Category: National

  • Blast damages girls’ school in Lakki Marwat

    Blast damages girls’ school in Lakki Marwat

    An explosion at a girls’ primary school in Lakki Marwat district of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa caused partial damage to the building, though no loss of life was reported, police said on Sunday.

    District Police Officer (DPO) Nazeer Khan told a private news channel, that the incident took place late Saturday night when an explosion occurred at a girl’s primary school in the Wanda Zahid Gul area, situated within the jurisdiction of Daddiwala Police Station.

    “The blast was carried out using an improvised explosive device (IED), which left part of the school building damaged. Luckily, no casualties were reported,” the DPO stated, adding that a heavy contingent of police had been deployed in the area.


    He further said that two IEDs had been planted in the school. “One of the IEDs exploded, while the other one was discovered when the police reached the incident site and carried out an inspection,” he explained. “It was successfully defused by the bomb disposal squad.”


    Police confirmed that a search operation had been launched in the district to trace those behind the attack.

    Since the early 2000s, Lakki Marwat has been subjected to violence and terrorism. Despite a period of relative peace brought about by security measures, militant activity has increased recently, raising concerns of renewed instability.

    Earlier this month, militants carried out multiple attacks in the district, killing three soldiers and a woman, while injuring three others, including two soldiers. On August 13, police reported that a gas pipeline in Lakki Marwat had been blown up by terrorists, suspending supply to Punjab.

  • Ganda Singh Wala continues to witness exceptionally high flood as Sindh braces for ‘super flood’

    Ganda Singh Wala continues to witness exceptionally high flood as Sindh braces for ‘super flood’

    Punjab’s Ganda Singh Wala on the Sutlej River continues to witness an “exceptionally high” flood, while Balloki on Ravi and Trimmu on the Chenab also record a “very high” flood level.

    According to the Flood Forecasting Division’s (FFD) data, the outflows at Ganda Singh Wala were 253,068 cusecs and “steady”, while those at Trimmu were over 550,000 cusecs and “rising”.

    Death toll rises to 33 due to flood in Punjab

    As many as 33 people have lost their lives and eight others were injured, driven by high floods in the Chenab, Ravi and Sutlej rivers from Aug 23 to 31, said the Provincial Disaster Management Authority (PDMA).

    According to the PDMA, 2,066,785 people of 2,222 mouzas were affected, and 506 relief camps were established to provide shelter to 10,654 people in the province. At least 352 medical camps were established, in which 17,853 people were treated.

    The rescue teams evacuated 760,424 people and 516,258 animals and transported them to safe locations. Veterinary services are being provided through 331 camps.

    Meanwhile, National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA) Chairman Lieutenant General Inam Haider Malik, while addressing the media alongside Climate Change Minister Dr. Musadik Malik, said that recent rains and flash floods have claimed 850 lives and left more than 1,150 people injured across the country.

    The NDMA chief said that over 600,000 people were relocated to safer areas during the flooding, and thousands of livestock were also rescued across the country.

    Malik further stated that the final monsoon spell is expected in the first 10 days of September, with heavy rainfall likely in eastern Punjab, Azad Kashmir and nearby regions

    Sindh braces for ‘super flood’

    Sindh Chief Minister (CM) Murad Ali Shah said the provincial government had devised a comprehensive plan to deal with the looming “super flood”.

    Speaking to media on Sunday during his visit to Sukkur and Guddu barrages, he stated that inflows from Trimmu would reach Sindh in about five days via Panjnad.

    Shah said that in 2010, inflows of 1.1 million cusecs had passed from the Guddu Barrage. “This time, even 900,000 to one million cusecs would be extremely challenging. If inflows remain limited, losses will be manageable, but crops may still not survive,” he added.

    The chief minister maintained that the provincial government’s foremost priority was to protect human lives and livestock, followed by safeguarding the Guddu, Sukkur and Kotri barrages.

