Glof alert

Published May 22, 2026 Updated May 22, 2026 07:39am

FOR many communities in northern Pakistan, the sound of heavy rain now carries a different meaning. It is no longer simply weather moving through the mountains. It is the possibility of roads collapsing overnight, rivers changing course and entire settlements being cut off within hours. The Met Office’s latest Glof alert arrives against this backdrop. In 2022, glacial flooding and extreme rainfall damaged homes, bridges and transport links across GB and KP. In Hassanabad, Hunza, a glacial lake outburst swept away a key bridge on the Karakoram Highway, disrupting travel and trade while residents improvised ways to move people and supplies across the damaged route. In Upper Chitral’s Reshun valley, families shifted livestock and belongings themselves as floodwaters surged through vulnerable areas before substantial outside help could arrive.

These episodes are becoming part of the region’s seasonal reality. Pakistan contains more glaciers than any country outside the polar regions, and warming temperatures are accelerating melt at a dangerous pace. When intense rainfall combines with unstable glacial lakes, the result can be sudden torrents carrying mud, rocks and debris through narrow valleys with little warning. The Met Office has identified vulnerable districts and advised residents to watch for changes in water colour, unusual sounds and rising stream levels. Such details matter because, in many places, local observation is the first line of defence. And in too many cases, preparedness has depended heavily on the resilience of local communities. Villagers, volunteers and small disaster committees continue to shoulder responsibilities that require strong institutional backing. Communication systems fail, access roads remain fragile and rescue operations are often slowed by terrain and poor planning. Authorities should already be positioning relief supplies, checking evacuation routes and ensuring uninterrupted communication with remote valleys before the weather worsens. The pressure on our northern valleys is growing. The state response must keep up.

Published in Dawn, May 22nd, 2026

Opinion

Editorial

Hardening lines
Updated 22 May, 2026

Hardening lines

Iranian suspicions about Pakistan’s close ties with Washington and Gulf states persist, while Pakistan remains uneasy over Tehran’s growing engagement with India.
Unliveable city
22 May, 2026

Unliveable city

IN Karachi, when it comes to water, it is every man and woman for themselves. A persistent shortage in available...
Glof alert
22 May, 2026

Glof alert

FOR many communities in northern Pakistan, the sound of heavy rain now carries a different meaning. It is no longer...
External woes
Updated 21 May, 2026

External woes

Relying indefinitely on remittances to offset structural economic weaknesses is not sustainable.
Political activity
21 May, 2026

Political activity

THE opposition is astir. There is talk of widespread protests this Friday over a list of dissatisfactions with the...
Seizing hope
21 May, 2026

Seizing hope

ISRAEL’S tyranny knows no bounds. After intercepting the Global Sumud Flotilla that set sail last week, disturbing...