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  • Hezbollah rejects Lebanon’s cabinet decision to disarm it

    Hezbollah rejects Lebanon’s cabinet decision to disarm it

    Beirut: Hezbollah said Wednesday it would treat a Lebanese government decision to disarm the militant group “as if it did not exist”, accusing the cabinet of committing a “grave sin”.

    Amid heavy US pressure and fears Israel could expand its strikes on Lebanon, Prime Minister Nawaf Salam said Tuesday that the government had tasked the army with developing a plan to restrict weapons to government forces by year end.

    The plan is to be presented to the government by the end of August for discussion and approval, and another cabinet session has been scheduled for Thursday to continue the talks, including on a US-proposed timetable for disarmament.

    Hezbollah said the government had “committed a grave sin by taking the decision to disarm Lebanon of its weapons to resist the Israeli enemy”.

    The decision on the thorny issue is unprecedented since Lebanon’s civil war factions gave up their weapons three and a half decades ago.

    “This decision undermines Lebanon’s sovereignty and gives Israel a free hand to tamper with its security, geography, politics and future existence… Therefore, we will treat this decision as if it does not exist,” the Iran-backed group said in a statement.

    – ‘Serves Israel’s interests’ –

    The government said its decision came as part of implementing a November ceasefire that sought to end more than a year of hostilities between Israel and Hezbollah, including two months of full-blown war.

    Hezbollah said it viewed the government’s move as “the result of dictates from US envoy” Tom Barrack.

    It “fully serves Israel’s interests and leaves Lebanon exposed to the Israeli enemy without any deterrence”, the group said.

    Hezbollah was the only faction that kept its weapons after Lebanon’s 1975-1990 civil war.

    It emerged weakened politically and militarily from its latest conflict with Israel, its arsenal pummelled and its senior leadership decimated.

    Israel has kept up its strikes on Hezbollah and other targets despite the November truce, and has threatened to keep doing so until the group has been disarmed.

    The group said Israel must halt those strikes before any domestic debate about its weapons and a new defence strategy can begin.

    – ‘Pivotal moment’ –

    “We are open to dialogue, ending the Israeli aggression against Lebanon, liberating its land, releasing prisoners, working to build the state, and rebuilding what was destroyed by the brutal aggression,” the group said.

    Hezbollah is “prepared to discuss a national security strategy”, but not under Israeli fire, it added.

    Two ministers affiliated with Hezbollah and its ally the Amal movement walked out of Tuesday’s meeting.

    Hezbollah described the walkout as “an expression of rejection” of the government’s “decision to subject Lebanon to American tutelage and Israeli occupation”.

    The Amal movement, headed by parliament speaker Nabih Berri, accused the government of “rushing to offer more gratuitous concessions” to Israel when it should have sought to end the ongoing attacks.

    It called Thursday’s cabinet meeting “an opportunity for correction”.

    Hezbollah opponent the Lebanese Forces, one of the country’s two main Christian parties, said the cabinet’s decision to disarm the militant group was “a pivotal moment in Lebanon’s modern history — a long-overdue step toward restoring full state authority and sovereignty”.

    The Kataeb, another Christian party, called the cabinet’s move “historic” and warned against “any attempt to deal with the decision negatively”.

    It accused the Hezbollah leader of being in denial and “trying to drag the country into a confrontation that Lebanese reject”.

  • Trump slaps India with additional 25% tariff, increasing total levy to 50%

    Trump slaps India with additional 25% tariff, increasing total levy to 50%

    WASHINGTON: U.S. President Donald Trump issued an executive order on Wednesday imposing an additional 25% tariff on goods from India, increasing the total levy to 50 per cent, after he warned the New Delhi of action over its oil purchases from Russia.

    Donald Trump imposed the additional tariff over India’s continued purchase of Russian oil, a key revenue source for Moscow’s war in Ukraine.

    The tariff is set to take effect in three weeks and would be added on top of a separate 25 percent tariff entering into force on Thursday. It maintains exemptions for items targeted by separate sector-specific duties such as steel and aluminum, and categories that could be hit like pharmaceuticals.

    Read More: Trump says US to impose 25% tariff on India from Aug 1

    The move threatens to further complicate U.S.-Indian relations and comes shortly after a Indian government source said Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi would visit China for the first time in over seven years later this month.

