On Pakistan Day, octogenarian recalls struggle of migration, holds hope for new generation 

Special On Pakistan Day, octogenarian recalls struggle of migration, holds hope for new generation 
The still image taken from a video shows Abdul Qayyum, 86, speaking with Arab News during an interview on March 20, 2024, in Rawalpindi, Pakistan. (AN Photo)
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Updated 23 March 2024
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On Pakistan Day, octogenarian recalls struggle of migration, holds hope for new generation 

On Pakistan Day, octogenarian recalls struggle of migration, holds hope for new generation 
  • Abdul Qayyum, 86, migrated from India’s Noor Mahal village to Pakistan’s Faisalabad in 1947 amid riots, bloodshed
  • At least two million people were killed in 1947 when Muslims and Hindus rushed to new homelands on opposite sides of border

ISLAMABAD: Abdul Qayyum’s family was among millions who abandoned their homes in India in 1947 to migrate to Pakistan, a newly created nation cleaved out of British colonial India for the Muslims of the subcontinent. 

The journey was an arduous one, with Qayyum and his family arriving in Pakistan with nothing but the clothes on their backs, the octogenarian told Arab News ahead of Pakistan Day on March 23, celebrated each year as the day the Lahore Resolution was adopted, calling for the creation of an independent sovereign state for Muslims. 

Chaos, confusion and violence engulfed the subcontinent from June to August 1947 when the British announced they were dividing the subcontinent into India and Pakistan. The event triggered one of the largest displacements in history, with close to 15 million Hindus and Muslims rushing in opposite directions to new homelands and around two million people killed in the violence that ensued after the announcement to divide the subcontinent was made in June 1947. 

Dreading the violence in which neighbors slaughtered neighbors and childhood friends turned on one another to become sworn enemies, Qayyum, now 86, remembered when his family made the decision that June to leave their house in the village of Noor Mahal in India’s Punjab state and migrate to Pakistan’s Lyallpur. The city is now called Faisalabad, the industrial center of the Pakistani province of Punjab and the country’s third largest and populous city.

Qayyum was eight years old then and left for a refugee camp as part of a convoy, accompanied by his mother, father and sister, for the newly created Muslim state of Pakistan. 

“When the announcement of Pakistan’s birth happened [in June 1947], the riots began immediately and then people started packing up whatever things they had in their houses,” Qayyum told Arab News in an interview this week.

The family also managed to quickly pack some clothes and jewelry that Qayyum’s mother owned, before bolting for a camp for migrants in Tehsil Nakozil in India. An official advised them against carrying their belongings on foot, offering to take their suitcase to the camp.

“Then he came back and said he was looted on the way and said, ‘Now I have nothing left’,” Qayyum said, smiling. “So, believe me when we entered Pakistan, I had a kurta, shalwar and sandals on me. Same with my father and my mother and sister were also in their clothes only.”

More suffering awaited the family, who lived at the refugee camp for the next two months.

“We spent a miserable time there as the rains started, it was the rainy season. There was a lot of difficulty, there was no roof so we propped up sheets on wood and made a makeshift tent and lived there.”

After braving two months at the camp, Qayyum and his family boarded a train at Nakodar station, approximately 12 miles from Jalandhar, for their journey to Pakistan.

With hundreds of migrants to cater to, women and children were accommodate in the train’s compartments while the men were put on the roof. Those in the compartments were told to keep the windows shut as the dangerous journey progressed slowly, with passengers eating only roasted gram and jaggery to survive. 

“The train would stop often along the way. If it had gone in one go it would have been a few-hours-long journey. But night fell. Then in the morning we crossed the border [of India into Pakistan],” Qayyum remembered.

The train arrived in Pakistan in late August or September 1947, Qayyum, who on account of his old age could not remember the exact date, said. 

“We crossed into Pakistan through the Wagah border, reaching Lahore amid loud celebrations.”

“HIGH HOPES”

From there the family left for present-day Faisalabad, where Qayyum’s father had previously worked at the Lyallpur Cotton Mill till 1946, leaving the city that year to start a business in Calcutta. 

