Residents of a northwestern Pakistani district where devastating floods have killed more than 200 people said on Monday they were too scared to go back to their deluged homes as authorities warned of more rains to come.
🚨 Pakistan Floods
320+ dead after torrential rains & flash floods
Hardest-hit: Buner (157 deaths), Swat, Bajaur, Battagram, Shangla, Mansehra, Gilgit-Baltistan & AJK
Rescue ops hampered by washed-out roads & a crashed aid helicopter#Pakistan #flooding #FloodAlert #DeFi pic.twitter.com/lBXTmvybk3
— GlobeUpdate (@Globupdate) August 16, 2025
“Everybody is scared. Children are scared. They cannot sleep,” said Sahil Khan, a 24-year-old university student.
He was speaking to a Reuters team from a rooftop in the district of Buner, where he and 15 other villagers had climbed to escape any more flooding amid a fresh spell of rain on Monday.
Upholding its legacy of responding to the nation’s call during times of natural calamities, Pakistan Air Force, extended vital support to ongoing relief operations in flood-affected areas of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa. In this regard, a total of 48 tons of relief goods arranged by an NGO… pic.twitter.com/hfMO5C0b1k
— War Analyst (@War_Analysts) August 18, 2025
“It was like a doomsday scenario,” he said of the flash floods caused by heavy rains and cloudbursts that have killed over 300 people in the country’s northwest since Friday – more than 200 of them in Buner.
The intense rain has claimed lives and spread destruction in several northern districts, with most people killed in flash floods, according to the National Disaster Management Authority.
In hilly areas, the floods washed away houses, buildings, vehicles and belongings.
Buner district was the worst hit.
Khan and other residents in Buner’s Bayshonai Kalay village fled to higher ground when a water channel that had earlier overflowed and caused major devastation started swelling with more rain on Monday, according to Reuters witnesses.
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He and several other residents said most of the villagers were staying with relatives or in makeshift camps set up by local authorities on higher ground.
Rescuers were finding it difficult to get heavy machinery into narrow streets.
In Buner’s main markets and streets, shops and houses were buried in up to five feet of mud, which locals were clearing with shovels. Elsewhere, cars and other belongings were strewn in the rubble of ruined buildings.
FEARFUL
“People are out of their homes. They are fearful,” said Dayar Khan, 26, a shopkeeper in Buner. “They have climbed up in the mountains.”
Rescue and relief efforts resumed in the flood-hit areas several hours after heavy rain forced rescuers to halt work on Monday, a regional government officer, Abid Wazir, told Reuters.
“Our priority is now to clear the roads, set up bridges and bring relief to the affected people,” he said.
Lieutenant General Inam Haider Malik, the National Disaster Management Authority’s chairman, warned of two more spells of rain between August 21 and September 10.
“It can intensify,” he said, and there could be more cloudbursts.
Syed Muhammad Tayyab Shah, who leads risk assessment at the authority, said global warming had changed the pattern of the annual monsoon, pushing it around 100 km west of its normal path.