    U.S.-India ties are facing their most serious crisis in years after talks with India failed to produce a trade agreement.

    The White House move, first signaled by Trump on Monday, follows meetings by Trump’s top diplomatic envoy Steve Witkoff in Moscow aimed at pushing Russia to agree to peace in Ukraine.

    Trump has threatened higher tariffs on Russia and secondary sanctions on its allies, if Russian President Vladimir Putin does not move to end the war in Ukraine.

    Read More: India will buy Russian oil despite Trump’s threats

    Earlier, Indian officials said they would keep purchasing oil from Russia despite the threat of penalties that U.S. President Donald Trump said he would impose, the New York Times reported on Saturday.

    The White House, India’s Ministry of External Affairs and the Ministry of Petroleum and Natural Gas did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

    Trump blasts India, Russia as ‘dead economies’

    Two senior Indian officials said there had been no change in policy, according to the NYT report, which added that one official said the government had “not given any direction to oil companies” to cut back imports from Russia.

    Reuters had earlier reported that Indian state refiners stopped buying Russian oil in the past week as discounts narrowed in July.

    On July 14, Trump threatened 100% tariffs on countries that buy Russian oil unless Moscow reaches a major peace deal with Ukraine. Russia is the top supplier to India, responsible for about 35% of India’s overall supplies.

  • Rescuers search for scores missing after deadly Himalayan flood

    Rescuers search for scores missing after deadly Himalayan flood

    NEW DELHI: The Indian army brought in sniffer dogs, drones and heavy earth-moving equipment on Wednesday to search for scores of people missing a day after deadly Himalayan flash floods.

    At least four people were killed and more than 50 from Dharali and 11 soldiers from nearby village are unaccounted for after a wall of muddy water and debris tore down a narrow mountain valley, smashing into the town of Dharali in Uttarakhand state, rescue officials said on Wednesday.

    Climate change experts warned that the disaster was a “wake-up call” to the effects of global warming.

    Deadly floods and landslides are common during the monsoon season from June to September, but experts say climate change, coupled with urbanisation, is increasing their frequency and severity.

    Torrential monsoon rains have hampered rescue efforts, with communication limited and phone lines damaged.

    However, the assessment of the number missing has been reduced as soldiers and rescue teams reached marooned individuals. Around 100 people were reported as unaccounted for late on Tuesday.

    “The search for the missing is ongoing,” said Mohsen Shahedi from the National Disaster Response Force.

    Videos broadcast on Indian media showed a terrifying surge of muddy water sweeping away multi-storey apartment blocks in the tourist region on Tuesday afternoon.

    Shahedi said more than 50 people were missing from Dharali, while 11 soldiers were unaccounted for from the nearby downstream village of Harsil.

    “Additional army columns, along with army tracker dogs, drones, logistic drones, earthmoving equipment etc., have been moved… to hasten the efforts,” the army said.

    Military helicopters were flying in essential supplies, it said, as well as picking up those stranded after roads were swept away even though rain and fog made flights difficult.

    ‘Unimaginable scale’

    Uttarakhand Chief Minister Pushkar Singh Dhami said the flood was caused by an intense “cloudburst” of rain and that rescue teams had been deployed “on a war footing”.

    Several people could be seen in videos running before being engulfed by the waves of debris that uprooted entire buildings.

    Suman Semwal told the Indian Express newspaper that his father saw the flood hitting Dharali with a “rumbling noise” from a village uphill.

    What he saw was on an “unimaginable scale”, he said.

    “They tried to scream, but could not make themselves heard,” Semwal told the newspaper. “The people couldn’t comprehend what was happening. The flood waters struck them in 15 seconds.”

    A large part of the town was swamped by mud, with rescue officials estimating it was 50 feet (15 metres) deep in places, swallowing some buildings entirely.

    Government weather forecasters said on Wednesday that all major rivers in Uttarakhand were flowing above danger levels.

    “Residents have been moved to higher reaches in view of rising water levels due to incessant rains,” the army said.

    The UN’s World Meteorological Organization said last year that increasingly intense floods and droughts are a “distress signal” of what is to come as climate change makes the planet’s water cycle ever more unpredictable.