Qayyum’s father got his old job back and managed to secure a house from the government. Migrants who provided evidence they had left behind property in India were given lands and properties by Pakistan’s government during the early years of partition. 

Qayyum went on to become an engineer and joined the Capital Development Authority (CDA) in 1965, a public company responsible for providing municipal services in Islamabad. 

“I was part of a dedicated team tasked with constructing key landmarks such as the President’s House and secretariat, as well as various roads and bridges across different sectors,” he said. 

Though Qayyum said he did not regret moving to Pakistan, he recalled with sadness the year of 1971, when then East Pakistan, now Bangladesh, won independence from Pakistan after a nine-month war, helped by India.

“It was a significant loss considering the immense contributions made by the people of East Pakistan to the creation of Pakistan,” Qayyum said. 

Moreover, he lamented that Pakistan as a country had not been able to achieve its true goal of becoming a democratic nation for the subcontinent’s Muslims. 

“The goal for which Pakistan was created, Pakistan got made but that goal could not be fulfilled. The vision that Quaid e Azam [Pakistan’s founder Muhammad Ali Jinnah] had, it [Pakistan] wasn’t made according to that.”

But the octogenarian still has high hopes from the younger generation and its ability to fight to change a system he does not believe had ever been truly democratic. 

“There is a lot of hope attached with the next generation because times have changed. The old forms of [so-called] democracy will not remain and god willing a better time will come.”


Pakistan to hold Mar. 23 military parade on 'limited scale' due to Ramadan

Pakistan to hold Mar. 23 military parade on 'limited scale' due to Ramadan
Updated 2 min 30 sec ago
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Pakistan to hold Mar. 23 military parade on 'limited scale' due to Ramadan

Pakistan to hold Mar. 23 military parade on 'limited scale' due to Ramadan
  • Parade will mark 85th anniversary of Pakistan’s republic day celebrated each year on Mar. 23 to celebrate adoption of Lahore Resolution
  • Pakistan honors foreign dignitaries, national heroes with top civilian awards, features tanks, missiles, UAVs, and air defense systems at parade

ISLAMABAD: The Pakistan Day military parade will be held this year on Mar. 23 on a “limited scale” due to the holy month of Ramadan, state-run media reported on Thursday, with contingents of the country’s three armed forces set to participate in the spectacle. 
The parade will be held on the 85th anniversary of Pakistan’s republic day, marked each year to celebrate the adoption of the Lahore Resolution by the Muslim League party, which called for the creation of an independent state for the Muslims of India on Mar. 23, 1940.
While last year the event was held at the Parade Avenue in Pakistan’s capital Islamabad, this year it is scheduled to take place within the premises of the Aiwan-e-Sadr or the official residence of Pakistan’s president. President Asif Ali Zardari will be the chief guest on the occasion, state broadcaster Radio Pakistan said. 
“Pakistan Day Parade will be held on Sunday on a limited scale with traditional enthusiasm,” it said. “The decision to hold the parade on a limited scale was made due to the month of Ramadan,” Radio Pakistan said. 
Pakistan Air Force (PAF) fighter jets will also conduct a fly past, a ceremonial or honorific flight by an aircraft or group of aircraft, during the occasion. 
“Foreign ambassadors and other distinguished guests have also been invited to the event,” the state media reported. 
Pakistan honors foreign dignitaries and national heroes on the occasion with top civilian awards. The parade also features mechanized columns including tanks, armored personnel carriers, rocket launchers, air defense system, guns, UAVs, short-and-long-range Pakistani missiles such as Ra’ad, Nasr, Babur, Shaheen, Ghauri and Ababeel every year. 
This year the military parade takes place as Pakistan grapples with surging militancy, especially in its southwestern Balochistan province bordering Iran and Afghanistan. Separatist militants last Tuesday bombed a section of the railway track and stormed the Peshawar-bound Jaffar Express train carrying over 400 passengers in the mountainous Bolan region. 
The crisis was resolved the following day when the armed forces carried out a successful operation to rescue the hostages, killing all 33 militants in the process. A final count showed 23 soldiers, three railway employees and five passengers had died in the attack.
Violence persisted in the region days later as a blast killed five, including three paramilitary soldiers, in the province’s Nushki district on Sunday. 
Both attacks were claimed by the Baloch Liberation Army (BLA), an ethnic separatist militant outfit in the province. The BLA is the largest and strongest of several ethnic Baloch insurgent groups which have been fighting for decades to win a larger share of the natural resources of mineral-rich Balochistan, which is also home to major China-led projects including a port and gold and copper mines.
 


