Swat Floods Leave Over 125 Schools Unusable

2 mins read

SWAT: The recent floods caused extensive damage to the education sector in Swat district, rendering 128 government schools, both for boys and girls, partially or completely unusable.

Officials of the district education department told Dawn that the natural calamity hit primary, middle, high and higher secondary educational institutions in multiple tehsils.

They said the majority of buildings had suffered structural cracks, boundary wall collapse and damage to roofs and inundated classrooms, leaving them unsafe for teaching activities.

The officials said although the provincial government announced a one-day closure of schools in the flood-hit areas on Sunday, all public and private educational institutions across Swat reopened on Monday. However, classes weren’t held in 128 damaged schools.

Floods also destroyed 1,849 houses across the district after water swept through entire neighbourhoods, leaving households with nothing but debris.

Affected students lamented that their textbooks, notebooks and completed assignments were washed away in the deluge.

“We lost all our books, notebooks and school work done all through the year,” said a student from Matta.

The crisis has been compounded by widespread losses in Mingora city, where Udyana Bazaar, the largest market for schoolbooks, stationery and other supplies in the district, was completely inundated.

Shopkeepers said that the floodwater ruined their stocks, leaving thousands of students without access to new books and school materials.

“There are around 50 shops only in our market where all of them were inundated by the floods, destroying books and notebooks,” said Qadir Khan, a bookseller in Mingora.

Teachers feared the prolonged school closure and loss of learning materials could cause a learning crisis, especially in rural areas where alternative arrangements were scarce.

“The extent of damage is alarming. Children are eager to return to school, but many buildings are no longer fit for use. Unless urgent rehabilitation is carried out, their learning will be severely disrupted,” said a senior teacher from Kabal tehsil.

The district education officer confirmed that assessment surveys had been completed and detailed reports forwarded to the provincial government.

“Restoration work will require significant funding, but we are working with the provincial administration to secure resources,” he told Dawn.

The provincial government has pledged to prioritise the reconstruction of schools under its rehabilitation programme.

When contacted, a spokesperson for the chief minister, Ahmad Faraz Mughal, said that education was among the foremost concerns and that necessary steps would be taken to ensure that no student was deprived of learning opportunities.

“The provincial government is committed to extending all possible assistance. The chief minister directed officials to prioritise relief operations and was personally monitoring the situation in the affected districts of Swat, Buner, Shangla and Swabi,” he said.

Mr Mughal said around 10,000 buildings were damaged by floods in Swat alone, resulting in losses worth billions of rupees.

Meanwhile, education activists and local NGOs have called for urgent intervention of authorities, warning that prolonged disruption in schooling could drive dropout rates high, especially among girls in remote areas.

Swat director (education) Fazal Khaliq told Dawn that around 105 primary, middle and high schools for boys had been affected by the floods.

“Our school employees and volunteers have cleaned mud and sand from classrooms, while the data of partially damaged schools has been sent to the higher authorities for necessary action,” he said.

The official said schools whose buildings were currently usable would reopen in a couple of days.

Published in Dawn, August 27th, 2025

Previous Story

City Sees Alarming Rise In Rabies Deaths

Next Story

Girls Dominate Top Positions of FBISE Intermediate Results

Latest from Blog

Educational Discrimination of its Kind

The other day, a private educational institution offered me an opportunity to guide its students on how to solve the question paper in board exams to achieve maximum marks or at least how to avoid deduction of marks because of lack of right and relevant information. The selected students, the…

Man Jailed for 14 Years in Boy’s Rape Case in Karachi

KARACHI: A sessions court has sentenced a man to 14 years in prison in a case pertaining to sexually assaulting a minor boy within the jurisdiction of the Sukhan police station. The additional district and sessions judge (Malir) found Sher Ali guilty for committing rape with a six-year-old boy in…

Call for Enforcing Infection Control Protocols amid HIV, Mpox Surge

• Health experts say between 2010 and 2024, AIDS-related deaths in Pakistan increased 6.4-fold, rising from 2,200 to 14,000 annually • New HIV diagnoses in Larkana exceeded 2,000 • Doctors stress need for using disposable syringes KARACHI: Expressing serious concern over the recurring healthcare-associated disease outbreaks in the country, experts…

Addressing OOSC

A highly ambitious plan to enrol half of the 25.1 million out-of-school children in Pakistan by 2030 has just been undertaken by the Sindh government in collaboration with UNICEF. The move aims to tackle larger issues such as poverty, child labour, gender discrimination and access to education over the next…

Karachi Records Dramatic Increase in paediatric HIV Cases

• 159 patients admitted to three city hospitals this year • Majority of them contracted the incurable virus due to ‘unsafe healthcare practices’ • Alarm raised over lack of basic infection control protocols in hospitals KARACHI: Three hospitals in Karachi have recorded a dramatic increase in the number of paediatric…
Go toTop