Pakistani religiopolitical party leads Gaza protests outside US consulates, Islamabad embassy

Pakistani religiopolitical party leads Gaza protests outside US consulates, Islamabad embassy
Activists of Pakistan’s Jamaat-e-Islami (JI) party shout pro-Palestinian slogans as they hold placards and flags during a march to express their solidarity with the Palestinians, in Karachi on January 12, 2025. (AFP/File)
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Updated 21 March 2025
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Pakistani religiopolitical party leads Gaza protests outside US consulates, Islamabad embassy

Pakistani religiopolitical party leads Gaza protests outside US consulates, Islamabad embassy
  • Jamat-e-Islami chief urges Pakistani authorities to allow his party to hold “peaceful protest” outside US consulates, Islamabad embassy
  • JI issues call for protest after Israel’s fresh military action in Gaza killed over 500 people since Tuesday, threatening fragile Hamas ceasefire

ISLAMABAD: Prominent Pakistani religiopolitical party Jamaat-e-Islami Pakistan (JI) is expected to hold a protest march outside the US embassy in Islamabad and its consulates in other parts of the country today, Friday, against Washington’s support for Israel’s fresh strikes in Gaza that have killedover 500 people this week and threatened to disrupt the fragile ceasefire in the enclave. 

Since Tuesday, Israeli airstrikes have killed 510 Palestinians, with more than half of them women and children, a health official in Gaza said. The Israeli military said on Thursday it had begun conducting ground activities in the northern Gaza Strip, along the coastal route in the area of Beit Lahia.

The latest escalation is a blow to the ceasefire agreement reached between Israel and Hamas on Jan. 15 following more than a year of Israeli airstrikes that flattened much of Gaza’s infrastructure, including schools, hospitals and residential neighborhoods. Around 48,000 Palestinians in Gaza were killed during the 15-month war that began in October 2023. 

“We will march toward all American consulates and its embassy in Islamabad,” Naeem-ur-Rehman, the head of the party, said at a news conference on Thursday. “We will protest and our protest will be peaceful.”

He pointed out that protests outside consulates and embassies take place worldwide, wondering why authorities in Pakistan do not allow the same to take place. 

“It will be a peaceful [protest] from our side but it is the government’s responsibility to ensure the situation remains peaceful and it allows this peaceful protest to take place,” Rehman said. “So that just like the entire world is standing against oppressors, Pakistan can also contribute to it.”

This is not the first time that the JI has announced a rally outside the US embassy to protest Israel’s bombardment in Gaza. In May last year, Islamabad police prevented JI supporters from marching toward the US embassy in Islamabad to protest against Israel’s airstrikes in Gaza. 

Police used batons on the demonstrators, angering hundreds of rallygoers who briefly blocked a key road and later staged a sit-in near a high-security area where foreign embassies and the offices of president, prime minister and parliament are located.

JI students posted videos on social media, claiming they were beaten by police who did not allow them to go toward the American embassy for a peaceful rally. 

Pakistan does not have diplomatic relations with Israel and has frequently criticized it for its military operations in Gaza. 

Pakistan’s ambassador at the UN, Munir Akram, this week called for the resumption of humanitarian aid to the Palestinian enclave and the need for a revival of negotiations leading to a two-state solution. 

He also called for an independent Palestinian state along pre-1967 borders and East Jerusalem as its capital.


Pakistan urges international community to take decisive steps to end ‘genocide’ in Palestine

Pakistan urges international community to take decisive steps to end ‘genocide’ in Palestine
Updated 23 March 2025
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Pakistan urges international community to take decisive steps to end ‘genocide’ in Palestine

Pakistan urges international community to take decisive steps to end ‘genocide’ in Palestine
  • President Asif Ali Zardari’s statement comes in response to renewed military operations by Israel in Gaza
  • Pakistan does not recognize Israel, and its passport explicitly states it cannot be used for travel to country

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan President Asif Ali Zardari on Sunday demanded the international community take decisive steps to end the “genocide” in Palestine, reaffirming solidarity with the people of Gaza as tensions with Israel flare in the Middle East again. 

Zardari’s statement came following the disagreement between Hamas and Israel over the next steps in the Jan. 19 ceasefire, with the Jewish state resuming air strikes in Gaza this Tuesday followed by ground operations the day after.

On Friday, Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz threatened to annex parts of Gaza unless Hamas frees the remaining Israeli hostages seized in the Oct. 7, 2023 attack.

“Here, we express solidarity with Palestine and reaffirm our resolve for their right to self-determination,” Zardari told participants of a military parade held in Islamabad to mark Pakistan’s republic day. 

“The international community must immediately take decisive steps to end Palestinian genocide. The Palestinian masses must have complete independence in their own country without any external interference,” he added. 

Hamas’ 2023 attack on Israel resulted in 1,218 deaths, mostly civilians, according to Israeli figures.
Nearly 50,000 people in Gaza have been killed in the war since then due to Israel’s retaliation, according to the Hamas-run territory’s health ministry.