Pakistan stocks hit new high in intraday trading on investor confidence, IMF review optimism 

Pakistan stocks hit new high in intraday trading on investor confidence, IMF review optimism 
Updated 20 min 43 sec ago
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Pakistan stocks hit new high in intraday trading on investor confidence, IMF review optimism 

Pakistan stocks hit new high in intraday trading on investor confidence, IMF review optimism 
  • Benchmark KSE-100 index climbed 1,215.46 points, or 1.03 percent, to reach 119,189.48 
  • Index eventually settled at 118,769.77, up by 795.75 or 0.67 percent, from the previous close 

ISLAMABAD: The Pakistan Stock Exchange (PSX) crossed the 119,000-point threshold in intraday trading for the first time, largely driven by aggressive buying from local mutual funds and confidence over a positive review of an International Monetary Fund bailout program, a top brokerage house said.

The benchmark KSE-100 index climbed 1,215.46 points, or 1.03 percent, to reach 119,189.48 from the last close of 117,974.02 at 9:43am. The index settled at 118,769.77, up by 795.75 or 0.67 percent, from the previous close. 

“This strong upward movement was largely driven by aggressive buying from local mutual funds, as investor confidence remained high on expectations of an imminent IMF review, which might be completed earlier than expected,” Topline Securities said in its daily market review.

Market activity remained robust, with 666 million shares traded, amounting to a turnover of Rs38.5 billion. Cnergyico Pk Ltd. oil refining company led the volume charts, with 163.9 million shares changing hands.

“The positive trajectory in the Pakistan Stock Exchange signifies the increasing trust of traders and investors in the government’s economic policies,” Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif said in statement.

“The government is providing all necessary facilities on a priority basis to ensure a conducive environment for business and investment in the country.”

Earlier this month, an International Monetary Fund (IMF) team concluded its first review of Pakistan’s economic reforms under a $7 billion loan program, describing Pakistan’s progress as “strong,” though the mission departed without finalizing a staff-level agreement.


BankIslami unveils ‘Aik,’ Pakistan’s first fully digital Islamic banking solution 

BankIslami unveils ‘Aik,’ Pakistan’s first fully digital Islamic banking solution 
Updated 20 March 2025
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BankIslami unveils ‘Aik,’ Pakistan’s first fully digital Islamic banking solution 

BankIslami unveils ‘Aik,’ Pakistan’s first fully digital Islamic banking solution 
  • ‘Aik’ is designed to seamlessly integrate essential banking features, offers Qibla direction tool
  • The bank says it is spearheading digital transformation of Islamic finance for tech-savvy clientele

KARACHI: An Islamic commercial bank in Pakistan announced on Wednesday it had launched the country’s first digital Islamic banking solution designed to deliver seamless Shariah-compliant financial services nationwide.
BankIslami Pakistan Limited was incorporated in Pakistan in 2004 and commenced operations in April 2006 as the first Islamic bank in the country to receive a license from the State Bank of Pakistan (SBP) under the 2003 Islamic Banking Policy.
It announced the launch of “Aik” in a statement, saying it would help lead the way in the digital transformation of Islamic finance in Pakistan.
“Aik translates to ‘one’ — a symbol of simplicity, unity and our shared vision for an ethical, Riba-free financial future,” Ashfaque Ahmad, the project lead, was quoted as saying in the statement.
“This platform fulfills a critical need in Pakistan’s banking landscape for a fully digital solution that aligns with Islamic principles without compromising convenience and accessibility,” he added.
The statement said the platform integrates essential banking features, including digital account opening with biometric authentication, instant money transfers, secure bill payments, mobile top-ups and an internationally accessible debit card, with other functionalities such as a Qibla direction tool.
Available for download on Google Play and the Apple App Store, Aik allows users to register using their CNIC and instantly access a secure, fully digital Islamic banking experience.
As one of Pakistan’s leading Islamic financial institutions, BankIslami currently operates over 540 branches and offers a comprehensive suite of Shariah-compliant products.
With the launch of Aik, the bank said it was spearheading the digital transformation of Islamic finance for a tech-savvy clientele in the country.


