ISLAMABAD — Authorities in Pakistan’s southern Sindh province have evacuated more than 100,000 people from low-lying areas along the Indus river, a government spokesman said on Friday, after neighboring India warned of cross-border flooding from dam release.
100K Pakistanis flee amid flood threat

The evacuations come as rescuers mounted a major rescue and relief operation in the country’s eastern Punjab province, where flooding from weeks of monsoon rains and overflowing dams in India has displaced about 1.8 million people since August.
Since late June, monsoon flooding has killed more than 900 people across Pakistan, according to disaster officials. India notified Islamabad through diplomatic channels on Friday of the potential cross-border flooding, according to the National Disaster Management Authority or NDMA and local authorities.
, This news data comes from:http://www.jyxingfa.com
Weeks of heavier-than-normal monsoon rains, compounded by water releases from dams in India, have swelled rivers in Punjab to dangerous levels.
Deluges are now moving downstream toward Sindh, where they could swell the Indus river, officials said.
Currently, thousands of rescuers backed by the military are delivering food and other displaced people in Muzaffargarh and Multan districts in Punjab, where floods have inundated 3,900 villages since the Ravi, Sutlej, and Chenab rivers burst their banks two weeks ago.
Sindh Information Minister Sharjeel Memon said in a statement that evacuations were underway in vulnerable districts, with 109,320 people already moved to safer ground as water levels in the Indus rise.
Sindh was among the worst-hit regions in the catastrophic 2022 floods, which killed 1,739 people nationwide.
- Motive probed for US shooting that killed two children, injured 17
- 'Large shark' kills man off Sydney beach
- Senate subpoenas 8 DPWH officials, contractors in flood control probe
- Motive probed for US church shooting that killed 2 children, injured 17
- Artikulo Onse' group calls for independent panel to probe flood control corruption
- Strikes across Gaza Strip kill at least 31 as international scholars accuse Israel of genocide
- Seoul says over 300 South Koreans held in US battery plant site raid
- Five journalists among 20 killed in Israeli strikes on Gaza hospital
- Court orders Immigration to release of Global Ferronickel Chairman Joseph Sy
- 'Strangest' dinosaur covered in spiked armory — Scientists