Pakistan raises alarm over US, Israeli airstrikes in Yemen, Houthi attacks in Red Sea

Pakistan raises alarm over US, Israeli airstrikes in Yemen, Houthi attacks in Red Sea
Pakistan’s top diplomat at the United Nations, Ambassador Munir Akram, is addressing a session in United Nation Security Counci in New York, US, on January 15, 2025. (@PakistanUN_NY/X)
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Updated 16 January 2025
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Pakistan raises alarm over US, Israeli airstrikes in Yemen, Houthi attacks in Red Sea

Pakistan raises alarm over US, Israeli airstrikes in Yemen, Houthi attacks in Red Sea
  • Munir Akram says the conflict in Yemen must be viewed in the context of overall Mideast situation
  • He reiterates Pakistan’s stance that the conflict in Yemen should be resolved through political means

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s top diplomat at the United Nations raised concerns over US and Israeli airstrikes in Yemen and Red Sea attacks by the Houthis during a Security Council briefing on Wednesday, emphasizing the need to view the conflict in the context of the volatile situation across the Middle East.
The United States and Israel launched aerial attacks in Yemen in recent weeks, targeting positions held by the Houthis, a faction that controls much of northern Yemen, including the capital Sanaa.
The strikes were said to be in response to Houthi attacks on commercial ships in the Red Sea and a series of missile and drone strikes against Israel, including a projectile intercepted near central Israel.
The Houthis have described their actions as a commitment to the Palestinian resistance, expressing solidarity with Gaza and Lebanon in the face of Israeli military operations.
A senior UN official noted during the briefing that the conflict in Yemen was increasingly becoming internationalized due to the involvement of external actors.
“Pakistan is deeply concerned on the airstrikes in Yemen,” Ambassador Munir Akram said during his comments to the Security Council. “Israeli airstrikes on Yemen’s civilian infrastructure, including Sana’a International Airport, Red Sea ports and power stations have caused civilian casualties, further exacerbating the dire humanitarian and political crises in Yemen.”
“We are also deeply concerned over Houthi attacks on commercial and maritime vessels in the Red Sea, which threaten global trade, regional stability and the environment,” he added.
Focusing on Yemen’s internal situation, the Pakistani diplomat highlighted the progress made during the December 2023 peace negotiations, which resulted in agreements on a nationwide ceasefire, economic revival initiatives, resuming oil exports and ensuring the payment of public sector salaries.
“It is crucial to preserve these gains, establish a roadmap and fully implement commitments to foster sustainable peace,” he emphasized.
Hans Grundberg, Special Envoy of the Secretary-General for Yemen, also urged for “immediate de-escalation and genuine engagement for peace,” noting that nearly 40 million Yemenis had long awaited a peaceful environment to rebuild their lives.
Ambassador Akram reiterated Pakistan’s stance that the conflict in Yemen should be resolved through diplomatic and political means.
“Pakistan urges all parties to prioritize dialogue, engage in a Yemeni-led and Yemeni-owned political process, and resolve differences through peaceful means,” he said.
 


Erdoğan receives 21-gun salute in Islamabad as Turkish businesses seek investment in Pakistan

Erdoğan receives 21-gun salute in Islamabad as Turkish businesses seek investment in Pakistan
Updated 20 sec ago
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Erdoğan receives 21-gun salute in Islamabad as Turkish businesses seek investment in Pakistan

Erdoğan receives 21-gun salute in Islamabad as Turkish businesses seek investment in Pakistan
  • Turkish president will co-chair Pakistan-Türkiye High-Level Strategic Cooperation Council meeting with PM Sharif
  • The government assures a Turkish business delegation of stable policy framework and ease of doing business

ISLAMABAD: Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan’s aircraft was escorted by Pakistan Air Force (PAF) fighter jets as it entered national airspace and received a 21-gun salute upon arrival, the foreign office said on Thursday, hours after Pakistan’s finance minister met a Turkish business delegation to discuss economic opportunities in the country.
Erdoğan arrived in Islamabad late Wednesday for a two-day visit to co-chair a high-level strategic cooperation council aimed at strengthening bilateral trade, investment and other priority sectors. The visit is also expected to witness the signing of multiple agreements.
Erdoğan was received at Nur Khan Airbase by Pakistan’s President Asif Ali Zardari and Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif and is expected to have a packed schedule on Thursday.
“President Zardari @PresOfPakistan and PM Shehbaz Sharif @CMShehbaz warmly welcomed Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan @RTErdogan on his arrival in Islamabad,” the foreign office said in a social media post. “President Erdoğan’s aircraft was escorted by PAF jets, and he was given a 21-gun salute, followed by a performance by a military band and reception by children waving Pakistan and Türkiye flags.”

