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New recipes help Pakistani mothers ward off malnutrition

New recipes help Pakistani mothers ward off malnutrition
This photograph taken on July 29, 2025 shows a female health worker (R) teaching mothers how to prepare nutritious meals for their children during a UNICEF nutrition programme at Fateh Muhammad Soomro village in the Sujawal district of Sindh province. (AFP)
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Updated 15 min 4 sec ago

New recipes help Pakistani mothers ward off malnutrition

New recipes help Pakistani mothers ward off malnutrition
  • Despite Sindh province being home to the country’s financial hub, 48 percent of children under five suffer from malnutrition and 20 percent from its most severe form
  • Parents are recommended to feed babies solid foods from about six months old, but in rural Sindh this often means adult leftovers, too spicy for young stomachs

SUJAWAL: Clutching their hungry babies, a group of mothers mix a semolina dish under the guidance of a teacher, an attempt to curb malnutrition which affects nearly one in two children in Pakistan’s south.

Despite Sindh province being home to the mega port city of Karachi, the financial center of the country that sprawls along the Arabian coastline, children in rural areas just a few hours away face stark levels of wasting and stunting.

In the arid village of Sujawal, lethargic children with prominent bones wilt in the searing heat as social workers educate mothers on nutrient-rich ingredients and dispel myths around food.

“Before, we only gave our children potatoes because they were always available at home,” said Shahnaz, 25, who has radically changed the diet of her six children, weak and frequently sick, after a year of classes.

Now, convinced that children should eat a varied diet, she has introduced affordable ingredients such as lentils and semolina into her cooking, lifting her daughter out of malnutrition.

In impoverished rural Sindh province, 48 percent of children under five suffer from malnutrition and 20 percent from its most severe form, wasting, according to the latest national survey on the issue conducted in 2018.

In this class, Azma, a social worker, shows mothers how to cook with semolina — easily available in the market.

“Semolina is cheap — for 50 rupees it can last a week if you’re feeding one to two spoonfuls daily to a six-month-old child,” she explained to AFP.

In Sindh, a province of 55 million people where contraception remains taboo and large families are the norm, 3,500 mothers have benefited from cooking classes developed by UNICEF.

Like many mothers in the area, Kulsoom, 23 and pregnant with her sixth child, all born prematurely and underweight, once only fed her children pieces of fried flatbread.

“One of my children died, and my youngest is extremely weak, so I was advised to take these classes,” said Kulsoom, who goes by only one name, like most women in her district.

NO SPICES

Parents are recommended to feed babies solid foods from about six months old, but in rural Sindh this often means adult leftovers, too spicy for young stomachs.

“The main problem is the lack of dietary diversity,” says Mazhar Iqbal, a nutritionist for UNICEF.

In Pakistan, 38 percent of children eat only two or fewer of the eight food categories recommended by UNICEF.

Meat is saved for special occasions, yet inexpensive protein alternatives exist such as chicken offal, boiled bones, lentils and beans.

As for fruit and vegetables, they are usually fried, losing their nutrients.

Bakhtawar Kareem joined the program after her child died of anaemia.

“I have no money. Sometimes we eat, sometimes we don’t,” she lamented, scanning the swollen belly of her one-year-old daughter, who has only sparse clumps of hair.

Like 72 percent of children in the village, her daughter has stunting, well above the average rate in Pakistan of 42 percent — one of the highest in the world.

Stunting is most closely associated with brain development and physical growth, and can have long-term physical and mental impacts.

Vulnerable to a lack of clean water and sanitation which contributes to malnutrition, children often also suffer from dengue fever or malaria, from vomiting, diarrhea, or difficulty urinating, and have abnormally swollen bellies.

WOMEN EAT LEFTOVERS

But the vicious cycle of malnutrition begins with the mothers.

“With early marriages and repeated pregnancies, more than 45 percent of women in Sindh are anaemic,” said the nutritionist.

“This increases the risk of having low birth weight babies, who are more likely to suffer from malnutrition.”

In Sujawal, where only a quarter of the population can read and write, myths about food also deprive women of vital nutrients.

Farrah Naz, the head of the Global Alliance for Improved Nutrition in Pakistan, regularly has to repeat that eggs and dried fruits do not cause women to bleed more during their periods.

Cultural norms around women serving meals to men first and eating the leftovers — despite the physical work they carry out in the fields — also contributes to poor health.

“And when food runs out, it’s their rations that are cut first.”