    Hydrologist Manish Shrestha said the 270 millimetres (10 inches) of rain that fell within 24 hours counted as “an extreme event”.

    Shrestha, from the Nepal-based International Centre for Integrated Mountain Development, said such rain in mountains had a “more concentrated” impact than on flatter lowlands.

    “Such intense rainfall events are becoming increasingly common, and could be linked to climate change,” he said.

  • Chikungunya in China: What you need to know

    Chikungunya in China: What you need to know

    BEIJING: Cases of chikungunya fever are rising in southern China, prompting local authorities to take measures to curb its spread.

    Here is what you need to know about the disease:

    What is chikungunya?

    Chikungunya is caused by a virus that can be passed to humans by infected mosquitoes, with most cases occurring in Africa, Asia and the Americas.

    Symptoms include fever and joint pain, which may persist for some time but are rarely fatal.

    Because the symptoms of chikungunya resemble other mosquito-borne diseases like dengue and Zika, it can sometimes be hard to determine the extent of an outbreak.

    Two vaccines for chikungunya have been approved in some countries but are not yet widely used.

    Infected people are typically given medicines like paracetamol to ease their symptoms.

    How serious is China’s outbreak?

    More than 7,700 people in the southern province of Guangdong have been infected in recent weeks, according to an article by the China Association for Science and Technology that was widely carried by state media.

    Most cases have occurred in the industrial centre of Foshan, where 2,770 people fell ill between July 27 and August 2, the provincial disease control office said on Sunday.

    Dozens of infections have also been detected in neighbouring Guangzhou, while semiautonomous Hong Kong reported its first case on Saturday.

    Chief expert Kang Min said “the rapid rise of the epidemic has been preliminarily curbed” in Guangdong, according to a statement from the province’s disease control office.

    But Kang warned that officials still faced “complex and severe challenges” due to the high risk of imported cases in the international trade hub as well as rain and typhoons that help mosquitoes to thrive.

    What are authorities doing?

    Top officials in Guangdong agreed at a meeting on Saturday to “go all out to win the… war of annihilation against the epidemic”, according to an official statement.

    They stressed the need to “mobilise the public” to eliminate the conditions in which mosquitoes breed, for example, by removing pots and cans, unblocking ditches and clearing pools of stagnant water.

    Footage by state news agency Xinhua showed doctors at a hospital in Foshan’s Shunde district tending to a ward of chikungunya patients lying on beds surrounded by mosquito nets.

    Other interventions seemed more dramatic.

    The New York Times reported that some infected people in Foshan were “given no choice” but to go to hospital, while others had workers enter their homes without consent in search of stagnant water.

    State media and local governments have published images of workers in helmets and face masks spraying insecticide in parks, gardens and overgrown buildings, where mosquitoes can linger.

    Law enforcement officers have threatened fines of up to 1,000 yuan ($140) for businesses that do not take adequate steps to prevent mosquitoes from breeding, according to the provincial disease control office.

    And one subdistrict in Foshan cut power to the homes of some residents who failed to comply with disease controls, according to an online statement from a local government committee.

    Should people be worried?

    The United States has issued a travel advisory urging increased caution when going to affected areas in China.

    Some of China’s measures evoke its pandemic strategy, when Beijing wielded city-wide lockdowns, lengthy quarantines and travel bans to curb the spread of Covid-19.

    But comparisons to the pandemic are overblown.

    Unlike Covid, chikungunya is caused by a known pathogen, is not transmitted via human contact and very rarely proves fatal.

    Chinese authorities have stressed that the disease is “preventable, controllable and treatable” and the World Health Organization has not issued any special guidance on China’s outbreak.

  • US envoy Witkoff arrives in Russia ahead of sanctions deadline

    US envoy Witkoff arrives in Russia ahead of sanctions deadline

    MOSCOW: US envoy Steve Witkoff arrived in Moscow on Wednesday, state media reported, where he will meet with Russian leadership as President Donald Trump’s deadline to impose fresh sanctions looms.

    Trump has given Russia until Friday to halt its offensive in Ukraine or face new penalties.

    The White House has not outlined specific actions it plans to take on Friday, but Trump has previously threatened to impose “secondary tariffs” targeting Russia’s remaining trade partners, such as China and India.

    The move would aim to stifle Russian exports, but would risk significant international disruption.