    Highlighting that Sindh’s terrain poses greater risks than Punjab’s, he explained, “In Punjab, designated breaches allow water to return quickly to the river. But Sindh lies below river level, so once water spreads, it does not recede easily.”

  • Flood money spent on ceremonial events, refreshments, souvenirs: NDMA audit report reveals unauthorised expenditure

    Flood money spent on ceremonial events, refreshments, souvenirs: NDMA audit report reveals unauthorised expenditure

    The audit report of the National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA) for FY 2023-24 reveals unauthorised expenditure of Rs. 23.254 million from the National Disaster Management Fund (NDMF) on ‘unauthorized’ event management services, with large payments processed on a single day. The money was reportedly spent on ceremonial events such as inaugurations, post-rescue events, and simulation exercises, including payments for refreshments, souvenirs, printing, and related services.

    According to reporters, these expenses were not aligned with the NDMA Act, which restricts the fund’s use to “emergency preparedness, response, mitigation, relief, and reconstruction”. NDMA management defended the spending as part of a shift from “reactive” to “proactive” disaster management, but the audit rejected this explanation. The matter was not regularised as no DAC meeting was held.


    But this is not the only area where authorities fell short.


    Similarly, locals and analysts have criticised the government for having poor radar systems that would not timely forecast heavy rains. In 2018, $210 million were allotted for the Pakistan Hydromet and Climate Services Project, including $188 million worth of World Bank credit, to improve weather forecasting and disaster management with new radar systems. However, the funds have not been utilised effectively to date, with experts reportedly citing bureaucratic failures.

    After the 2022 floods, Pakistan got over $10 billion in pledges at a Geneva donor conference for recovery and climate resilience. But by mid-2024, most of that money still had not reportedly reached communities.

    This year, in 2025, eastern Pakistan is on high alert as floodwaters from Punjab are flowing down towards Sindh and are expected to hit by September 2 to 3, according to Senior Minister Sharjeel Inam Memon.

    Floods 2025

    On June 26 began the spells of torrential rains and flash floods. By August 15, heavy rains and increased flash floods in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa wreaked havoc, killing at least 460 people and injuring over 245 others, according to the Provincial Disaster Management Authority (PDMA).

    In Punjab, where around 1.5 million lives are at risk, at least 30 people have died after India opened major dams, including the Salal and Baglihar dams on the Chenab River, releasing water into Pakistan and worsening levels in the Sutlej, Ravi, and Chenab rivers.

    The Current reached out to Idrees Mahsud, Member of Disaster Risk Reduction at the National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA), who stated that “All preparations to facilitate victims and animals are in place,” adding that “obviously it can’t be an ideal situation.”

    “Our main priority is to evacuate people. Camp management is very important; it has its own SOPs, and we are trying our best within the given resources to provide all facilities to the affectees, including medical relief camps, which are available everywhere and largely staffed by volunteers. This is a disaster situation; nothing can be ideal,” he said.

    Flooding in the Chenab river has submerged 991 villages, Sialkot flooding has affected 395 villages, 127 in Jhang, 124 in Multan, 48 in Chiniot, 66 in Gujrat, 51 in Khanewal, 45 in Hafizabad, 41 in Sargodha, 35 in Mandi Bahauddin, and 19 villages in Wazirabad.

    According to Relief Commissioner Nabeel Javed, more than 2,308 villages across Punjab had been underwater, and 481,000 people have been evacuated to safer areas. 511 relief camps have been set up by the provincial administration where flood affectees are being provided food and shelter, along with 351 medical camps and 321 veterinary camps. Moreover, more than 405,000 animals have also been moved to different places.

    Iterating that over 1.4 million people have been rescued and are in relief camps, Mahsud said: “Which government on this earth has been responding better than this government?”

    He clarified that the NDMA is not claiming to provide “two-star or four-star hotel facilities” in these camps. “Relief camps mean you save a human being and help them sustain for a few days, until they are able to return to their homes once the water recedes, with whatever means are available.”