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and First Lady Emine Erdoğan arrive in Islamabad on February 13, 2025, on a two-day official visit to Pakistan. (PID)

During the visit, Prime Minister Sharif and Erdoğan will co-chair the 7th session of the Pakistan-Türkiye High-Level Strategic Cooperation Council (HLSCC), a forum established in 2009 to enhance bilateral cooperation.
The council oversees joint standing committees covering key sectors such as trade, investment, banking, finance, culture, tourism, energy, defense and agriculture. Six sessions of the HLSCC have taken place since its inception, with the last one held in Islamabad in 2020.
Erdoğan is scheduled to hold bilateral meetings with Sharif and Zardari and address the Pakistan-Türkiye Business and Investment Forum, which will convene top investors, companies and business leaders from both nations, the foreign office said in a statement issued earlier.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan (center) gestures as he received by Pakistan President Asif Ali Zardari (left) and Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif (right) at Nur Khan Airbase in Rawalpindi on February 13, 2025. (PID)

Ahead of Erdoğan’s visit, a Turkish business delegation met with Pakistan’s Finance Minister Muhammad Aurangzeb to explore investment opportunities.
According to the state-run Associated Press of Pakistan (APP), Aurangzeb assured the delegation of the government’s commitment to providing a stable policy framework and continuity to facilitate foreign businesses and investments.
Discussions covered potential areas for collaboration and measures to enhance ease of doing business in Pakistan. Both sides reaffirmed their commitment to strengthening bilateral economic ties, recognizing the mutual benefits of sustained investment and trade partnerships.
Türkiye and Pakistan enjoy historically close relations and last year agreed to enhance bilateral trade to $5 billion during Turkish Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan’s visit to Islamabad.
Pakistan has been intensifying its outreach to international partners and allies in recent months as it navigates a fragile economic recovery, backed by a $7 billion International Monetary Fund (IMF) facility granted in September.


Rawat Fort: A forgotten Pakistani archaeological treasure undergoes restoration

Rawat Fort: A forgotten Pakistani archaeological treasure undergoes restoration
Updated 9 min 53 sec ago
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Rawat Fort: A forgotten Pakistani archaeological treasure undergoes restoration

Rawat Fort: A forgotten Pakistani archaeological treasure undergoes restoration
  • 16th-century fort is believed to have been founded during Delhi Sultanate as an inn for traveling caravans and merchants
  • Monument, currently undergoing restoration, has three gates, mosque, central courtyard that houses ruins of graves of Gakhar chieftains 

ISLAMABAD: Among the many forgotten relics dotting the vast spread of the Potohar Plateau in northern Punjab is the Rawat Fort, which stands as a silent witness to centuries of history in what is this part of present-day Pakistan.
The fort lies about 18 kilometers east of the garrison city of Rawalpindi on the Grand Trunk Road highway and is believed to have been built in the 15th or 16th centuries during the Delhi Sultanate period. 
There are many legends about the fort’s founding and its purpose. According to Pakistan’s Department of Archaeology and Museums (DOAM), the fort, which derives is named from the Arabic word rabat meaning caravanserai, was built as an inn that provided lodging for travelers, merchants, and caravans passing through the strategic location of Rawat, at the crossroads of trade routes and a gateway to Kashmir and Central Asia.
Some historians, however, believe the fort was built in 1036 AD by Sultan Masood, the son of Sultan Mehmood Ghaznavi, the head of the Ghaznavid Empire who ruled from 998 to 1030 AD and who had at the time of his death raised an extensive military empire that extended from northwestern Iran proper to the Punjab in the Indian subcontinent, Khwarazm in Transoxiana, and Makran. Other historical accounts say the fort was built by Sultan Sarang Khan Gakhar, the chief of the Gakhar tribes who was made ruler of the Pothohar Plateau by Mughal emperor Babar in 1520.
Dr. Abdul Ghafoor Lone, a director at DOAM which is restoring the monument, told Arab News Rawat Fort was one of many hidden relics near the Pakistani capital of Islamabad and its main attraction was a central courtyard that housed the ruined graves of Sultan Sarang and a number of his sons who died fighting Sher Shah Suri, the ruler of Bihar from 1530 to 1540 and Sultan of Hindustan from 1540 until his death in 1545. In fact, the area in which the fort is located is known as a key battleground between the Gakhar tribe and Suri.
“Tatar Khan had two sons, Sarang Khan and Adam Khan,” Lone explained. “Islam Shah, who was the son of [emperor] Sher Shah Suri, when he fought Sarang Khan, Sarang Khan was killed in battle. Sarang Khan and his 12-13 sons were also killed.”