    Trump said Tuesday that he would await the outcome of the Moscow talks before moving forward with any economic retaliation.

    “We’re going to see what happens,” he told reporters. “We’ll make that determination at that time.”

    After arriving in Moscow, Witkoff was met by presidential special representative Kirill Dmitriev, Russian state news agency TASS said.

    An American source did not specify if the meetings will include Russian President Vladimir Putin, whom Witkoff has met with several times previously.

    Despite pressure from Washington, Russia has continued its campaign against its pro-Western neighbour.

    Three rounds of peace talks in Istanbul have failed to make headway on a possible ceasefire, with the two sides appearing as far apart as ever.

    Moscow has demanded that Ukraine cede more territory and renounce Western support.

    Kyiv is calling for an immediate ceasefire, and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky last week urged his allies to push for “regime change” in Moscow.

    Nuclear rhetoric

    Trump has increasingly voiced frustration with Putin in recent weeks over Russia’s unrelenting offensive.

    When reporters asked Trump on Monday what Witkoff’s message would be to Moscow, and if there was anything Russia could do to avoid the sanctions, Trump replied: “Yeah, get a deal where people stop getting killed.”

    Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said Monday it considered the talks with Witkoff to be “important, substantial and helpful” and valued US efforts to end the conflict.

    Putin, who has consistently rejected calls for a ceasefire, said Friday that he wants peace but that his demands for ending the nearly three-and-a-half-year offensive were unchanged.

    Russia has frequently called on Ukraine to effectively cede control of four regions Moscow claims to have annexed, a demand Kyiv has called unacceptable.

    Putin also wants Ukraine to drop its ambitions to join NATO.

    The visit comes after Trump said that two nuclear submarines he deployed following an online row with former Russian president Dmitry Medvedev were now “in the region.”

    Trump has not said whether he meant nuclear-powered or nuclear-armed submarines. He also did not elaborate on the exact deployment locations, which are kept secret by the US military.

    Russia, in its first comments on the deployment, urged “caution” Monday.

    “Russia is very attentive to the topic of nuclear non-proliferation. And we believe that everyone should be very, very cautious with nuclear rhetoric,” the Kremlin’s Peskov said.

  • Bangladesh mystic singers face Islamist backlash

    Bangladesh mystic singers face Islamist backlash

    KUSHTIA, Bangladesh: Sufi singer Jamal has spent decades devoted to his craft but now fears for his future as hardline Islamists gain ground in post-revolt Bangladesh.

    Conservative Muslim groups regard Sufism as deviant, opposing its mystical interpretation of the Koran.

    The movement is highly popular in Muslim-majority Bangladesh, but followers say they have faced unprecedented threats since the ouster of former prime minister Sheikh Hasina in August last year following a mass uprising.

    Hasina took a tough stand against Islamist movements during her autocratic 15-year rule, and since her ouster, Islamist groups have become emboldened, with security forces stretched.

    At least 40 Sufi shrines have come under attack in the past few months, according to official figures, with vandalism, arson and other violence linked to Islamist hardliners.

    Other estimates put the number at twice as high.

    Musical performances, once a mainstay at Sufi shrines, have sharply declined.

    “It’s been difficult for the last one-and-a-half decades but after August 5 things have deteriorated significantly,” said Jamal, on the sidelines of a musical gathering at a centuries-old shrine in Dhaka.

    “We used to perform in 40 programmes per season but now it’s down to 20 due to resistance from some people,” added the 50-year-old.

    In addition, Bangladesh’s ascetic minstrels, Baul folk singers who wander on foot from town to town singing and begging for alms, are also feeling the heat.

    While separate from Sufis, they are also branded heretics by some Islamists.

    Sardar Hirak Raja, general secretary of the Bangladesh Baul and Folk Artists Association, said more than 300 musical performances had to be cancelled since last year because of pressure from Islamist hardliners.

    “The Sufi singers are in crisis because there aren’t enough programmes,” he told AFP.

    ‘Inappropriate music’

    In northern Bangladesh’s Dinajpur this year, a vigilante group vandalised a popular shrine, accusing it of hosting “inappropriate music”.

    Similar disruptions have been reported across the country.

    Many of these attacks have been claimed by “Tauhidi Janata” (people of faith), an umbrella group of Muslim radicals who insist music is forbidden in Islam.

