Swat school principal Saeed Ahmad ordered an immediate evacuation on Friday, minutes before a surging stream smashed into his campus in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa’s Swat.
Around 900 children and their teachers were already out when the waters hit, officials and locals said.
Swat school principal acted at 9am; students cleared in 15 minutes before torrents tore through campus
“It was exactly 9am when I had a last glance at the stream and sensed it was going to burst its banks,” said Ahmad.
He cleared nearly 950 enrolled students at once. Within 15 minutes, classrooms were empty.
Minutes later, floodwaters ripped away half the building, boundary walls and the playground.
Local councillor Sarwar Khan called it a life-saving decision.
“This timely action by the principal saved 900 lives.”
The school is one of dozens of education facilities damaged across flood-hit districts of KP in recent days.
Ahmad has led the school for 12 years and still remembers July 1995, when the same building was destroyed during floods.
“There were summer vacations; that’s why there was no casualty,” he said.
That memory, he added, guided his call to evacuate without delay.
The wider picture is grim. Monsoon rains have intensified across the north, with officials reporting more than 350 deaths in KP over three days.
NDMA chairman Lt Gen Inam Haider says this year’s monsoon is “50–60%” stronger than last year, with two to three more spells likely through early September.
For Swat, the near miss underscores what quick decisions and rehearsed procedures can do.
District authorities are urging schools near streams and nullahs to keep watch posts, test alarms and map exit routes.
Parents in high-risk pockets have been asked to follow local advisories and avoid crossings during active rain cells.