    Mahsud further said that if any camp faces issues, people are encouraged to inform the authorities so they can verify and resolve the problems. “We try to facilitate people in every way, from camps and shelter to medical treatment and medicines.”

    So far, this year, at least 800 people have died across Pakistan in the flooding, while 1,018 have been injured, 6,630 houses damaged, and 5,548 livestock killed, according to the National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA).

    What’s next?

    These floods are yet to hit Sindh, where Guddu Barrage will receive inflows of 700,000–800,000 cusecs early next week. The province’s Senior Minister Sharjeel Inam Memon warns that around 1.6 million people across 1,657 villages could be at risk.

    Meanwhile, Chief Minister Syed Murad Ali Shah, over 52,000 families along the Indus are under threat. He has directed authorities to set up over 500 relief camps along embankments to safeguard people and livestock, while more than 30,000 personnel of Rescue-1122 and 178 boats have been deployed in northern and southern districts.

    Previously, the 2022 floods had affected 33 million people in Pakistan and destroyed 897,014 houses and damaged another 1,391,467. The climatic disaster also killed 1,164,270 livestock, primarily in Balochistan, while access to flood-hit areas was severely hindered by damage to 13,115 kilometres of roads and the destruction of 439 bridges.

  • ‘We are not copying you’; Viral reporter from Bhai Bhai Channel tells BBC

    ‘We are not copying you’; Viral reporter from Bhai Bhai Channel tells BBC

    A young reporter whose unorthodox reports have gone viral on social media has addressed the confusion surrounding the name of her channel which is shown on her mic as ‘BBC Urdu News Punjab TV’, hours after the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) issued a statement warning audiences to beware of impostors.

    In a video statement posted on the internet in the wee hours of Saturday, Mehrunnisa held the same mic, saying her channel’s name is an abbreviation for Bhai Bhai Channel. 

    “As you can see, BBC UK walay has uploaded a post on X. Their channel’s abbreviation is British Broadcasting Corporation, while ours stands for Bhai Bhai Channel. You can directly talk to us via email. We are not copying you,” she addressed the allegations.

    In its statement, originally in Urdu, BBC wrote, “It has come to our attention that a digital media company called BBC Urdu News Punjab TV is operating in Pakistan using the BBC’s name.”

    The BBC stated that it has no connection with BBC Urdu Punjab TV or its reporter Mehrunnisa, adding that the organisation has not been authorised to use the BBC’s name in this manner. 

    “We request BBC audiences to verify the presence of any content published under the BBC’s name on the BBC’s official platforms before trusting it.”

    After her report on the visit of the Iranian President to Lahore went viral, Mehrunnisa once again became the rage on social media for her coverage of Lahore’s flood-affected suburb Shahdara, where she boarded a boat wearing a rescue jacket alongside rescue officials.

    “As you can see, the water pressure is rising; we are so scared, the boat is shifting to one side then to another, we can’t balance,” the reporter was heard saying. She signed off with a plea that was nothing short of iconic, “Please just pray for us guys.”

  • Donald Trump impressed by Gen Asim Munir’s consistency, steady approach: American magazine

    Donald Trump impressed by Gen Asim Munir’s consistency, steady approach: American magazine

    The American magazine The National Interest has highlighted that Chief of Army Staff (COAS) Field Marshal Syed Asim Munir’s steady and consistent approach has resonated well with US President Donald Trump.

    “Widely regarded as a steady hand in an often turbulent region, Munir’s consistency in both strategic outlook and messaging appealed to Trump’s craving for predictability beneath the theatrics,” read the magazine’s article published on August 26.

    The magazine maintained that for years, India sat comfortably in Washington’s “good graces”, however, “the script began to flip”, when President Trump praised Pakistan for counter-terrorism cooperation during his first joint address to Congress on March 05, 2025.

    The magazine maintained that following General Munir’s meeting with President Trump in White House in late June, the relationship between both countries “flowered”, adding, “a month later, Trump doubled down on his new ‘bromance’ with General Munir, while touting great economic deals with Pakistan,” distancing himself from India by punishing it economically as the US imposed massive 50 percent tariffs on Indian goods.

