ISLAMABAD: The chief minister of Pakistan’s most populous Punjab province this week announced her government would provide Rs100 billion [$352 million] in financial assistance for victims of this year’s monsoon floods, vowing to ensure transparency and merit in its distribution.

Unusually heavy rains exacerbated by climate change and excess floodwaters released by dams in India caused cataclysmic floods in Punjab in late August. The deluges killed over 130 people and affected over 4.5 million others, forcing the provincial government to evacuate more than 2.6 million people from high-risk areas.

Nationwide, deadly monsoon rains and floods killed over 1,000 people and 22,000 livestock since late June and washed away over 2.2 million acres of crops, as per data from the National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA). Pakistan’s government has said it is estimating economic damages inflicted by the deadly rains and floods via surveys to mitigate losses.

“And now that billions of rupees, around Rs100 billion [$352 million] that we are about to give for your rehabilitation, for the construction of your houses, for the losses of your crops, for the losses of your animals, this is also being done through Punjab’s own resources,” Nawaz told people gathered at a camp in the eastern city of Okara set up for flood victims.