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Pakistan issues new flood alerts in south as rescue efforts continue amid deadly northwest deluge
Heavy rains threaten southern Sindh just days after devastating floods in northwest Pakistan killed hundreds and left many missing, stretching rescue efforts thin.
Pakistan issues new flood alerts in south as rescue efforts continue amid deadly northwest deluge
A bus drives through a flooded road after heavy rainfall in Karachi, Pakistan, Tuesday, August 19, 2025. / AP
6 hours ago

Pakistan issued a flood alert on Wednesday for some southern districts, warning of torrential rains, as rescue teams continued searching for missing people in the country's northwest, where severe floods killed hundreds over the past week.

The new warning is for the same southern regions struck by climate-induced catastrophic deluges in 2022 that killed thousands of people.

The National Emergencies Operation Centre said expected rainfall of up to 100 millimetres (about 4 inches) over the next 24 hours could submerge highways, disrupt transport, and damage power and telecommunications networks in Karachi, Hyderabad, Thatta, Badin, Mirpurkhas, and Sukkur in the southern province of Sindh.

At least 41 people have been killed in rain-related incidents nationwide over the past 24 hours, the disaster management agency said, mostly in the northern Gilgit-Baltistan region and in the city of Karachi, where torrential rains on Tuesday flooded streets and disrupted daily life.

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Schools in Karachi remain closed.

Pakistan has suffered above-normal monsoon rains, killing at least 746 people since June 26. Officials say 437 of these deaths are since August 14.

Meanwhile, rescuers in the northwest pressed on with a grim search for nearly 150 people missing in the district of Buner, where floodwaters carrying massive boulders and mud swept through villages, flattening homes and leaving piles of rubble.

Search teams aided by army sniffer dogs pulled more bodies from the debris as anxious relatives looked on.

Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif and army chief Field Marshal Asim Munir visited flood-hit areas in KP and met with the affected families, the Prime Minister’s Office said.

Mohammad Suhail, a spokesman for the emergency services, said the death toll in Buner has climbed to 290 after more bodies were recovered.

RelatedTRT Global - ‘It came out of nowhere’: Flash floods ravage Pakistan as climate chaos keeps nation on high alert

Rescue teams managed to distribute tents, blankets, cooking utensils, ready-to-eat food, and clean drinking water in the area, he said, as others worked on restoring power in the devastated zone.

Most of the damaged roads have been reopened in Buner.

Survivors recounted horrific stories of sudden floodwaters that carried boulders and barely allowed people to run to safer grounds.

SOURCE:TRT World and Agencies
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