Rains swell Punjab rivers with Trimmu, Panjnad headworks in high flood situation

Rains swell Punjab rivers with Trimmu, Panjnad headworks in high flood situation
Updated 11 sec ago

Rains swell Punjab rivers with Trimmu, Panjnad headworks in high flood situation

Rains swell Punjab rivers with Trimmu, Panjnad headworks in high flood situation
  • Weather authorities have predicted more monsoon rains in most districts of Punjab till September 9
  • Sindh’s Sukkur, Ghotki, Larkana, Khairpur, Dadu and Jacobabad on alert as floodwaters move downstream

ISLAMABAD: Rains in upper parts of Pakistan have swelled rivers in the eastern Punjab province, disaster authorities said on Friday, amid a high flood situation at Trimmu and Panjnad headworks.

Monsoon floods have killed 46 people, displaced 1.8 million and inundated 1.3 million acres of agricultural land in the country’s breadbasket province of Punjab over the last two weeks, with another 3.9 million people affected, official data shows.

Following rains in upper parts, the water flow in Chenab remains 115,000 cusecs at Marala, 205,000 at Khanki and 266,000 cusecs at Qadirabad. The river flow is the highest at Trimmu at 331,000 cusecs, according to the Punjab Provincial Disaster Management Authority (PDMA).

Ravi is flowing at 73,000 cusecs at Jassar, 112,000 at Shahdara, 122,000 at Sidhnai and 144,000 cusecs at Balloki. The flow in Sutlej is recorded at 319,000 cusecs at Ganda Singh Wala in Kasur, 142,000 at Sulemanki and 310,000 cusecs at the Panjnad headworks in Bahawalpur.

“Monsoon rains are predicted in most districts of Punjab till September 9,” the PDMA said on Friday. “Citizens should take precautionary measures and never go near rivers for recreational activities. Refrain from fishing and other activities in rivers.”

Monsoon season brings Pakistan up to 80 percent of its annual rainfall, but increasingly erratic and extreme weather patterns are turning the annual rains, which are vital for agriculture, food security and the livelihoods of millions of farmers, into a destructive force.

Rains, floods, landslides and similar incidents have killed at least 884 people nationwide since June 26, according to the National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA). The disaster has revived memories of the 2022 deluges, when a third of the country was submerged, over 1,700 people were killed and losses exceeded $35 billion.

The floods, which have been moving downstream from Punjab, have prompted authorities in the southern Sindh province to evacuate people to safety.

On Thursday evening, the NDMA said Sindh’s northern districts of Sukkur, Ghotki, Larkana, Khairpur, Dadu and Jacobabad were at risk, while southern districts of Thatta, Sujawal, Badin, Tharparkar, Umerkot, Sanghar, Karachi, Hyderabad and Jamshoro could see heavy downpours in the coming days.

“Your lives are precious, and no unnecessary risk should be taken in the face of natural calamities,” First Lady Aseefa Bhutto Zardari told communities, while inspecting protective structures and relief camps during a preparedness visit to embankments near Nawabshah.

“Effective coordination between departments, close monitoring, and advanced planning are essential if we are to manage this challenge successfully.”

Pakistan, which ranks among the world’s most climate-vulnerable nations, has experienced increasingly erratic, frequent weather events, including heat waves, untimely rains, storms, cyclones and droughts, in recent years, which scientists have blamed on human-driven climate change.

In May, at least 32 people were killed in severe storms in the South Asian country.


Pakistani state-owned firm announces major oil, gas discovery in Attock district

Pakistani state-owned firm announces major oil, gas discovery in Attock district
Updated 44 min 7 sec ago

Pakistani state-owned firm announces major oil, gas discovery in Attock district

Pakistani state-owned firm announces major oil, gas discovery in Attock district
  • The well flows 1,469 barrels per day of oil and 2.56 MMscfd of gas at Wellhead Flowing Pressure of 1,147 psig on a 32/64” choke
  • The discovery will make a meaningful contribution to Pakistan’s energy mix by adding additional reserves, exploration firm says

KARACHI: The Pakistan Petroleum Limited (PPL), one of the country’s leading oil and gas exploration and production companies, has discovered “significant” oil and gas reserves in the Attock district of the eastern Punjab province, it said on Friday.

This landmark discovery at Dhok Sultan-03 well is not only a major milestone for PPL and its partner, the Government Holdings Private Limited (GHPL), but also marks the second deepest oil discovery in naturally fractured carbonate in the Pothohar region, according to PPL.

