Ex-PM Khan aide says party will hold Pakistan-wide protests against constitutional amendment

Ex-PM Khan aide says party will hold Pakistan-wide protests against constitutional amendment
Chief Minister of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Ali Amin Gandapur (C) addresses a protest against the alleged skewing in Pakistan's national election, in Peshawar on March 10, 2024. (AFP/File)
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Updated 22 October 2024
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Ex-PM Khan aide says party will hold Pakistan-wide protests against constitutional amendment

Ex-PM Khan aide says party will hold Pakistan-wide protests against constitutional amendment
  • Khan’s PTI party, legal fraternity say government’s amendment aims to curtail independence of judiciary 
  • Ali Amin Gandapur says “continuous” and “final” protest will continue till government is not sent packing

ISLAMABAD: Former prime minister Imran Khan’s close aide and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Chief Minister Ali Amin Gandapur on Tuesday said his party was planning to launch a “final” anti-government protest against the ruling coalition’s contentious constitutional amendments related to judicial reforms. 

Pakistan’s parliament passed the 26th amendment to the constitution on Sunday night with a two-thirds majority amid protests from the opposition and the country’s legal fraternity, who both allege the government intends to exercise power over key judicial appointments through them. Pakistan’s government denies the allegations, saying that the amendments establish the parliament’s supremacy and will enable speedy justice for the people. 

Khan’s party led protests in Punjab and Pakistan’s capital Islamabad against the constitutional amendments earlier this month. The protest triggered clashes with Pakistani police in Islamabad after authorities sealed off the capital’s main arteries with shipping containers, beefed up security and cut off mobile phone services. The clashes caused the death of one police constable and injuries to other cops. 

“This time we will make another final plan to protest which will be carried out across Pakistan,” Gandapur told reporters in the northwestern Peshawar city. “People will come forth from all over Pakistan and where they cannot advance [to Islamabad] due to restrictions, they will carry on the protest there, and will be joined by others.”

Without sharing any date for the protest, Gandapur said it would be a continuous one. 

“This protest will now continue till we do not rid ourselves of this government because it is now taking decisions for its selfish interests and not for 250 million people,” the chief minister said. 

PAKISTAN’S COMMITTEE TO NOMINATE TOP JUDGE

Pakistan’s National Assembly speaker on Tuesday formed a 12-member parliamentary committee, in line with the new constitutional amendment, to nominate the next chief justice from a panel of the three most senior judges of the apex court. The committee includes eight members from the treasury benches and four from the opposition, including PTI Chairman Gohar Ali Khan and Senator Ali Zafar. 

In a message to reporters, however, the party said its members will not participate in a meeting of the committee to pick the new chief justice. 

The committee has been formed to pick a new chief justice as Pakistan’s incumbent top judge, Justice Qazi Faez Isa, is set to retire on Friday. 

Khan’s PTI has accused Justice Isa of being aligned with the government and says the amendment was passed to grant him an extension in office. The government has rejected these allegations.

Under the previous law, Justice Isa would have been automatically replaced by the most senior judge behind him, currently Justice Mansoor Ali Shah, who has consistently issued verdicts deemed favorable to Khan and the PTI.

Sharif’s government has passed the bill, which it says ensures the parliament will not remain a rubber stamp one, in the wake of its tensions with the judiciary that have been on the rise since the February national election.

In July, Pakistan’s top court ruled that the country’s election commission was wrong to have sidelined Khan’s party in the election campaign by forcing its lawmakers to stand as independents due to a technical violation. It also awarded Khan’s party a handful of non-elected reserved parliamentary seats for women and religious minorities, which would give Khan’s party a majority in parliament, angering the government.

Khan, who was ousted from office after a parliamentary vote in April 2022, remains popular among the masses. He has since waged an unprecedented campaign of defiance against the country’s powerful military, which is thought to be aligned with the government. Khan has been languishing in prison since August 2023 after being convicted on several charges ranging from corruption to treason that he says are politically motivated. 


Issue of Pakistan hosting released Palestinian prisoners not taken up at ‘official level’ — FO

Issue of Pakistan hosting released Palestinian prisoners not taken up at ‘official level’ — FO
Updated 11 sec ago
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Issue of Pakistan hosting released Palestinian prisoners not taken up at ‘official level’ — FO

Issue of Pakistan hosting released Palestinian prisoners not taken up at ‘official level’ — FO
  • Hamas spokesperson told Arab News this week Pakistan was ready to host 15 Palestinian prisoners freed under ceasefire deal
  • Palestinian territories, encompassing Gaza Strip and West Bank, including East Jerusalem, occupied by Israel since 1967

ISLAMABAD: Foreign Office Spokesperson Shafqat Ali Khan said on Thursday the issue of Pakistan hosting Palestinian prisoners freed by Israel under the Gaza ceasefire deal had not yet been discussed with Islamabad at the “official level.”

