Africa qualify for the semifinals?

    • South Africa need to beat Bangladesh comprehensively in order to maintain their top position with both points and net run rate.
    • Should South Africa lose, they will need the West Indies to lose both their games. In this scenario, their healthy net run rate after the first three games could still see the Proteas women enter the semifinals in the second spot ahead of both the West Indies and Bangladesh.

    How can the West Indies qualify for the semifinals?

    • The West Indies need two wins in their last two matches and hope that South Africa lose to Bangladesh or England lose both of their games.
    • If the West Indies win one game and England win both of theirs, the 2016 champions will hope that South Africa lose to Bangladesh by a big margin. Hayley Matthews’s team will then qualify ahead of South Africa on net run rate.
    • Two losses will result in a group-stage exit for West Indies.

    How can Bangladesh qualify for the semifinals?

    • The hosts, who won their first-ever T20 World Cup match in the tournament opener on October 3, will pull off a near-miracle if they beat both 2016 champions West Indies and 2023 runners-up South Africa and end up on six points. It will be enough to see them through to the knockouts.
    • In the other instance, Bangladesh will hope they can beat at least one of West Indies or South Africa with a big margin and enter the battle for net run rate.
    • Losing both of their games will send Nigar Sultana’s team crashing out of the tournament.

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  • Unbelievable facts

    Unbelievable facts

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    In 2008, Pakistan accidentally caused a global YouTube outage while trying to block the platform…

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  • Pakistan brings arrested nurse before cameras to answer questions about her alleged bombing attempt

    Pakistan brings arrested nurse before cameras to answer questions about her alleged bombing attempt

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    QUETTA, Pakistan (AP) — Pakistani authorities brought a nurse they said was arrested over the weekend before state-run media on Wednesday to answer questions about her alleged suicide bombing attempt. The government-organized interview in Balochistan province was broadcast on national and local television channels.

    The southwestern Balochistan province has for years been the scene of a long-running insurgency, with several separatist groups staging attacks that target mainly security forces in their quest for independence. The province also has an array of militant groups that are active there.

    Pakistan’s government has also long battled militants and insurgents of various groups across the entire country — fighting that has killed hundreds, both civilians and members of the security forces.

    Authorities are likely eager to show that they are gaining the upper hand in the fight.

    In Wednesday’s interview in Quetta, the provincial capital of Baluchistan, the nurse identified herself as Adeela Baloch and said she had worked at a government hospital in the district of Turbat before she was “misguided by terrorists” and recruited to carry out a suicide attack.

    She said she was arrested before she could carry out the attack.

    It was not clear if she spoke under duress. She did not name the group that had allegedly enlisted her or describe the target of the planned attack.

    The Associated Press could not independently confirm her identity or verify her claims. Officials contacted by the AP declined to provide details and only said she would not be prosecuted because she did not carry out the attack.

    Last month, the outlawed separatist Balochistan Liberation Army, said a woman was among a group of its fighters who had killed more than 50 people in the restive province.

    Earlier on Wednesday, a roadside bomb targeting police in Quetta wounded 12 people, according to local officials.

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  • Bomb targets foreign diplomats’ convoy in Pakistan’s restive northwest, policeman killed

    Bomb targets foreign diplomats’ convoy in Pakistan’s restive northwest, policeman killed

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    A roadside blast caused by an improvised explosive device, targeting a convoy of foreign diplomats, killed a policeman and injured four others, an official in Pakistan said Sunday.

    The diplomats were traveling to a tourist area in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, which borders Afghanistan and is a base for militant groups, including the Pakistani Taliban.

    The blast occurred at the tourist spot and hill station of Malam Jabba, one of Pakistan’s two ski resorts, some 250 km (155 miles) north of the provincial capital Peshawar.

    Pakistan Violence
    Vehicles drive past a damaged police vehicle, foreground, which was escorting a convoy of foreign diplomats, at the site of a fatal bomb explosion on a road near Malam Jabba, a tourist area in Pakistan’s Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province.