    Hefazat-e-Islam — a platform of religious seminaries also accused of mobilising people to attack shrines — said it opposed musical gatherings.

    “A group of people gather at shrines, consume cannabis and hold music fests, all of which are prohibited in our religion,” said its general secretary, Mawlana Mamunul Haque.

    Experts say the conflict between codified Islam and its mystical offshoots goes back far into the past.

    “Sufi singers and Bauls have been attacked repeatedly over the past decade but such incidents have become more frequent now,” said Anupam Heera Mandal who teaches folklore in the state-run Rajshahi University.

    “Since they rarely file complaints, the crimes committed against them often go unpunished.”

    Bangladesh’s interim government, headed by Nobel Peace Prize winner Muhammad Yunus, has been criticised for going soft on the alleged vandals, with police making only about 23 arrests so far.

    Mostofa Sarwar Farooki, who heads the country’s cultural affairs ministry, downplayed the threat, calling the scale of the violence “relatively low”.

    “Whenever a festival is cancelled, we help the organisers hold it again,” Farooki told AFP.

    ‘More powerful now’

    But critics say the measures are insufficient.

    “For mystical singers, the lyrics are not just words — they carry knowledge. Through music, they spread this philosophy,” said Faisal Enayet, a marketing graduate and Sufi music enthusiast.

    “Some people are trying to silence them.”

    Sufi singer Shariat Bayati, whom Islamist groups have in the past targeted with police complaints, said the harassment continued.

    “I couldn’t hold a programme in my courtyard last March,” he said. “Those who filed the cases are more powerful now and they keep threatening me.”

    Mystic practitioners, however, say they are turning to their core beliefs to weather the storm.

    “For mystic singers, it’s imperative to overcome anger,” Fakir Nahir Shah, one of the country’s best-known Bauls, said at a recent gathering of ascetics in Kushtia, widely celebrated as Bangladesh’s cultural capital.

    “Modesty is the path we’ve deliberately chosen for the rest of our lives.”

  • Flash flood washes out Himalayan town, killing 4

    Flash flood washes out Himalayan town, killing 4

    DEHRADUN, India: Rescue teams deployed Tuesday to India’s Himalayan region after flash floods tore down a mountain valley, appearing to wipe away much of a town, where at least four people were killed.

    Videos broadcast on Indian media showed a surge of muddy water sweeping away multi-storey apartment blocks in the tourist region of Dharali in Uttarakhand state.

    Uttarakhand State Chief Minister Pushkar Singh Dhami said rescue teams had been deployed “on a war footing”.

    Senior local official Prashant Arya said four people had been killed, with other officials warning that the number could rise.

    “Luckily, most of the people were at a fair in a safe location,” said a disaster official who asked not to be named since he was not authorised to speak to the media.

    India’s army said its teams had reached the town.

    “A massive mudslide struck Dharali… triggering a sudden flow of debris and water through the settlement,” it said.

    Images released by the army, taken from the site after the main torrent of water had gone, showed a river of slow-moving mud.

    A wide swathe of the town was swamped by deep debris.

    In places, the mud lapped at the rooftops of houses.

    Chief Minister Dhami said the flood was caused by a sudden and intense downpour.

    “News of heavy damage caused by a cloudburst… is extremely sad and distressing,” he said.

    “I am in constant contact with senior officials, and the situation is being closely monitored,” Dhami added in a statement. “I pray to God for everyone’s safety.”

    The India Meteorological Department issued a red alert warning for the area, and recorded “extremely heavy” rainfall of around 21 centimetres (eight inches) in isolated parts of Uttarakhand.

    Deadly floods and landslides are common during the monsoon season from June to September, but experts say climate change, coupled with urbanisation, is increasing their frequency and severity.

    The UN’s World Meteorological Organization said last year that increasingly intense floods and droughts are a “distress signal” of what is to come as climate change makes the planet’s water cycle ever more unpredictable.

  • Iran says detains sabotage cell linked to exiled opposition

    Iran says detains sabotage cell linked to exiled opposition

    TEHRAN: Iran has arrested three members of a suspected sabotage cell linked to the exiled opposition for attempting to disrupt public order, Iranian media reported Tuesday.