Of the 251 Israeli hostages taken that day, 58 are still being held, including 34 the Israeli military says are dead.

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. 


Pakistan win toss, bowl in fourth New Zealand T20I

Pakistan win toss, bowl in fourth New Zealand T20I
Updated 23 March 2025
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Pakistan win toss, bowl in fourth New Zealand T20I

Pakistan win toss, bowl in fourth New Zealand T20I
  • Chasing team has won each of three games of current T20I series between both sides
  • Pakistan beat New Zealand by nine wickets in stellar run chase in last match on Friday 

Tauranga, New Zealand: Pakistan won the toss and elected to bowl in the fourth Twenty20 against New Zealand in Mount Maunganui on Sunday as they bid to square the five-match series.

Captain Salman Agha’s decision was no surprise, given that the chasing team has comfortably won each of the first three games of the series.

New Zealand made two changes from the team that lost the third match in Auckland on Friday by nine wickets, leaving Pakistan trailing 2-1.

Both are to their seam attack, with Zak Foulkes and Will O’Rourke replacing Kyle Jamieson and Ben Sears.

Pakistan are unchanged from the team that won at Eden Park, highlighted by opener Hasan Nawaz’s maiden century of 105 not out off 45 balls.

New Zealand: Tim Seifert, Finn Allen, Mark Chapman, Daryl Mitchell, James Neesham, Mitchell Hay, Michael Bracewell (capt), Ish Sodhi, Zak Foulkes, Jacob Duffy, Will O’Rourke

Pakistan: Mohammad Haris, Hasan Nawaz, Salman Agha (capt), Irfan Khan, Shadab Khan, Abdul Samad, Khushdil Shah, Abbas Afridi, Shaheen Shah Afridi, Haris Rauf, Abrar Ahmed

Umpires: Chris Brown (NZL), Wayne Knights (NZL)

TV umpire: Kim Cotton (NZL)

Match referee: Jeff Crowe (NZL)


Pakistan celebrates Republic Day with military parade in capital city

Pakistan celebrates Republic Day with military parade in capital city
Updated 23 March 2025
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Pakistan celebrates Republic Day with military parade in capital city

Pakistan celebrates Republic Day with military parade in capital city
  • Pakistan holds military parade on Mar. 23 each year to commemorate Lahore Resolution’s adoption by Muslim League party in 1940
  • Pakistan President Asif Ali Zardari says country has capability to rise above geopolitical challenges, stabilize economy and its borders

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan celebrated its Republic Day with a grand military parade in the capital city on Sunday, as the country’s president vowed the nation would rise above its current challenges to stabilize its economy. 

The parade was held at the Aiwan-e-Sadr or the official residence of the president on Sunday morning. It is held each year on Mar. 23 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.

The day began with a 31-gun salute in the federal capital and a 21-gun salute in provincial capitals. All three contingents of Pakistan’s armed forces, the army, the navy and the air force took part in the military parade. 

Speaking at the ceremony, chief guest President Asif Ali Zardari acknowledged that the country is facing several challenges. However, he said Pakistan was capable of striving and prevailing over its existing difficulties. 

“Pakistan faces several geopolitical problems but our brave armed forces are giving numerous sacrifices as they stand shoulder-to-shoulder with Pakistan’s masses,” Zardari told attendees at the parade. 

“We will stabilize our borders, our economy and our agriculture,” he added. 

Apart from Zardari, the ceremony was attended by Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif, armed forces services chiefs, senior officials and other dignitaries.

Pakistan Air Force fighter jets presented a fly-past at the ceremony to showcase the country’s air defense capabilities. Pakistan Army troops also held a march-past at the parade, paying homage to the attendees at the event. 

While last year the event was held at the Parade Avenue in Islamabad, this year it was held at the Aiwan-e-Sadr on a “limited” scale due to the holy month of Ramadan, state broadcaster Radio Pakistan reported earlier this week. 

This year, the military parade took 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 last Sunday.

On Saturday, unidentified gunmen shot dead four cops and four Punjab-based laborers in Balochistan in separate attacks. 

No group has claimed responsibility for the attacks but suspicion is likely to fall on the outlawed militant Baloch Liberation Army (BLA) group, which has carried out attacks against Punjab-based laborers and law enforcers in the southwestern province. 


Gunmen kill four cops, four Punjab-based laborers in southwestern Pakistan 

Gunmen kill four cops, four Punjab-based laborers in southwestern Pakistan 
Updated 23 March 2025
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Gunmen kill four cops, four Punjab-based laborers in southwestern Pakistan 

Gunmen kill four cops, four Punjab-based laborers in southwestern Pakistan 
  • Unidentified men shoot dead police officers in Balochistan’s restive Nushki district, say police official 
  • No group has claimed responsibility but suspicion likely to fall on separatist Baloch Liberation Army

QUETTA: Unidentified gunmen killed four police officers and four Punjab-based laborers in Pakistan’s southwestern Balochistan in separate attacks on Saturday, police and government officials confirmed amid the province’s worsening security situation. 