    Sherin Zada / AP


    The diplomats in the convoy were from Indonesia, Portugal, Kazakhstan, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Zimbabwe, Rwanda, Turkmenistan, Vietnam, Iran, Russia and Tajikistan. All of them are safe and a heavy security contingent is at the scene, police officer Javed Khan said.

    They were visiting the area at the invitation of the local chamber of commerce and industry, Khan added.

    A statement from the Foreign Ministry said an advance scout police vehicle was hit by an IED. The diplomats have returned to the capital Islamabad.

    “Our sympathies are with the families of the policeman. We honor our law enforcement authorities that remain steadfast in the face of terrorists,” said the ministry.

    There was no claim of responsibility for the attack.

    In a separate incident, in southwest Balochistan province, gunmen opened fire on a security patrol team in Zhob district and killed two officers on Saturday night.

    A third died from his injuries on Sunday, said Assistant Police Inspector Ghulam Muhammad.

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  • Hathurusingha wants to complete coaching contract with Bangladesh

    Hathurusingha wants to complete coaching contract with Bangladesh

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    RAWALPINDI, Pakistan (AP) — Bangladesh head coach Chandika Hathurusingha is still interested in completing his contract with the men’s national cricket team to 2025 despite the recent political turmoil in the country.

    There is a strong possibility of a major shakeup in the Bangladesh Cricket Board after the turmoil.

    “I have signed a contract till whatever the date and I’m looking forward to serve that term,” the 55-year-old Hathurusingha told reporters in Rawalpindi on Monday.

    “If the board (is) changed and the new people want to make a change, I’m OK with that. (If) they want me to continue, if they’re happy with me, I’m happy with that.”

    He also said his “thoughts and prayers are with the families that lost loved ones.”

    Hathurusingha is preparing his team for the opening game of a two-match test series against Pakistan, starting Wednesday at Rawalpindi Cricket Stadium.

    Hathurusingha, a former Sri Lankan international cricketer, was appointed Bangladesh’s all-format coach early in 2023 on a two-year contract. It was Hathurusingha’s second stint as Bangladesh coach after 2014-17 before he left to coach Sri Lanka.

    The unrest in Bangladesh disrupted the preparations back home of its test team and players got an additional three days of training in Lahore when they arrived in Pakistan last Tuesday.

    Six Bangladesh test players, who came with the country’s “A” team, also got a four-day practice game against Pakistan Shaheens in Islamabad, although the drawn game was disrupted by the weather.

    The Bangladesh test squad includes star all-rounder Shakib Al Hasan, who was a lawmaker in ousted Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina’s government, but was playing in Canada at the time she resigned earlier this month.

    Pakistan has included pace bowlers Shaheen Shah Afridi, Naseem Shah, Khurram Shehzad and Mohammad Ali in its playing XI for the first test.

    The selectors had already released sole specialist leg-spinner Abrar Ahmed and uncapped batter Kamran Ghulam.

    Rawalpindi will also host the second test from Aug. 30.

    ___

    AP cricket: https://apnews.com/hub/cricket

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  • Pakistan’s health ministry confirms a case of mpox but more tests are being done for its variant

    Pakistan’s health ministry confirms a case of mpox but more tests are being done for its variant

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    PESHAWAR, Pakistan (AP) — Pakistan’s health ministry said Friday it has identified a case of mpox, but sequencing is being done to determine whether it is a new variant, days after the World Health Organization declared the spread of mpox a global health emergency.

    The case, in a man who had recently returned from a Middle Eastern country, is the first in Pakistan this year but the nature of the variant was yet to be determined. The first case was reported on Thursday by authorities in Sweden.

    The ministry in a statement said the man was from Mardan, a district in the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province bordering Afghanistan.

    It said the ministry has directed officials at border crossing points and airports to ensure strict surveillance and collect samples for medical tests if they see symptoms of the disease in any passenger returning from abroad.