    The suspects, who are allegedly linked to banned former rebel group the People’s Mujahedeen Organization of Iran (MEK), were detained by the Revolutionary Guard in the county of Pakdasht, southeast of Tehran, the ISNA news agency said.

    “Three members of MEK-linked sabotage cells who sought to disrupt public order and security were identified and arrested,” prosecutor Mohammad Hassanpour told ISNA.

    He accused the MEK of using underground propaganda networks to recruit individuals to form “sabotage cells” aimed at disrupting public order.

    Security forces dismantled the cell and arrested all its members, he added.

    Hassanpour said the suspects were undergoing “specialised interrogation” and the investigation was ongoing.

    Their arrest comes after the execution late last month of two alleged long-term members of the group.

    They had been found guilty of producing improvised mortars to attack civilians, homes and public institutions.

    Founded in the 1960s to oppose the Western-backed shah, the MEK was outlawed after the Islamic revolution of 1979 for fighting alongside Saddam Hussein’s troops in the Iran-Iraq war.

    Disarmed by a US-led coalition following its invasion of Iraq in 2003, the group now advocates a change in Iran’s system from abroad.

    In recent weeks, Iran’s supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei has accused the group of seeking to foment “unrest” with the aim of toppling the system during Israel’s June 13 attack, which triggered a 12-day war with Iran.

  • Saudi Aramco profit drops for 10th straight quarter

    Saudi Aramco profit drops for 10th straight quarter

    RIYADH: Oil giant Saudi Aramco announced its 10th straight drop in quarterly profits on Tuesday as a slump in prices hit revenues, putting more pressure on the key driver of the Saudi economy.

    Second-quarter profits slid 22 percent year-on-year to 85 billion riyals ($22.67 billion), extending a decline that stretches back to late 2022.

    “The decrease in revenue was mainly due to lower crude oil prices and lower refined and chemical products prices,” Aramco said in its quarterly report.

    Aramco’s falling revenues come as Saudi Arabia pursues a costly revamp aimed at reducing its reliance on oil and pivoting towards tourism and business.

    Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman’s Vision 2030 project includes flashy resorts, sprawling entertainment complexes and NEOM, a futuristic $500 billion new city in the desert.

    Aramco was trading at 23.97 riyals on Tuesday, 12 percent below the 27.35 riyals price of its secondary share offering last year.

    Since a high point of nearly $2.4 trillion in 2022, when oil prices soared following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, Aramco has lost more than $800 billion in market value.

    Oil prices, currently around $70 a barrel, have remained low despite tensions roiling the Middle East, including the short-lived Israel-Iran war in June.

    However, Aramco president and CEO Amin H. Nasser remained optimistic, predicting higher demand in the rest of the year.

    “Market fundamentals remain strong, and we anticipate oil demand in the second half of 2025 to be more than two million barrels per day higher than the first half,” he said in the report.

    On Sunday, Saudi Arabia, Russia and six other key members of the OPEC+ alliance announced a production hike of 547,000 barrels per day as they unwind cuts of 2.2 million bpd that were designed to prop up prices.

    ‘More downwards than upwards’

    Last month, Saudi Arabia’s Jadwa Investment forecast a widening of the budget deficit to 4.3 percent of GDP this year. Oil revenues provided 62 percent of the budget last year.

    Aramco’s latest drop in profits was widely expected by industry analysts.

    “Oil market forces are more downwards than upwards in the first half of 2025, due to OPEC+ policy shifts and economic uncertainty stemming from the US trade war,” Abu Dhabi-based Ibrahim Abdul Mohsen told AFP.

    “This has impacted the profit margins of oil companies, including Aramco.”

    But he added: “Saudi Arabia has strong reserves capable of defending financial stability and supporting development projects in the short term.”

    Government-owned Aramco listed on the Saudi exchange in the world’s biggest initial public offering in 2019, selling 1.7 percent of its shares at $29.4 billion.

    A secondary offering of 0.64 percent of its issued shares raised a further $11.2 billion in June last year.

    Aramco has also transferred a 16 percent stake to the Public Investment Fund, the Saudi wealth vehicle that is driving much of Vision 2030.

