Karachi Rains: Death Toll Rises to 19 on Second Day of Monsoon Showers, Flooding and Power Outages
Staff Reporter
Karachi: The death toll from rain-related incidents in Karachi climbed to 19 on Wednesday after two days of heavy monsoon showers battered the city, leaving streets inundated, power disrupted, and flight operations heavily affected.
The Pakistan Meteorological Department (PMD) recorded 178mm of rainfall in Gulshan-e-Hadeed, 145mm on University Road, and over 235mm in Mangopir, far exceeding Karachi’s drainage capacity of just 40mm.
Major roads, including Shahrah-e-Faisal, Karsaz, Malir Halt, and University Road, were waterlogged, leaving stranded vehicles and damaged infrastructure. Rainwater also flooded areas such as Old City Area, Aram Bagh, Sindh High Court, Liaquatabad, and Gulistan-e-Jauhar.
Rescue officials confirmed that women and children were among the deceased.
K-Electric reported that over 550 feeders were disrupted, with many areas, including Gulistan-e-Jauhar, North Nazimabad, Korangi, Orangi Town, Malir, and PECHS, facing blackouts for more than 24 hours.
At Jinnah International Airport, several domestic flights were cancelled and international flights delayed as airline staff struggled to reach duty stations due to flooding.
Sindh Chief Minister Syed Murad Ali Shah declared a public holiday on Wednesday following Tuesday’s unprecedented downpours. The Sindh High Court also suspended proceedings at its principal seat and subordinate courts due to flooding.
Karachi Mayor Murtaza Wahab acknowledged shortcomings in the drainage system but said 3.024 million cubic feet of debris had been removed from storm drains to improve water flow. He urged citizens to avoid road travel during heavy showers.
The National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA) issued a fresh alert, warning of 50–100mm of rain in Karachi, Hyderabad, Sukkur, and Mirpurkhas within 12–24 hours. It also cautioned of possible flash floods in Thatta, Badin, Jamshoro, and Dadu, and rising water levels in the Indus River.
Nationwide, the NDMA reported 47 deaths in the past 24 hours, including 35 in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, seven in Azad Kashmir, two in Gilgit-Baltistan, two in Balochistan, and one in Punjab.
The PMD forecast said Karachi will continue to experience light to moderate rain until August 23, with chances of isolated heavy falls that may worsen flooding.
Mayor Wahab said: “Rainfall was extraordinary, but our teams worked round the clock. I appeal to citizens to stay indoors and avoid unnecessary travel during urban flooding.”
Samira Nizami Karachi: The Consul General of Indonesia in Karachi, Mudzakir, has extended warm Eid-ul-Fitr…
Sobia Khan Karachi: Team Voice of Karachi (VOK), in collaboration with the Karachi Port Trust…
PR Karachi: In a shift from conventional charity practices, the Khudi Foundation, in collaboration with…
By Dr. Saeid Talebi Nia (Director General, Iran Cultural Center, Karachi) At a critical juncture…
Atif Ikram Sheikh، President FPCCI Pakistan’s renewable energy sector is facing a growing crisis as…
Shamoon Zaki Karachi: Rising geopolitical tensions across South and West Asia are posing fresh challenges…
This website uses cookies.