The exploration firm, as operator of the Dhok Sultan block with a 75 percent working interest (WI) alongside GHPL’s 25 percent WI, spudded the well on January 18. Drilled to a depth of 5,815 meters, the well tested the hydrocarbon potential of the Patala and Lockhart formations.

The well flowed 1,469 barrels per day of oil and 2.56 Million Standard Cubic Feet per Day (MMscfd) of gas at Wellhead Flowing Pressure (WHFP) of 1,147 Pounds per Square Inch Gauge (psig) on a 32/64” choke, and 2,113 barrels per day of oil and 4.13 MMscfd of gas at WHFP of 813psig on a 48/64” choke.

“This discovery is a result of rigorous geological, geophysical and reservoir engineering data analyzes and integration that helped in overcoming the drilling challenges by optimizing the well design that resulted in saving drilling days and cost optimization,” PPL said.

The South Asian country, which imports most of its energy needs and is currently looking for ways to lessen the costs, is currently pursuing a multi-pronged strategy to advance the energy sector, focusing on indigenization, electrification and liberalization.

The Dhok Sultan-03 discovery is expected to make a meaningful contribution to Pakistan’s energy mix by adding additional hydrocarbon reserves and will save significant foreign exchange for the country through indigenous hydrocarbon production.

“This discovery is a testament to PPL’s in-house expertise, perseverance, and commitment to energy security,” PPL Managing Director Imran Abbasy. “It demonstrates our ability to deliver impactful results that not only strengthen our reserves base but also contribute to reducing the country’s reliance on imported energy and conserving valuable foreign exchange.”

Earlier in Feb., Mari Energies, a Pakistani hydrocarbon exploration firm, discovered new oil and gas reserves in the northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) province, with initial tests suggesting a flow of 12.96 million standard cubic feet per day (MMSCFD) of gas and around 20 barrel per day (bbl/d) of condensate.

The discovery was made in KP’s Waziristan district at the Spinwam-1 exploratory well, which was drilled on May 28 last year, according to Mari Energies. The company holds a 55 percent stake in the Waziristan block together with the state-owned Oil and Gas Development Company Limited (OGDCL) and Orient Petroleum Inc. (OPI).

It followed Islamabad’s announcement offering foreign investors 40 offshore and 31 onshore blocks for oil and gas exploration.


Two powerful aftershocks hit Afghanistan after quake kill 2,200, tremors felt in Pakistan

Two powerful aftershocks hit Afghanistan after quake kill 2,200, tremors felt in Pakistan
Updated 52 min 40 sec ago

Two powerful aftershocks hit Afghanistan after quake kill 2,200, tremors felt in Pakistan

Two powerful aftershocks hit Afghanistan after quake kill 2,200, tremors felt in Pakistan
  • Friday’s earthquake of magnitude 5.4 struck the southeast at a depth of 10 km, hours after one late on Thursday
  • Official says the epicenter of Thursday’s earthquake was in the district of Shiwa near the border with Pakistan

KABUL: Two powerful aftershocks shook eastern Afghanistan in a span of 12 hours, the German Research Center for Geosciences (GFZ) said, triggering fears of more deaths and destruction on Friday in a region where about 2,200 people died in quakes in four days.

They follow two earthquakes that have already ravaged the South Asian nation, crushed by war, poverty and shrinking aid. The Taliban administration estimated 2,205 deaths and 3,640 injuries by Thursday.

A Reuters witness said continuous aftershocks hit the province of Nangarhar and details of the damage were still being collected.

Friday’s earthquake of magnitude 5.4 struck the southeast at a depth of 10 km (6.2 miles), GFZ said, hours after one late on Thursday night.

The week’s first earthquake of magnitude 6, just minutes before midnight on Sunday, was one of Afghanistan’s deadliest, unleashing damage and destruction in the provinces of Nangarhar and Kunar when it struck at a shallow depth of 10 km (6 miles).

A second quake of magnitude 5.5 on Tuesday caused panic and interrupted rescue efforts as it sent rocks sliding down mountains and cut off roads to villages in remote areas.

With houses built mostly of dry masonry, stone, and timber, some families preferred to stay in the open rather than return home, as a precaution against aftershocks.

Naqibullah Rahimi, a spokesperson for the health department in Nangarhar province, said the epicenter of Thursday’s earthquake was in the district of Shiwa near the border with Pakistan, and there were some initial reports of damage.