  • Death of a delta: Pakistan’s Indus sinks and shrinks

    Death of a delta: Pakistan’s Indus sinks and shrinks

    KHARO CHHAN: Salt crusts crackle underfoot as Habibullah Khatti walks to his mother’s grave to say a final goodbye before he abandons his parched island village on Pakistan’s Indus delta.

    Seawater intrusion into the delta, where the Indus River meets the Arabian Sea in the south of the country, has triggered the collapse of farming and fishing communities.

    “The saline water has surrounded us from all four sides,” Khatti told AFP from Abdullah Mirbahar village in the town of Kharo Chhan, around 15 kilometres (9 miles) from where the river empties into the sea.

    As fish stocks fell, the 54-year-old turned to tailoring until that too became impossible with only four of the 150 households remaining.

    “In the evening, an eerie silence takes over the area,” he said, as stray dogs wandered through the deserted wooden and bamboo houses.

    Kharo Chan once comprised around 40 villages, but most have disappeared under rising seawater.

    The town’s population fell from 26,000 in 1981 to 11,000 in 2023, according to census data.

    Khatti is preparing to move his family to nearby Karachi, Pakistan’s largest city, and one swelling with economic migrants, including from the Indus delta.

    The Pakistan Fisherfolk Forum, which advocates for fishing communities, estimates that tens of thousands of people have been displaced from the delta’s coastal districts.

    However, more than 1.2 million people have been displaced from the overall Indus delta region in the last two decades, according to a study published in March by the Jinnah Institute, a think tank led by a former climate change minister.

    The downstream flow of water into the delta has decreased by 80 percent since the 1950s as a result of irrigation canals, hydropower dams and the impacts of climate change on glacial and snow melt, according to a 2018 study by the US-Pakistan Center for Advanced Studies in Water.

    That has led to devastating seawater intrusion.

    The salinity of the water has risen by around 70 percent since 1990, making it impossible to grow crops and severely affecting the shrimp and crab populations.

    “The delta is both sinking and shrinking,” said Muhammad Ali Anjum, a local WWF conservationist.

    ‘No other choice’

    Beginning in Tibet, the Indus River flows through disputed Kashmir before traversing the entire length of Pakistan.

    The river and its tributaries irrigate about 80 percent of the country’s farmland, supporting millions of livelihoods.

    The delta, formed by rich sediment deposited by the river as it meets the sea, was once ideal for farming, fishing, mangroves and wildlife.

    But more than 16 percent of fertile land has become unproductive due to encroaching seawater, a government water agency study in 2019 found.

    In the town of Keti Bandar, which spreads inland from the water’s edge, a white layer of salt crystals covers the ground.

    Boats carry in drinkable water from miles away and villagers cart it home via donkeys.

    “Who leaves their homeland willingly?” said Haji Karam Jat, whose house was swallowed by the rising water level.

    He rebuilt farther inland, anticipating more families would join him.

    “A person only leaves their motherland when they have no other choice,” he told AFP.

    Way of life

    British colonial rulers were the first to alter the course of the Indus River with canals and dams, followed more recently by dozens of hydropower projects.

    Earlier this year, several canal projects on the Indus River were halted when farmers in the low-lying riverine areas of Sindh province protested.

    To combat the degradation of the Indus River Basin, the government and the United Nations launched the ‘Living Indus Initiative’ in 2021.

    One intervention focuses on restoring the delta by addressing soil salinity and protecting local agriculture and ecosystems.

    The Sindh government is currently running its own mangrove restoration project, aiming to revive forests that serve as a natural barrier against saltwater intrusion.

    Even as mangroves are restored in some parts of the coastline, land grabbing and residential development projects drive clearing in other areas.

    Neighbouring India meanwhile poses a looming threat to the river and its delta, after revoking a 1960 water treaty with Pakistan which divides control over the Indus basin rivers.

    It has threatened to never reinstate the treaty and build dams upstream, squeezing the flow of water to Pakistan, which has called it “an act of war”.

    Alongside their homes, the communities have lost a way of life tightly bound up in the delta, said climate activist Fatima Majeed, who works with the Pakistan Fisherfolk Forum.

    Women, in particular, who for generations have stitched nets and packed the day’s catches, struggle to find work when they migrate to cities, said Majeed, whose grandfather relocated the family from Kharo Chhan to the outskirts of Karachi.

    “We haven’t just lost our land, we’ve lost our culture.”