Pakistan to investigate alleged visit of journalists to Israel, says ‘no question’ of recognizing Tel Aviv

Pakistan to investigate alleged visit of journalists to Israel, says ‘no question’ of recognizing Tel Aviv
Updated 30 min 11 sec ago
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Pakistan to investigate alleged visit of journalists to Israel, says ‘no question’ of recognizing Tel Aviv

Pakistan to investigate alleged visit of journalists to Israel, says ‘no question’ of recognizing Tel Aviv
  • Israeli newspaper reported this week 10-member Pakistani delegation visited Israel for a week
  • Foreign office says has no knowledge of delegation members and what passports they were traveling on

ISLAMABAD: The Pakistani Foreign Office said on Thursday there was no change in the country’s position that it did not recognize Israel, adding that officials were gathering information on an alleged visit to the Middle Eastern country by a local delegation of journalists and influencers. 

A media report by the Israeli newspaper Israel Hayom said on Wednesday a 10-member Pakistani delegation of journalists, intellectuals and influencers had visited Israel for a week.

Pakistan does not recognize the state of Israel, and its passport explicitly states that it cannot be used for travel to the country. Islamabad has repeatedly called for an independent Palestinian state based on “internationally agreed parameters” and pre-1967 borders with Al-Quds Al-Sharif as its capital. 

“As far as Pakistan’s position is concerned, it’s very unambiguous,” Pakistan foreign office spokesperson Shafqat Ali Khan told reporters at a weekly media briefing in Islamabad.

“There is no question of a change in Pakistan’s position on the question of recognition of Israel or on the question of Palestine or Israel or on the question of Palestine or the Arab-Israel problems.”

Responding to a question on the reported visit of the Pakistani delegation, the spokesperson said the trip had nothing to do with the foreign ministry or government.

“We are gathering information and when we have a clearer picture, we will be able to comment on that,” he added. 

“We don’t know who was there [Israel] and what kind of passport they were carrying, maybe they were dual nationalities.”

The Hayon newspaper report said the ten Pakistani journalists and researchers, including two women, arrived in Israel last Monday and carried passports declaring their invalidity for travel to Israel. 

“Despite this, they bravely accepted an invitation from Sharaka, an organization working to strengthen relations between Israel and South Asian countries,” the report said. 

“To protect the delegation members, their passports were not stamped, and publication of their visit was delayed until they returned safely home.”

RESUMPTION OF GAZA WAR

Commenting on Israel resuming its bombing campaign and ground operations in Gaza, the FO spokesman said Pakistan “unequivocally condemned” the assault in the occupied West Bank and Gaza, calling it a “blatant violation of the ceasefire agreement [signed in January].”

Tuesday’s first day of resumed airstrikes killed more than 400 Palestinians, one of the deadliest days of the war. At least 510 Palestinians have been killed in the past three days, more than half of them women and children, Khalil Al-Deqran, the spokesperson of Gaza’s health ministry told Reuters.

The surprise bombardment has threatened to fully reignite the 17-month-old war, with Israeli officials saying the operation was expected to expand.

“Israel’s airstrikes and raids are a flagrant violation of the ceasefire agreement; international humanitarian law; the UN Charter, and hampers the confidence and faith in the global community and international law,” Khan added.

