Looming super flood

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Pakistan once again stands on the brink of disaster. The worst floods since 1988 have engulfed Punjab, wiping out villages and livelihoods in a mix of man-made neglect and climate-driven fury. Since late August, relentless monsoon rains and sudden dam releases from India have sent a surge down the Sutlej, Chenab and Ravi, displacing over two million people across 2,200 villages. Farmland now lies submerged, homes and livestock destroyed, and while relief camps dot the floodplain, the losses are already irreversible.

PDMA has raised the alarm: "exceptionally high flood" conditions persist, with the next 48 hours deemed critical as fresh water - and danger - descend from India's swollen catchments. Matters worsened when India opened all gates at the Salal Dam without warning, unleashing 800,000 cusecs into the Chenab and threatening communities already battered by the first onslaught. Sindh is now braced for a "super flood", with over 1.6 million people at risk as waters press downstream against crumbling embankments and barrages. Yet the human hand remains central. Diplomatic and hydrological coordination, once hallmarks of the Indus Waters Treaty, now feel like relics. The breakdown in communication has turned shared rivers into weapons, punishing downstream communities. Floodwaters have not only swallowed villages but also eroded Pakistan's economic foundations. Thousands of acres of cotton, rice, maize and sugarcane - vital to agriculture and exports - lie destroyed. Inflation is rising, food security teeters and the textile sector - the backbone of exports - faces an existential crisis.

If anything, this catastrophe must serve as a wake-up call. Monsoon floods of this severity should no longer be treated as episodic tragedies but as the foreboding new normal. Pakistan must invest in resilient infrastructure: reservoirs, modernised embankments, predictive forecasting systems and urban planning that respects the inevitability of water, not just its menace.

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