    It was unclear which Middle Eastern country the man had visited, and no cases of the new variant have yet been reported in that region. The United Arab Emirates, however, has had 16 confirmed cases of mpox since 2022, according to the WHO. The UAE is particularly affected by transnational outbreaks given its role as a hub connecting East and West with its long-haul carriers Emirates and Etihad.

    On Wednesday, the WHO said there have been more than 14,000 cases and 524 deaths in Africa this year, which already exceed last year’s figures. More than 96% of all cases and deaths have been in Congo.

    The director of public health for Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Dr. Irshad Roghani, said the person infected with mpox in Pakistan has mild symptoms. “Contact tracing of the affected person has been started and samples of more people are being obtained,” he told The Associated Press.

    Roghani said that since 2022, 300 people have been tested in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, of whom two tested positive last year. This is the first case detected this year.

    ——

    This story has been corrected to say that the health ministry says the sequencing of the case is still being done and it is not yet confirmed as the new variant.

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  • Pakistan Makes Positive Move On Cannabis

    Pakistan Makes Positive Move On Cannabis

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    Recently, Pakistan approved the passage of an ordinance that created the Cannabis Control and Regulatory Authority (CCRA). This government body is tasked to regulate the cultivation, extraction, refining, manufacturing, and sale of cannabis derivatives for medical and industrial purposes.

    RELATED: How To Be Discreet When Using Weed

    UN laws says if country wants to produce, process and conduct sales of cannabis-related products, it must have a federal entity to deal with supply chain and ensure international compliance.  The regulatory framework of the CCRA is the organization.

    The CCRA specifies the maximum level of THC in the cannabis derivative to be 0.3 percent to avoid the abuse of medicinal products and use them recreationally.  With this move, the government plans to crack down on illicit grows in order to bring them into a licensed tax paying business.

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    Terry Hacienda

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  • ‘Jackie Chan Adventures,’ ‘Men in Black’ on the Slate as Sony Strikes Pakistan Deal With Streamer Begin (EXCLUSIVE)

    ‘Jackie Chan Adventures,’ ‘Men in Black’ on the Slate as Sony Strikes Pakistan Deal With Streamer Begin (EXCLUSIVE)

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    Sony Pictures Entertainment (SPE) has signed a one-year deal that is a mix of exclusive and non-exclusive library titles for the Pakistan market with streamer Begin.

    Backed by venture accelerator Z2C Limited, Begin is an SVOD platform that serves the Southwest Asian region, with licensed deals in live sports and entertainment.

    The deal also includes TV Shows such “The Goldbergs,” “Damages,” “The Big C,” “Preacher,” “Sneaky Pete,” “Men in Black” and “Jackie Chan Adventures.” Begin will also license rights to select titles from SPE’s film library.

    Begin has existing live sports deals with Professional Golfers Association, Saudi Premier League and All Elite Wrestling.

    Jonathan Mark, chief commercial officer at Begin, said: “Sony Pictures is a great partner and we are thrilled to expand our relationship through this forward-thinking agreement. This not only allows us to bring their impressive slate of beloved film franchises to Begin in the Pakistan market, but it also establishes a new source of first run films for Begin movie lovers.”

    Sonika Basin, VP, international distribution, South Asia, SPE, added: “We are thrilled to partner with Begin, which is one of the leading SVOD platforms in Pakistan. At Sony Pictures, we produce some of the biggest blockbusters and the most creative, original films and tv shows in the industry. This exciting agreement further demonstrates the importance of content to our distribution partners as they grow their audiences and deliver the very best in entertainment.”

    In 2024, the projected revenue in the Pakistan SVOD market is estimated to reach $353 million, according to data and business intelligence platform Statista. It is expected to grow by 13% to reach a market volume of 25 million users and $514 million by 2027.

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    Naman Ramachandran

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  • Death of Osama bin Laden Fast Facts | CNN

    Death of Osama bin Laden Fast Facts | CNN

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    CNN
     — 

    Here’s a look at the death of Osama bin Laden.

