The Sutlej has been battering Multan, Bahawalpur and Lodhran for over a month, yet the water shows little sign of receding. In some localities, entire hamlets remain marooned under eight feet of stagnant water. Relief camps are overcrowded, disease is spreading, and schools that might have doubled as shelters lie in ruins. These pages have repeatedly documented families living on rooftops, waiting for rations that arrive sporadically at best.
The human toll has rightly drawn headlines, but the deeper story is the collapse of resilience in the breadbasket. Fields have been wiped clean, sugarcane has rotted where it stood, and wheat prices are rising in anticipation of shortages. More than a rural setback, this is the unravelling of supply chains that tie Punjab’s fields to national food security and to the economy’s fragile stabilisation. Many rural families have lost not only their crops but also their small livestock, tools and savings. These losses will force migration to towns and cities, straining already overstretched urban services and markets. Each lost harvest drags the state further into debt, forcing fresh borrowing to cover the gap.
Equally troubling is the silence around education. Over 3,000 schools have been damaged or destroyed in Punjab. For 700,000 children, the floods have erased classrooms. Past experience shows that many of them will never return, instead swelling the ranks of child labour. Trauma in these communities runs deep, yet it rarely features in official relief plans. Health services in flooded areas are equally precarious, with clinics damaged and waterborne diseases on the rise. The conversation on rebuilding cannot exclude the future of these children or the well-being of the displaced, or the country risks writing off another generation.
Climate scientists have confirmed what all of us already know: heavier rains are here to stay. Sadly, our fate is not written in the clouds alone. Riverbeds clogged with silt, embankments left unrepaired, and drainage channels allowed to choke have magnified the flood’s fury. Add to this the unpredictability of upstream water releases from India, and it becomes clear that Pakistan’s vulnerability is as political as it is environmental.
The coming weeks will bring another round of appeals for international assistance. Donors will talk of climate justice and loss-and-damage funds. However, no external support can substitute for the basic governance that keeps embankments intact, delivers relief transparently, and plans for schools and clinics to reopen quickly. Islamabad’s credibility abroad rests on its ability to act decisively at home. The floods are a reminder that water, climate, and livelihoods cannot be treated as separate challenges. Without sustained investment in infrastructure, disaster preparedness, and regional water cooperation, the Sutlej will not be the last river to test the nation’s resolve. *