India releases water from dams, warns rival Pakistan of cross-border flooding, says source

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Men stand on a bridge over the Chenab River, following the monsoon rains and rising water level in Wazirabad, in Punjab province, Pakistan August 27, 2025. REUTERS/Akhtar Soomro

Archrivals India and Pakistan have been ravaged by intense monsoon rain and flooding in recent weeks.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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ISLAMABAD/NEW DELHI - India on Aug 27 opened all gates of major dams on rivers in its part of the Kashmir region following heavy rain, and

warned neighbouring Pakistan

of the possibility of downstream flooding, said an Indian government source.

Pakistan said Islamabad received the warning, and subsequently issued an alert for flooding at three rivers which flow into the country from India.

Archrivals India and Pakistan have been ravaged by

intense monsoon rain and flooding

in recent weeks.

Pakistan’s heartland province of Punjab faces an “exceptionally high” risk of flooding due to a combination of heavy rain and the excess water India is releasing from the dams, which then flows across the border, according to Pakistani officials. Pakistani Punjab serves as the country’s breadbasket and is home to half of its 240 million people. 

An Indian source said that some 200,000 cusecs of water are likely to be released. One cusec is a volume equivalent to about 28 cubic litres per second. It was unclear whether the water release would be a one-off event or would be carried out in stages.  

A Pakistani disaster management official had warned on Aug 26 that India would be releasing controlled volumes of water in coming days.

Pakistan says New Delhi had passed on two earlier flood warnings since Aug 24.

The nuclear-armed nations have been in a tense stand-off since a brief conflict in May – their worst fighting in decades – and any flooding in Pakistan blamed on India could inflame ties.   

India routinely releases water from its dams when they get too full, with the excess flowing into Pakistan, as the two nations share rivers.

Pakistani authorities on Aug 27 called in army troops to help rescue people from already flooded areas in the Punjab province, and for relief and evacuation efforts. Pakistan began forced evacuations due to floods on Aug 22.  

The number of displaced people in Pakistani Punjab due to flooding now exceeds 167,000, including nearly 40,000 people who left voluntarily following flood warnings since Aug 14.  

The

death toll from flooding in Pakistan

since the start of the monsoon season in late June now stands at 802 – half of them in August alone.

Punjab province was divided between the two countries when they gained independence in 1947. REUTERS

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