    On May 2, 2011, Al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden was killed by US Special Forces during an early morning raid at a compound in Abbottabad, Pakistan.

    – Built in approximately 2006.
    – Significantly larger than other homes in the area, and worth a reported $1 million.
    – Lacked telephone and internet service.
    – Residents burned their trash rather than having it picked up.
    – Approximately 24 people lived at the house.
    – Surrounded by 12- to 18-foot walls topped by barbed wire.
    – Had two security gates.
    – Bin Laden and his family’s living quarters were on the second and third levels.
    – The third floor terrace had a seven-foot privacy wall.
    – Located only about a mile from the Pakistan Military Academy.

    US forces retrieved numerous items from bin Laden’s compound, including 10 hard drives, five computers and more than 100 storage devices, such as disks, DVDs and thumb drives, according to a senior US official.

    2007 (approx.) – US intelligence uncovers the name of one of bin Laden’s most trusted couriers.

    2009 (approx.) – Intelligence sources identify the area of Pakistan where the courier and his brother live.

    August 2010 – US intelligence sources identify the Abbottabad compound as the home of the courier and his brother, who have no obvious means of affording a $1 million home.

    September 2010 – The CIA informs President Barack Obama that bin Laden may be living in the Abbottabad compound. They base this on the size and price tag of the compound as well as the elaborate security.

    February 2011 – The intelligence on the Abbottabad compound is considered strong enough to begin planning action.

    March 14, 2011 – President Obama chairs the first of five National Security Council meetings to discuss an operation to raid bin Laden’s compound.

    March 29, 2011 – Second National Security meeting.

    April 12, 2011 – Third meeting.

    April 19, 2011 – Fourth meeting.

    April 28, 2011 – Last of the National Security Council meetings on the bin Laden raid.

    April 29, 2011 – At 8:20 a.m. ET, President Obama gives the order to raid bin Laden’s compound.

    May 2, 2011 – In the early morning hours (mid-afternoon on May 1 in the United States), a group of 25 Navy Seals raid the compound in Abbottabad, Pakistan.
    – They arrive outside the compound in two Black Hawk helicopters.
    – The operation takes 40 minutes total.
    – US Special Forces breach the outer walls of the compound before fighting their way through the ground floor of the three-story building. The firefight then moves to the second and third floors.
    – In the last 5-10 minutes of the firefight, bin Laden is killed by a gunshot wound to the head.
    – Three men, including a son of bin Laden, are killed as well as one woman.
    – Bin Laden’s body is identified by one of his wives. Facial recognition is also used.

    May 2, 2011 – Bin Laden is buried at sea off the deck of the USS Carl Vinson in the Arabian Sea.
    – He is buried within 24 hours according to Islamic law.
    – The hour-long ceremony aboard the USS Carl Vinson is conducted according to Islamic law.

    May 2, 2011 – A DNA test is done on a sample from the body, confirming that it is bin Laden.

    May 3, 2011 – Attorney General Eric Holder declares the raid “lawful, legitimate and appropriate in every way.”

    May 3, 2011 – White House Press Secretary Jay Carney offers new details on the raid. He clarifies that the woman killed was on the first floor, not with bin Laden, and was killed in the crossfire. Carney also says that bin Laden was not armed but did put up resistance.

    May 3, 2011 – A congressional source tells CNN that bin Laden had approximately $745 and two telephone numbers sewn into his clothing.

    May 3, 2011 – Taliban spokesman Zabiullah Mojahed releases a statement, “Obama has not got any strong evidence that can prove his claim over killing of the Sheikh Osama bin Laden… And secondly, the closest sources for Sheikh Osama bin Laden have not confirmed” the death.

    May 4, 2011 – White House Press Secretary Carney announces that President Obama has decided not to release photos of bin Laden’s body.

    May 6, 2011 – Al Qaeda confirms bin Laden’s death, in a statement on jihadist forums.