    After Pakistan shot down Indian fighter jets in early May, the magazine says Indian Prime Minister (PM) Narendra Modi came under domestic pressure and he might attempt choking off the Indus River and its tributaries, which flow from Northern India into Pakistan, to avenge, an act Islamabad has already clarified would be considered an act of war. 

    The magazine said that when Indian premier Modi launched an attack on Pakistan in May in the wake of the April 22 Pahalgam incident in Indian Illegally Occupied Jammu and Kashmir (IIOJK), he intended to demonstrate Indian military superiority; however, “the gamble partially backfired” when Pakistan downed a number of Indian fighter jets in the ensuing dogfights before agreeing to a ceasefire.

    Pakistan has claimed to have shot down six Indian fighter jets, including Rafales, on the night of May 6-7, when the latter launched strikes in Pakistan, killing civilians.

    In an interview with Bloomberg Television during the Shangri-La Dialogue in Singapore earlier June, India’s Chief of Defence Staff, General Anil Chauhan, had admitted that Indian aircraft were downed during the May conflict with Pakistan.

  • Pakistan’s top Ironman athlete Shahrez Khan sent to jail on judicial remand

    Pakistan’s top Ironman athlete Shahrez Khan sent to jail on judicial remand

    A Lahore anti-terrorism court (ATC) dismissed the police’s plea for the additional physical remand of PTI founding chairman Imran Khan’s nephew, Shahrez Khan, and instead sent him to jail on judicial remand in connection with the May 9 case.

    Shahrez, the son of Imran Khan’s sister Aleema Khan, was arrested on August 21, followed by the arrest of his brother Shershah in the same case.

    He was presented before ATC Judge Manzer Ali Gill on Saturday (today) after the completion of his physical remand. The prosecution requested an extension of his physical remand for further investigation, but the judge rejected the plea and sent him on judicial remand.

    Read More: EXCLUSIVE: Imran’s arrested nephew was in Chitral on day of Jinnah House attack

  • ‘Decreasing trend’ in Shahdara flows; NDMA warns of urban flooding in Karachi

    ‘Decreasing trend’ in Shahdara flows; NDMA warns of urban flooding in Karachi

    Punjab PDMA Director General (DG) Irfan Ali Kathia has stated that a “decreasing trend” has been noted in the water flow at Shahdara on the Ravi River.

    “The largest deluge in Ravi has reached Balloki and has a flow of 211,000 cusecs. It includes the waters from the outfall of Nankana Sahib’s Daek nullah,” he said, addressing the media in Lahore on Saturday.

    He predicted that the water levels would rise and eventually merge with the Chenab at Sidhnai Headworks, adding that the flow would increase at Head Islam near Vehari within the next 48 to 55 hours.

    “From 6am to 9am tomorrow, we are expecting 830,000 cusecs at Trimmu,” he said, commending the authorities for their timely decision to blow up dykes to save lives by diverting water.

    Noting the recent rains, Kathia said additional water flows had entered the River Chenab from India, causing a medium-level flood at Marala. The Provincial Disaster Management Authority (PDMA) reported that 28 deaths have so far been recorded in Punjab due to the ongoing rains and flooding.

    Meanwhile, the flood, after wreaking havoc in major parts of Punjab, is expected to enter Sindh, and the authorities have been put on alert as the province braces for the flood’s impact.

    Sindh Irrigation Minister Jam Khan Shoro said that the provincial authorities will see the scale of the deluge at Panjnad, adding that the province does not have the option of creating controlled breaches in the dams.

    On Friday, the National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA) released a public alert, warning citizens of urban flooding in Karachi from Aug 30 to Sept 2.