On Feb. 3, a spokesperson for Hamas, Dr. Khaled Qaddoumi, told Arab News Pakistan had agreed to host 15 Palestinian prisoners released under the truce reached between Israel and Hamas on Jan. 15 to end the 15-month-long Gaza war. The six-week initial ceasefire phase includes prisoner exchanges, the gradual withdrawal of Israeli forces from central Gaza and the return of displaced Palestinians to northern Gaza.

“This issue has not come up to the foreign ministry at the official level so any comment at this point would be purely speculative,” Khan said in reply to a reporter’s question during a weekly press briefing on Thursday.

Earlier this week, fifteen Palestinian prisoners freed by Israel arrived in Turkiye after being deported first to Egypt, the Turkish foreign minister and the Hamas prisoners media office said.

Among key components of the Israel-Hamas truce deal is that Hamas will release 33 Israeli hostages, including all women (soldiers and civilians), children, and men over 50 in the first phase, while Israel in exchange will release 30 Palestinian detainees for every civilian hostage and 50 Palestinian detainees for every Israeli female soldier Hamas releases.

The first phase of the ceasefire in Gaza has led to Hamas’ release of 18 hostages and Israel’s release of 583 jailed Palestinians, of whom at least 79 were sent to Egypt.

Talks are now ongoing on phase two of the armistice, which will see the release of remaining Israeli hostages and the complete withdrawal of Israeli troops from Gaza. 

The Palestinian territories – encompassing the Gaza Strip and West Bank, including East Jerusalem – have been occupied by Israel since 1967.

Israel’s latest onslaught on Gaza began on Oct. 7, 2023, after about 1,200 Israelis were killed and 251 taken to Gaza as hostages after Hamas attacked Israel. The assault triggered a massive Israeli military offensive in Gaza, which has killed more than 47,000 Palestinians. Nearly the entire population of 2.3 million people in the enclave has been displaced from their homes and much of the territory has been laid to waste.

The Gaza war is the bloodiest episode yet in a conflict between Israelis and Palestinians that has rumbled on for more than 75 years and destabilized the Middle East.

Pakistan does not recognize nor have diplomatic relations with Israel and calls for an independent Palestinian state based on “internationally agreed parameters.”


‘Butterfly Lady’: Pakistani woman on a mission to save Karachi’s winged wonders

‘Butterfly Lady’: Pakistani woman on a mission to save Karachi’s winged wonders
Updated 26 min 13 sec ago
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‘Butterfly Lady’: Pakistani woman on a mission to save Karachi’s winged wonders

‘Butterfly Lady’: Pakistani woman on a mission to save Karachi’s winged wonders
  • Shereen Abdullah is part of a nonprofit that trains children to become environmental stewards who rescue caterpillars, raise butterflies
  • Warmer temperatures are making life harder for butterfly populations around the world as food is scarcer, flowering periods are shorter

KARACHI: Shereen Abdullah remembers the exact moment she decided to take on the mission to conserve and protect Karachi’s butterfly population.

It was 2004 and she was visiting plant nurseries in the Pakistani port city with her son Hamza, a toddler who wanted to see caterpillars and understand how the insects become butterflies through the process of metamorphosis. 

One gardener’s dismissive remark – “Madam, they are just insects, we kill them” – sent chills down Abdullah’s spine. 

“I still get goosebumps,” Abdullah, popularly known as ‘The Butterfly Lady’ in Karachi, told Arab News at a sanctuary for the winged insects she has set up in her home. “And that day I decided I have to do something about it.”

That “something” was a conservation program built on three Rs, rescue, raise, and release, with Abdullah and her team of young environmental stewards working tirelessly to rehabilitate the city’s butterfly population — one caterpillar at a time.

Warmer temperatures are making life harder for butterflies around the world, as food is scarcer, flowering periods are shorter, and experts now suspect butterflies may be getting smaller.

The butterfly life cycle is a fascinating four-stage transformation, beginning as a tiny egg laid on a host plant that hatches into a voracious caterpillar focused on eating and growing. The caterpillar then enters the pupa or chrysalis stage, a period of dramatic metamorphosis where it reorganizes its body into a butterfly. Finally, a fully-formed butterfly emerges from the chrysalis, dries its wings, and takes flight, ready to reproduce and continue the cycle.

Abdullah’s journey to save Karachi’s butterflies began with awareness sessions on butterfly lifespans, the first of which was held on Earth Day in 2007. Her efforts grew over time, and she set up a butterfly club in Karachi in 2016. In 2024, she joined the Butterfly Effect Program, a nonprofit experiential learning initiative that trains children to become environmental stewards who rescue caterpillars and raise butterflies.

