ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s eastern province of Punjab said Wednesday it has requisitioned the army for rescue and relief operations in seven districts after major rivers flowing from India swelled with heavy monsoon rains, prompting flood warnings and heightened monitoring for emergencies.
Heavy rains have lashed several parts of Pakistan since August 15, killing 489 people and injuring 348, with the northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province recording the highest casualties at 408. Sindh has reported 29 deaths, northern Gilgit Baltistan 26, Azad Jammu and Kashmir 21, Balochistan four and Punjab one, according to official figures.
Since June 26, seasonal rains have killed 802 people and injured 1,088 nationwide, including 479 in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, 165 in Punjab, 57 in Sindh, 45 in Gilgit Baltistan, 24 in Balochistan and Azad Kashmir, and eight in Islamabad.
Floodwaters in the Sutlej, Chenab and Ravi rivers have now forced authorities to evacuate residents from vulnerable areas of Punjab, the country’s most populous province bordering India.
“The Punjab Home Ministry has written to the federal interior ministry for the deployment of army units in seven districts – Lahore, Kasur, Sialkot, Faisalabad, Narowal, Okara and Sargodha – to support rescue and relief activities,” the provincial administration said in a statement.

Villagers stand outside their houses, partially submerged in floodwaters, after heavy rainfall in the Haqu Wala village at Kasur district on August 24, 2025. (AFP/File)
It added that the number of troops will be determined in consultation with district administrations.
The ministry said the army was called in “to assist civil administration and protect human lives,” with Army Aviation and other resources also on standby for use in flood-affected areas.
Provincial disaster and rescue agencies, police and civil defense units were already working on the frontlines, it said.
‘EXTRAORDINARY’ RIVER FLOWS
The National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA) has issued multiple flood alerts in the early hours of the day, warning of “extraordinary” flows in rivers. At Marala on the Chenab River, discharge crossed 900,000 cusecs at 2 a.m., well above the dangerous threshold.
At Khanki, the flow reached 450,000 cusecs, while the Ravi River at Jassar exceeded 200,000 cusecs, with Kot Naina recording 250,000 cusecs.
Authorities warned low-lying areas around Shahdara, Park View and Motorway-2 near Lahore were at risk of inundation.
“The situation in the Chenab and Ravi rivers is extremely dangerous,” the NDMA said. “Residents along riverbanks and waterways must immediately move to safer locations.”“Avoid unnecessary travel in flood-hit areas, keep emergency kits (water, food, medicines) ready and safeguard important documents,” it added.
The NDMA said it was working in coordination with civil and military authorities nationwide, with the National Emergencies Operation Center on round-the-clock alert.
MINISTERS TO OVERSEE RELIEF
Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif has directed federal ministers to personally oversee relief efforts in Punjab, according to a statement from his office on Tuesday.
The ministers were told to visit their constituencies, supervise evacuations and coordinate directly with the Provincial Disaster Management Authority (PDMA).
“The prime minister also stressed that the process of relocating residents living along riverbanks to safer places must be made more efficient and swifter,” the statement said.
Focusing on the situation in the rest of the country, the government approved Rs3 billion rupees ($10.8 million) in emergency funds for flood-affected families in Gilgit Baltistan.
The United Nations said it had released $600,000 over the weekend to support Pakistan’s flood relief activities.
The NDMA has warned that Punjab and Azad Kashmir are expected to receive more heavy rains over the next two to three days, raising fears of worsening floods.
Officials say the current monsoon spell is likely to last until at least Sept. 10 and could rival the catastrophic floods of 2022, which killed more than 1,700 people and caused damage exceeding $30 billion.
Annual monsoon rains are vital for Pakistan’s agriculture and water supply but in recent years have also brought devastation, a trend experts link to climate change.
Despite contributing less than 1 percent of global greenhouse gas emissions, Pakistan is among the world’s most climate-vulnerable nations, suffering increasingly erratic weather, from droughts and heatwaves to record-breaking rains.