    May 12, 2011 – US officials confirm to CNN that US authorities have interviewed three of bin Laden’s wives.

    May 13, 2011 – It is revealed that a large amount of pornography was seized from the Abbottabad compound during the raid. It is unclear to whom it belonged.

    May 13, 2011 – A US military official tells CNN the Navy Seal team who carried out the bin Laden raid wore helmet-mounted digital cameras that recorded the mission.

    May 17, 2011 – Senator John Kerry announces that Pakistan will return the tail of the US helicopter damaged during the raid.

    May 18, 2011 – Admiral Mike Mullen and Defense Secretary Robert Gates tell reporters there is no evidence that the senior Pakistani leadership knew of bin Laden’s presence in Pakistan.

    May 26, 2011 – A team of CIA forensic specialists is granted permission by the Pakistani government to examine the compound.

    June 15, 2011 – Pakistan’s intelligence agency arrests several people suspected of assisting the CIA before the raid.

    June 17, 2011 – The US Justice Department formally drops terrorism-related criminal charges against bin Laden.

    July 11, 2011 – Pakistani security forces detain a doctor suspected of helping the CIA attempt to collect the DNA of bin Laden’s family members through a vaccination drive.

    October 6, 2011 – Pakistan’s information ministry says the doctor suspected of helping the CIA target bin Laden will be charged with treason. Also, bin Laden’s compound will be turned over to city officials.

    February 2012 – Pakistani authorities begin to demolish the compound.

    May 9, 2012 – Citing that it is of national security interest, a federal judge has denies Judicial Watch’s Freedom of Information request regarding the release of bin Laden death photos.

    May 23, 2012 – Shakeel Afridi, the Pakistani doctor accused of helping the CIA track down bin Laden, is fined $3,500 for spying for the United States and sentenced to 33 years in prison for treason by a tribal court.

    September 4, 2012 – The memoir “No Easy Day: The Firsthand Account of the Mission that Killed Osama bin Laden” by former US Navy SEAL Matt Bissonnette, written under the name Mark Owen, is published.

    February 11, 2013 – Conflicting information about which Navy SEAL killed bin Laden appears when Esquire magazine reports on an unnamed former Navy SEAL who says he fired the kill shot, not the point man as told in Bissonette’s book “No Easy Day.”

    May 21, 2013 – A three-judge federal appeals court panel rejects an appeal from a conservative legal group, ruling that the release of post-mortem images of bin Laden’s body could result in attacks on Americans.

    October 31, 2014 – Adm. Brian Losey, head of the Naval Warfare Special Command, releases an open letter warning Navy SEALs against betraying their promise of secrecy. This is in advance of two upcoming interviews from SEALs involved in the bin Laden mission.

    November 7, 2014 – Former Navy SEAL Robert O’Neill says in an interview with The Washington Post that he was the one who fired the shot that killed bin Laden.

    May 10, 2015 – In a published report, investigative journalist Seymour Hersh contends the Obama Adminstration lied about the circumstances surrounding the killing of bin Laden. The White House later dismisses the report as “baseless.”

    May 20, 2015 – The Office of the Director of National Intelligence begins releasing and declassifying documents recovered in the raid in May 2011.

    March 1, 2016 – A second batch of recovered documents is released by the DNI. Included in the materials are bin Laden’s personal letters and will.

    August 2016 – Bissonnette agrees to pay the US government all past and future proceeds of the book “No Easy Day,” settling a lawsuit by the government for “breach of contract” by violating a non-disclosure agreement.

    November 1, 2017 – The CIA announces the release of thousands of files it says came from the bin Laden raid. Among them is the deceased al Qaeda founder’s personal journal.

    April 2023 – Newly released photos, obtained from the Obama Presidential Library via a Freedom of Information Act request by The Washington Post, offer a window into the meticulous planning – and tension – among the highest-ranking members of the US government on May 1, 2011.

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