Butterfly Effect has built its first conservatory at Karachi’s Church Mission School (CMS), the alma mater of Muhammad Ali Jinnah, the founder of Pakistan. A second conservatory has been established at a government school in Islamabad and a third is in the works in the city of Narowal in Punjab province. 

Caterpillars are typically rescued in the egg or caterpillar stage, with Butterfly Effect students learning to carefully collect them from their host plants and nurture them in clean, well-ventilated jars, feeding them the same leaves they were rescued from. 

“We felt happiness for the first time,” said Muhammad Yousuf Mansoor Bhojani, a student of grade nine who is involved in the program, describing the joy of raising a caterpillar into a butterfly and then releasing it into the wild. 

“It was so light, and by the grace of Allah, it was so beautiful that I didn’t want to let it go.”

Abdullah’s own children, including her now 22-year-old son Hamza, have grown up learning to love butterflies. 

“For them, there is no wow factor,” she said. “It is like they have grown up with butterflies. They always say butterflies are like our siblings.”

“ECOSYSTEM LOSS”

According to a 2020 study in the Journal of Bioresource Management, from nearly 20,000 species of butterflies known globally, nearly 400 species of moths and butterflies have been recorded in Pakistan.

“Very interestingly, when I started this work, the count of butterfly species…there were 20,000 species [around the world],” Abdullah said. “And now if you see, the number comes to 17,000, 16500 … So, in these twenty years, there is a decline. And the decline is not just in population but we are losing a lot of species as well.” 

Rehan Khan, who has been photographing butterflies for 28 years, said he had witnessed the decline of the species firsthand in Pakistan. 

“The natural colors of these butterflies are so beautiful that I feel compelled to shoot them,” Khan said. “But over time, this has been decreasing significantly.”

Javed Ahmed Mahar, the chief of the Sindh wildlife department, said he attributed the decline to habitat loss and the use of agricultural pesticides, emphasizing the role of butterflies as important pollinators that help plants reproduce and also provide food for other animals.

“Look, if butterflies are not present in our ecosystem or around us, it’s not just a loss of beauty but also a significant ecosystem loss,” Mahar explained.

And that is why rescuing the species is so important for Abdullah.

“I say the single rescue of a caterpillar is impactful because one caterpillar changes into a butterfly and that butterfly lays hundreds of eggs,” she explained. “So ideally, one butterfly is capable of producing 15 more butterflies.”


Saudi Arabia says ‘proud’ to participate as Pakistan’s AMAN-25 naval exercise kicks off 

Saudi Arabia says ‘proud’ to participate as Pakistan’s AMAN-25 naval exercise kicks off 
Updated 57 min 46 sec ago
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Saudi Arabia says ‘proud’ to participate as Pakistan’s AMAN-25 naval exercise kicks off 

Saudi Arabia says ‘proud’ to participate as Pakistan’s AMAN-25 naval exercise kicks off 
  • Pakistan Navy has conducted AMAN maritime exercise every two years since 2007 under the theme “Together For Peace”
  • This year’s edition will include the inaugural AMAN Dialogue for senior naval and other leaders from participating nations

KARACHI: Saudi Arabia said this week it was “proud” to participate in Pakistan’s AMAN maritime exercises that start today, Friday, adding that the multinational effort would enhance maritime cooperation and help address shared challenges.

The Pakistan Navy has conducted the AMAN (peace) maritime exercise every two years since 2007 under the theme “Together For Peace,” involving ships, aircraft and special operation forces. 

This year’s special feature is the inaugural AMAN Dialogue themed “Secure Seas, Prosperous Future,” with a focus on security challenges in the Indian Ocean. These include strategic competition, piracy, narco-trafficking, non-state actors, resource exploitation, climate change, emerging technologies like AI and unmanned systems, the blue economy, and the need for global collaboration to ensure stability and prosperity.

A senior Pakistani naval official said on Tuesday two Saudi warships, HMS Jazan and HMS Hail, would participate in AMAN-25, the exercise’s ninth edition, scheduled to be held from Feb. 7-11.

“Exercise AMAN is a key multinational effort to enhance maritime cooperation and address shared challenges,” Brig. (Staff) Bander Hamad S Al-Hokubani, the Saudi Military Attache in Islamabad, said in a video message. 

“The Royal Saudi Navi is proud to participate, reflecting our commitment to maritime security. We look forward to achieving its goals and fostering stronger ties with all participants.”

According to the Pakistan navy, nearly 60 countries will participate in this year’s AMAN exercise, with a wide range of maritime professionals and over 200 observers from around the world attending. The exercise will be conducted in two phases: a harbor phase from Feb. 7-9 and a sea phase, running from Feb. 10-11, which will include search and rescue operations, live weapon firings and an international fleet review.

The inaugural AMAN Dialogue is also expected to bring together chiefs of navies, coast guards and heads of defense forces of participating countries.