The first attack took place in Balochistan’s Mangochar town, located some 40 kilometers from Kalat district, at 2:30pm on Saturday when gunmen shot dead four laborers who hailed from Pakistan’s eastern Punjab province, Mangochar Assistant Commissioner Ali Gul Imrani said. The laborers hailed from Punjab’s Sadiqabad district. 

Attacks on laborers from other parts of the country have increased in Balochistan, with militants accusing them of profiting from the region.

In a separate attack, four cops were killed the same day after unidentified men on a motorcycle ambushed a police mobile in Nushki district’s Ghareebabad area, Nushki Police Station House Officer Zafar Sumalani told Arab News. 

“A police mobile came under attack on Saturday when armed men targeted them with intense gunfire,” Sumalani said. “Four policemen, including three constables and one head constable, were killed.”

Sumalani said the policemen belonged to Nushki district, adding that their bodies had been shifted to the District Headquarters Hospital in the area.

“Police have beefed up security in Nushki and its surrounding areas to hunt down the attackers involved in killing policemen,” he said. 

Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif condemned the attack on the police officers, expressing grief and sorrow over the incident. 

“The prime minister directed authorities to launch an immediate investigation into the incident and identify those responsible,” the Prime Minister’s Office (PMO) said in a statement. 

So far, no group has claimed responsibility for both attacks but suspicion is likely to fall on the outlawed separatist militant outfit Baloch Liberation Army (BLA). 

The BLA has carried out attacks against Punjab-based laborers and law enforcers in the restive southwestern province, as the group demands a greater share of Balochistan’s natural resources from the province. 

Balochistan, which shares porous borders with Iran and Afghanistan, has experienced a low-scale insurgency by Baloch separatist groups for decades, who accuse Islamabad of denying them a share in the natural resources of the province. 

Pakistan’s central government and the military deny the allegations, pointing to several projects they say are aimed at bringing progress to the province. 

The attacks take place amid the worsening security situation in the province. BLA fighters last Tuesday stormed a train in the rugged Bolan region, seizing hundreds of passengers before the military launched a rescue operation. 

The siege that lasted for two days ended after a military operation that killed 33 militants. The attack, which also claimed the lives of more than 30 Pakistanis, was one of the deadliest train assaults in the country’s history.

The attacks also take place in Balochistan amid rising political instability in the province, as a leading Baloch ethnic rights group announced on Saturday its top leader Mahrang Baloch had been arrested along with several of her colleagues in Balochistan after police raided their protest camp at dawn in the provincial capital of Quetta.

The Baloch Yakjehti Committee (BYC) said its leader’s arrest came amid a province-wide wheel-jam strike that followed an alleged police attack on a protest in Quetta that killed three people on Friday evening. 

BYC said its leader and other supporters began a sit-in with the bodies of the deceased when authorities intervened and detained them.
 


Pakistan eyes revenue boost as Chinese cargo firm formally launches flights to Islamabad

Pakistan eyes revenue boost as Chinese cargo firm formally launches flights to Islamabad
Updated 23 March 2025
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Pakistan eyes revenue boost as Chinese cargo firm formally launches flights to Islamabad

Pakistan eyes revenue boost as Chinese cargo firm formally launches flights to Islamabad
  • The air corridor linking Urumqi and Islamabad is expected to promote cross-border e-commerce
  • The airports authority says SF Cargo’s initiative will also strengthen Pakistan’s air freight sector

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan Airports Authority (PAA) expressed optimism over substantial revenue gains on Saturday as a Chinese logistics company officially launched flight operations to Islamabad.
SF Cargo, a subsidiary of one of China’s largest logistics and courier firms, has established a new air cargo route linking Urumqi, the capital of the Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region, and Islamabad.
According to a report in Pakistani state media earlier this month, the air corridor is expected to facilitate cross-border e-commerce and other trade goods, strengthening economic ties between the two countries.
“SF Cargo has officially commenced its flight operations at Islamabad International Airport,” the PAA said in a statement, adding the service would operate twice a week initially, with plans to expand to four weekly flights in the foreseeable future.
“This development is expected to generate substantial revenue growth through cargo throughput charges,” it added. “Additionally, it may open new export channels to Urumqi, offering local exporters enhanced access to the Chinese market.”
The statement said each flight operated by the Chinese firm will carry approximately 22,775 kilograms of cargo, contributing significantly to Pakistan’s air freight sector.
China and Pakistan maintain close economic and strategic relations, with both sides promoting trade and infrastructure development.
While large-scale projects like the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) remain central to their cooperation, both governments have increasingly encouraged private-sector-led initiatives to deepen bilateral commerce.