“We also call on the international community to increase its efforts to end Israel’s genocidal campaign against the innocent people of Palestine. We call for accountability of Israeli crimes committed in this brutal war, as a crucial step toward restoring international legitimacy.”


FO rejects Indian minister’s claim Pakistan ‘occupied’ Kashmir after 1948 ‘invasion’

FO rejects Indian minister’s claim Pakistan ‘occupied’ Kashmir after 1948 ‘invasion’
Updated 20 March 2025
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FO rejects Indian minister’s claim Pakistan ‘occupied’ Kashmir after 1948 ‘invasion’

FO rejects Indian minister’s claim Pakistan ‘occupied’ Kashmir after 1948 ‘invasion’
  • Pakistan says Jammu and Kashmir an “internationally recognized disputed territory” whose final status is to be determined by its people
  • Urges Kabul government to take “visible and verifiable” action against militants harboring in Afghanistan and launching regular cross-border attacks

ISLAMABAD: The foreign office on Thursday rejected Indian External Affairs Minister Subrahmanyam Jaishankar’s remarks that Pakistan was “occupying” a part of Kashmir after “invading” it in 1948, saying the region was an “internationally recognized disputed territory.”

The Muslim-majority Himalayan region of Kashmir has remained a flashpoint between Pakistan and India since their independence from British rule in 1947. Both countries administer parts of the region but claim it in full, having fought three wars over the territory. The part governed by Pakistan is called Azad Kashmir while the Indian part is called Jammu and Kashmir.

Addressing an event in New Delhi this week, Jaishankar called the “occupation” of some parts of Kashmir by Pakistan “the longest standing illegal occupation” of territory by another country after the Second World War. He said Indian had taken the “invasion” to the UN, which had declared it a “dispute,” putting the “attacker and the victim ... on par.”

During a weekly press briefing on Thursday, Foreign Office Spokesperson Ambassador Shafqat Ali Khan said Pakistan was “alarmed” by the increasing frequency of such statements about Kashmir by Indian leaders.

“It was India that took the Jammu and Kashmir issue to the United Nations in 1948,” he told journalists. “Today, it has no right to blame the Security Council and its erstwhile members for the resolutions that were subsequently adopted.

“Repetition of baseless claims cannot deny the fact that Jammu and Kashmir is an internationally recognized disputed territory whose final status is to be determined by its people through a UN-supervised plebiscite, as stipulated in the relevant UN Security Council resolutions,” Khan added.

The spokesperson said Pakistan believed in peaceful co-existence and lasting peace in South Asia would require the resolution of the Kashmir dispute in line with UN resolutions and the aspirations of the Kashmiri people.

He accused India of blocking peace efforts through its “rigid approach and hegemonic ambitions.”

“The anti-Pakistan narrative emanating from India vitiates the bilateral environment and impedes the prospects for peace and cooperation,” the FO spokesman added. “It must stop.”

AFGHANISTAN

During the briefing, Khan also urged the Kabul government to take “visible and verifiable” action against the Pakistani Taliban, Baloch separatist militants and Daesh insurgents that Islamabad says are harboring in neighboring Afghanistan and launching cross-border attacks from there.

His remarks come after a surge in militant attacks in the northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) and southwestern Balochistan provinces in recent months. 

Last week, an unprecedented train hijacking by the Balochistan Liberation Army (BLA) in Pakistan’s southwest killed 31 people, including troops. This was followed by a suicide attack in Nushki that killed five on Sunday. Pakistan said the attacks were carried out by militants who were in touch with “handlers” in Afghanistan.

The Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) and other militant groups have also intensified their attacks in KP province, frequently targeting security force convoys and check posts, as well as carrying out targeted killings and kidnappings of security and government officials.

“Indeed, the terrorist threat against Pakistan from terrorist entities including TTP, BLA, and Daesh is our foremost concern,” Khan said in reply to a question during his weekly press briefing.

“We continue to impress upon interim [Afghan] authorities to take visible and verifiable action against them.”

Pakistani government and military officials have variously accused neighboring India and Afghanistan of fueling militancy in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Balochistan, claims both New Delhi and Kabul deny.