  • Oil and Gas Development Company Limited Launches New Logo as #OGDCTheEnergy Sparks Buzz on Social Media

    Oil and Gas Development Company Limited Launches New Logo as #OGDCTheEnergy Sparks Buzz on Social Media

    Oil and Gas Development Company Limited has launched its new logo today, signalling what the company describes as a new era of energy. The launch has sparked a wave of reactions on social media, with the hashtag #OGDCTheEnergy trending at the top spot on X.


    The company, which has been at the centre of Pakistan’s energy sector for over 65 years, presented the new identity as a reflection of its operational strength and future ambitions. According to OGDC, the rebranding shows its commitment to innovation, delivery, and building trust as it works to meet the country’s energy demands.


    On X, users shared their excitement about the new look, with many interpreting it as a sign of renewed momentum in the energy sector. Some praised the bold identity as a fresh step forward, while others expressed optimism that OGDC’s rebranding could be the beginning of further milestones for the country’s energy industry.



    The online discussion also highlighted the company’s role in powering the nation. X users pointed out that OGDC’s operational excellence over the years has made it a cornerstone of the energy sector, and the new identity further reinforces that role.


    Observers believe the change arrives at a critical moment for Pakistan, as the energy sector undergoes a transformation driven by technology, innovation, and the push for modernisation. For many, the fresh logo represents continuity of commitment with a renewed focus on the future.


    The hashtag #OGDCTheEnergy has shown how closely the public associates the company with national progress. The wave of public response suggests that the new logo has resonated strongly, not only as a corporate statement but as a message of optimism for the country’s energy future.


    How do you like the new logo? Here’s a glimpse:

  • ‘I shouldn’t have lost my temper’: Azma Bokhari says she regrets her statement

    ‘I shouldn’t have lost my temper’: Azma Bokhari says she regrets her statement

    Punjab Information Minister Azma Zahid Bokhari on Thursday regretted her recent harsh remarks passed in the wake of online trolling on Chief Minister (CM) Maryam Nawaz’s clothes.

    Bokhari’s lament came days after she, during a press conference in Lahore, passed objectionable remarks, saying that mothers of those commenting on Maryam Nawaz’s attire “do not consider wearing appropriate clothes”.

    “I am in pain from giving such a statement. I should have expressed restraint,” Bokhari stated, speaking on a private media channel’s talk show.

    When informed that she should not have responded to trolls at their level, as she holds a ministerial post, Bokhari admitted, “I should not have lost my temper, which I realised later.”

    Recalling the Thursday visit of the chief minister to Lahore’s Shahdara to oversee relief measures amid the ongoing flood situation in the River Ravi, Bokhari said when Maryam Nawaz visited the affected area on a boat, “an organised propaganda” was carried out against the provincial executive chief.

    When the host further informed Bokhari that Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) as well as Pakistan Muslim League Nawaz (PML-N) do not condemn the trolling of females, she replied that her party does not endorse trolling, adding, “We do not have any propaganda cell.”

    “Why don’t they [trolls] come out of what CM Maryam is wearing? Why don’t they talk about her performance or how she is serving the people of Punjab?” she concluded by asking.

  • FIA suspends Torkham immigration officer for filming women

    FIA suspends Torkham immigration officer for filming women

    The Federal Investigation Agency (FIA) has suspended an officer at the Torkham border immigration centre after a video surfaced showing him filming female travellers without their consent.

    The incident sparked outrage on social media after the video went viral. It showed women without veils being recorded during immigration procedures.

    According to media reports, quoting an FIA spokesperson, the officer identified as Ehtesham-ul-Haq was found recording travellers during duty hours. Following the revelation, the FIA director general ordered his immediate suspension and initiated a departmental inquiry. The FIA Peshawar Zone director has also been instructed to submit a comprehensive report on the incident.

    “The FIA is committed to ensuring a respectful and dignified immigration experience for all travelers,” the spokesperson said. “Any misuse of authority or violation of duty will result in strict disciplinary action.”

    The agency added that it is working on modernising immigration services and maintaining professional standards. “All officials must treat citizens with courtesy and follow the law. Any breach of rules will lead to action without discrimination,” the spokesperson stated.