The earlier quakes flattened villages in both provinces, destroying more than 6,700 homes, and rescue workers pulled bodies from the rubble on Thursday.

Survivors in the quake-prone region have been left without basic amenities as the United Nations and other agencies warn of a critical need for food, medical supplies and shelter.

The earthquakes mainly happen in the Hindu Kush mountain range, where the Indian and Eurasian tectonic plates meet.


PM Sharif assures removal of all hiccups as Pakistan, China business firms sign $4.2 billion pacts

PM Sharif assures removal of all hiccups as Pakistan, China business firms sign $4.2 billion pacts
Updated 05 September 2025

PM Sharif assures removal of all hiccups as Pakistan, China business firms sign $4.2 billion pacts

PM Sharif assures removal of all hiccups as Pakistan, China business firms sign $4.2 billion pacts
  • The agreements were signed in the fields of agriculture, industry, health, trade, mining and minerals
  • Shehbaz Sharif also announces the launch of second phase of the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan and China have signed 21 memorandums of understanding and joint ventures worth $4.2 billion to enhance business-to-business (B2B) cooperation in diverse areas, Pakistani state media reported on Thursday, with Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif assuring Chinese businessmen removal of all hiccups in investment procedures.

The agreements were signed at the second Pakistan-China B2B Investment Conference in Beijing that Sharif as a reflection of the “iron-clad brotherhood” between Pakistan and China, unveiling his plans for greater economic cooperation between the two countries.

China is a key strategic ally of Pakistan, with Beijing pouring in tens of billions in energy and infrastructure development projects in the South Asian country under the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC), part of President Xi Jinping’s Belt and Road Initiative (BRI).

Speaking at the investment conference in Beijing, the Pakistan prime minister highlighted Pakistan’s unwavering commitment to investor facilitation and told Chinese businessmen that “Pakistan is your second home, just as China is ours,” the Associated Press of Pakistan (APP) reported.

“This is one of the largest business conferences I have attended during my visit to this great country. Our relationship with China is unmatched, higher than the Himalayas, deeper than the deepest oceans, sweeter than honey and stronger than steel,” he was quoted as saying.

“We will not tolerate a second’s delay.”

Sharif was in China on a six-day visit to China since Aug. 30 to attend the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) heads of state summit in Tianjin. He also held talks with President Xi, Premier Li Qiang, Russian President Vladimir Putin and other world leaders on the sidelines of the summit.

The Pakistan prime minister described the B2B engagements as a “long march of economic development” between the two countries, which he commenced from Beijing and would conclude in Islamabad, the Radio Pakistan broadcaster reported.

The agreements were signed in the fields of agriculture, industry, health, trade, mining and minerals, and others.

“Agriculture is the backbone of Pakistan’s economy as sixty percent of its economy relies on agriculture,” Sharif said, encouraging Chinese companies to come forward and contribute their experience, expertise and investments to boosting this sector in Pakistan.

“Information Technology and Artificial Intelligence is another area, where China is a world leader, where both countries can enhance bilateral cooperation.”

On Thursday, Sharif also announced the launch of the second phase of CPEC, vowing to safeguard Chinese nationals working in the country and accelerate stalled projects.

Signed in 2015, CPEC is a multi-billion-dollar network of roads, railways, ports and power plants linking western China to the Arabian Sea through Pakistan. Pakistan’s Planning Commission (CPEC Secretariat) last year reported that the corridor projects were worth about $25.4 billion, with another $8 billion under implementation, putting the total Chinese investment at around $33 billion so far.

The scheme’s second phase, branded “CPEC 2.0,” aims to expand beyond roads and energy into industry, agriculture, information technology and special economic zones, with Islamabad looking to revive growth and attract new Chinese capital.


Pakistan floods damaged 30 percent of wheat stocks, says business forum as traders call for imports

Pakistan floods damaged 30 percent of wheat stocks, says business forum as traders call for imports
Updated 05 September 2025

Pakistan floods damaged 30 percent of wheat stocks, says business forum as traders call for imports

Pakistan floods damaged 30 percent of wheat stocks, says business forum as traders call for imports
  • Devastating floods in Pakistan’s breadbasket Punjab have killed 46 since late August, affected over 3.9 million
  • Financial expert urges government to allow imports of up to 6 million tons of wheat to stabilize surging prices

KARACHI: Floods in Pakistan’s eastern Punjab province have destroyed 30 percent of the country’s wheat stocks, a senior official of a leading business forum said this week, as a prominent trader advised the government to allow imports of the commodity to stabilize prices. 

