Images

‘God’s wrath or poor planning?’: KP’s flash floods have people asking tough questions

From celebrities to X users, many are grieving the hundreds of lives lost, but also demanding urgent action.
16 Aug, 2025

The death toll from the catastrophic flash floods in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa has surged to 307, with Buner alone reporting 184 lives lost in the last 48 hours. What began as torrential rains and cloudbursts has spiralled into one of the deadliest natural disasters to hit the region in recent years.

According to the Provincial Disaster Management Authority (PDMA), nine districts in KP have been declared disaster-hit, including Buner, Shangla, Swat, Mansehra, Bajaur, and Battagram. Relief operations remain painfully slow as washed-out roads, landslides, and collapsed bridges make access nearly impossible.

The floods have not only claimed hundreds of lives in KP but have also left behind destruction in Gilgit-Baltistan and Azad Jammu and Kashmir, where dozens more have perished. Villages are in mourning, their grief compounded by the knowledge that rescue teams still struggle to reach them.

Celebrity solidarity

As the scale of devastation unfolds, public figures have been adding their voices to the call for empathy, prayers, and urgent action.

Singer Asim Azhar wrote, “Today, our land weeps. The floods have taken homes, dreams, and precious lives in Pakistan. My heart aches for every mother, father, child, and soul affected.”

Azhar held that amid such devastation, “we must become one” and reach out to another. “Please keep them in your prayers, and if you are able, extend your support to trusted relief efforts. Together, we can help heal what has been broken,” he added.

The singer also reminded everyone who celebrated Independence Day with passion to come forward for relief efforts just as passionately.

Cricketer Shaheen Afridi, who hails from Landi Kotal in KP, said, “My thoughts and prayers are with the victims of devastating floods. Please try to help the affected in any way possible. We stand together in this.”

Model and actor Nadia Hussain took to social media with a short but powerful prayer, “Ya Allah, please save our country from more disasters.”

Ordinary people, extraordinary frustration

But alongside grief, anger simmers. On X, people are questioning not just the government’s preparedness but the very way floods are repeatedly written off as “natural disasters.”

One user pointed out, “In Pakistan, floods are dismissed as ‘natural disasters’ but the truth is manmade — deforestation, poor drainage, unchecked construction, and zero climate planning. Nature punishes our negligence, not fate.”

Another wrote, “Every year we watch videos of man-made structures washing away in flash floods during monsoon and label it ‘God’s wrath’. But clearing water channels and regulating construction are the responsibility of governments. Why does no one act until lives are lost?”

Comparisons with other disasters in the region highlight how climate change is reshaping South Asia.

Climate change is very real, some users reminded everyone.

There were also urgent calls for action and solidarity.

The heartbreak of these floods is undeniable — hundreds of families broken overnight, and towns submerged. But as the floodwaters rise each monsoon, so does the frustration of citizens who know that climate change is not an abstract threat. It is here, it is deadly, and it is being met with little more than thoughts and prayers.

The question now is whether Pakistan can move beyond mourning to planning. Will the government finally implement long-overdue measures, including climate adaptation, reforestation, and urban regulation, or will next year’s headlines read the same?

Until then, the people of KP wait, grieving their dead and bracing for more rain.

Related Stories