“Due to the growing global participation over the years, PN has initiated the AMAN Dialogue as an adjunct to the exercise and its inaugural session will be held in tandem with AMAN-25,” the Pakistan Navy said in a statement on Jan. 14, adding that the aim of the dialogue was to provide a “dedicated forum” for senior leaders to discuss regional security and evolving challenges at sea.

“AMAN dialogue will include a summit of chiefs of navy and coast guards, a seminar encompassing academic activities and bilateral meetings between delegations.

“The main objectives are to promote peace and regional cooperation, enhance interoperability with regional and extra regional navies, thereby acting as a bridge between the regions, displaying united resolve against terrorism and crimes in the maritime domain.”

Other objectives of the dialogue include understanding maritime security issues and challenges confronting the region and their linkages with the economy.

Main activities during the exercise will include a maritime counter-terrorism demo by the Special Service Group (SSG) and Pak Marines, table top discussions on professional topics, and ship visits.

“An International Fleet Review is scheduled for February 11, 2025, alongside sea exercises to address collaborative security threats, with Special Operations Forces, Explosives Ordnance Disposal, and Marines teams participating in developing Tactics, Techniques, and Procedures for multinational responses to asymmetric threats,” the Pakistan Navy press statement added.


International Atomic Energy Agency chief to visit Pakistan next week – FO

International Atomic Energy Agency chief to visit Pakistan next week – FO
Updated 07 February 2025
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International Atomic Energy Agency chief to visit Pakistan next week – FO

International Atomic Energy Agency chief to visit Pakistan next week – FO
  • Pakistan was a founding member of IAEA established in 1957 
  • Pakistan elected to IAEA board of governors for two years in 2024

ISLAMABAD: Rafael Mariano Grossi, the director general of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), will visit Pakistan next week, the foreign office said on Thursday, to meet key political leaders, attend seminars and visit nuclear power generation sites. 

Pakistan was a founding member of the IAEA in 1957. Last year, it was elected to the IAEA’s board of governors for a two-year term. This is Pakistan’s 21st term on the board.

During next week’s visit, Grossi will call on Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif and his deputy Ishaq Dar, as well as attend seminars at the Pakistan Nuclear Regulatory Authority and the National University of Sciences and Technology. He will also visit the Anmol Hospital in Lahore and the Chashma Nuclear Power Generating Stations, 250 kilometers south of Islamabad.

“The visit reaffirms Pakistan’s deepening partnership with IAEA on the peaceful uses of nuclear technology and at fostering social economic development of the country,” the FO spokesperson said at a weekly briefing. 

Pakistan and the IAEA cooperate on various issues like climate change, food security, agriculture, water, medicine, and nuclear safety and security. 

Pakistan currently operates six nuclear power reactors at two sites that generate about 10 percent of the country’s total and almost a quarter of its low-carbon electricity.


Pakistani soldier, 12 militants killed in counterterrorism operation in northwest — army

Pakistani soldier, 12 militants killed in counterterrorism operation in northwest — army
Updated 06 February 2025
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Pakistani soldier, 12 militants killed in counterterrorism operation in northwest — army

Pakistani soldier, 12 militants killed in counterterrorism operation in northwest — army
  • Ties between neighbors are strained over surge in militant attacks in Pakistan it blames on Afghanistan
  • Kabul’s Taliban rulers say Pakistan’s security issues a domestic concern, it does not harbor militants 

ISLAMABAD: A Pakistani soldier and 12 militants were killed in a counterterrorism operation in the northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) province, the Pakistan army said on Thursday, as it battles a surge in militancy across the country. 
Islamabad has frequently accused neighboring Afghanistan of sheltering and supporting militant groups that launch cross-border attacks amid a spike in militancy in its KP and Balochistan provinces. The Taliban government in Kabul says it does not allow Afghan soil to be used by militants, insisting Pakistan’s security issues are an internal matter for Islamabad.
“During intense fire exchange, Lance Naik Muhammad Ibrahim, having fought gallantly, paid the ultimate sacrifice and embraced shahadat,” the army’s media wing said in a statement about an intelligence operation it carried out in Hassan Khel in the North Waziristan District, neighboring Afghanistan.
Islamabad says it has consistently taken up the issue of cross-border attacks with the Taliban administration. The issue has also led to clashes between the border forces of the two countries on multiple occasions in recent months.
In December, the Afghan Taliban said bombardment by Pakistani military aircraft in Afghanistan’s eastern Paktika province had killed at least 46 people, most of whom were children and women. Just days later, the Afghan defense ministry said Taliban forces targeted “several points” in neighboring Pakistan, further straining tense ties.
Relations between the two countries have also soured since Pakistan launched a deportation drive in November 2023 against illegal aliens residing in the country. Though Pakistan insists the campaign does not only target Afghans but all those residing in Pakistan unlawfully, it has disproportionately hit Afghans, with at least 800,000 repatriated so far.