Large swathes of crops have been destroyed in Pakistan’s Punjab since late August, where floods have killed 46, affected 3.9 million and displaced 1.8 million. Deluges have damaged fields of rice, maize, cotton, sugarcane, vegetables and damaged wheat storages in the breadbasket province, triggering fears of shortages and increase in food prices. 

Pakistan was ranked as the world’s eighth-largest wheat producer by the US Department of Agriculture (USDA) last year. It said the country had produced 31.4 million tons of the crop that year, which amounted to 4 percent of the world’s total wheat production.

“Our assessment (is that) 30 percent of wheat stock is gone,” the Pakistan Business Forum’s (PBF) Chief Organizer Ahmad Jawad told Arab News on Thursday. 

The PBF is a prominent organization that represents and supports the business community of Pakistan. It is a part of the International Business Forum (IBF), a platform comprising 42 business associations from nearly 25 countries. 

Shah Faisal, a public relations officer at Pakistan’s food ministry and Waqas Alam, general manager field wing at the Pakistan Agriculture Storage & Services Corporation (PASSCO), did not respond to Arab News’ queries about the position of the country’s wheat stocks. 

Agriculture contributes 24 percent to Pakistan’s gross domestic product, according to the Pakistan Bureau of Statistics. The USDA has estimated Pakistan’s wheat production this year at 28.9 million tons from 9.1 million hectares till August, 8 percent down from last year’s 31.4 million tons. 

The shortfall is expected to adversely impact the food supply situation in Pakistan. According to the PBF, Pakistan consumes 33.6 million tons of wheat annually. 

“Floods have severely affected wheat stocks in central and south Punjab,” Jawad said, wondering how Pakistan’s wheat stocks could remain stable when the government still lacked proper storage depots.

SUPPLY GAPS

Muzzammil R. Chappal, chairman of the Cereal Association of Pakistan (CAP) and a trader, said Pakistan was short of as much as three million tons of wheat, which has pushed its prices to a three-year high in the last 15 days.

The price of 100 kilograms of a bag of wheat in Pakistan’s major cities like Karachi, Quetta and Peshawar has surged by about 40 percent to Rs9,000 ($32).

“This perhaps can increase to Rs15,000 ($53) if the government still did not devise an import policy,” Chappal warned.

The CAP chairman and private trader said he had written to the food ministry on Aug. 27, seeking permission to import 500,000 tons of wheat per month to stabilize prices.

Chappal attributed the current shortage to some farmers whom he said had fed at least 2.5 million tons of wheat to their poultry and animals. He said this had happened when wheat was being sold for Rs5,500 ($20) per 100 kilograms.
 
“(Wheat) was substituted for maize, about 30 percent of which had been damaged by monsoon rains,” he said, adding that heavy rains, snowfall and floods damaged the crop. 

In his letter, Chappal told the food ministry that the recent “sharp increase” in wheat prices reflected concerns of a potential shortage. 

Pakistan has been importing wheat for the last five years, except in 2024, when the harvest was approximately 3.5 million tons higher than the five-year average of around 28 million tons, he said. 

For this year, production estimates stood at 27.5 to 28 million tons amid the consistent rise in consumption.
 
“If timely corrective steps are not taken, this could lead to supply gaps or even a shortage situation toward the end of the season,” the private grain trader warned. 

He requested the government to consider allowing wheat imports “at the earliest to ensure food security and market stability.”
 
Kamal Ahmed, a commodities analyst at brokerage house AKD securities, said the impact of floods would be more visible on rice and sugarcane, adding that Pakistan’s wheat stocks had largely remained safe.
 
“Currently, PASSCO holds about 4.2 million tons of wheat in its storage,” Ahmed said. “These facilities are specifically designed with flood risks in mind, ensuring that water intrusion is minimized.”

Arif Habib Commodities Chief Executive Officer Ahsan Mehanti, however, backed Jawad’s assessment that 30 percent of wheat had been lost to the floods. He said the deepening wheat shortfall may increase Pakistan’s import bill significantly this year.
 
“The country is going to face a production loss of at least $3 billion,” Mehanti said. “To keep prices stable, the government will be required to import as much as six million tons of wheat.”