Eleven people were killed in a stampede during the distribution of food aid in the southern Pakistani city of Karachi on Friday.
The dead included five women and three children, police said, while five other people were hospitalised following the incident, which occurred at a charity-run distribution site set up at a local factory.
Thousands of people have gathered at flour distribution centres set up across the country, some as part of a government-backed programme to ease the impact of inflation, which is running above 30 per cent, a 50-year high.
At least five other people have been killed and several injured in recent weeks at sites in other provinces in Pakistan.
Thousands of bags of flour have also been looted from trucks and distribution points, according to official records.
The stampedes underscore people's desperation in the face of soaring costs, exacerbated by Pakistan's falling currency and a removal of subsidies agreed with the International Monetary Fund to unlock the latest tranche of its financial support packages.
The costs of basic goods have surged, with flour prices rising more than 45 per cent in the past year.
The Pakistani government has launched the flour distribution programme to reach millions of families in need during the holy month of Ramadan that began last week.


Britain's Prince William calls for optimism on environment at EarthShot Prize event
Typhoon Kalmaegi death toll hits 114 in Philippines; heads to Vietnam
Investigators find 'black boxes' from UPS plane crash that killed at least 12
Zohran Mamdani wins NYC mayoral race, capping meteoric rise
Death toll rises to 11 in fire at Bosnian retirement home