This photo, taken on February 7, 2025, shows aerial view of the Pakistani archaeological site Rawat Fort in Potohar region, in northern Punjab, Pakistan. (AN Photo)

Adam Khan recovered the bodies, the archaeologist said, and built a tomb in their honor inside Rawat Fort. 
Indeed, the structure has witnessed the rise and fall of many empires and military commanders. The building’s strategic importance led to its inclusion in the Mughal defensive line against invaders from the North-West. The fort’s location on the route used by Mughal emperors traveling to Kashmir for pleasure and strategic purposes also cemented its importance.
In the early 19th century, Sikh forces led by Sardar Milkha Singh captured Rawat Fort, and under Sikh rule, the fort underwent significant renovations and expansions. But the British annexation of Punjab in 1849 marked the beginning of the fort’s decline as the British no longer saw it as strategically essential. Over time, the once-imposing structure fell into disrepair.

This photo, taken on February 7, 2025, shows the Pakistani archaeological site Rawat Fort in Potohar region, in northern Punjab, Pakistan. (AN Photo)

“It has been used throughout the ages,” Dr. Tahir Saeed, an archaeologist and visiting professor at the Quaid-e-Azam University in Islamabad, told Arab News. 
“During the Sher Shah Suri period, it was used as a port for the Mughals … The caravans passing through GT Road used it as a port. It was an important place from a strategic point of view … After the Mughal period, the Sikhs came here and used it as a stable or court.”
RESTORATION
The management of Rawat Fort shifted from the federal government to the Punjab provincial government due to administrative changes in 2010 after a constitutional amendment devolved power to the provinces. The transition period from 2011 to 2017 saw significant encroachment, according to the DOAM, until the monument was returned to the department in 2017.
The fort, a quadrangular monument with three main gates, has several small cells that used to be rented out to merchants, and which are now undergoing restoration by authorities, as well as a mosque with three domes. The main attraction is the tomb of Sarang Khan, built by his brother Adam Khan who assumed leadership of the tribe and became the next Gakhar chief after 1546. 

This photo, taken on February 7, 2025, shows entrance gate of the Pakistani archaeological site Rawat Fort in Potohar region, in northern Punjab, Pakistan. (AN Photo)

“We try our maximum effort to maintain the authenticity of our monuments and artifacts,” said Lone. 
“You can do conservation, preservation and restoration. But we don’t reconstruct them. We try to restore the material that has been used for the original construction. Wherever it is available, we bring and use it or if it is lying there, we restore it.”
At the last stage of the restoration, he added, the ruined graves would be restored so “that people can understand that there is a grave of Sarang Khan in it and all his sons who were martyred are buried here.”
Pakistan has six UNESCO heritage sites and 25 which are on a tentative list, according to Lone. Rawat Fort is not on either list but when it achieves the status of a UNESCO heritage site, it would boost tourism in the area and also lead to better upkeep, he added.

This photo, taken on February 7, 2025, shows aerial view of the Pakistani archaeological site Rawat Fort in Potohar region, in northern Punjab, Pakistan. (AN Photo)

The archaeologist stressed the need for a sense of “shared ownership” of monuments and historical sites by the government and members of the public to help preserve them for generations to come.
“This is our heritage. We all have to take ownership of it,” Lone said. “Only if we take ownership of it can we protect it.”
Saeed, the archaeology professor, also called for more government funding.
“The government will have to set priorities,” he said. 
“They will have to provide maximum funding and continuous funding so that conservation work on sites, archaeological sites, monuments and heritage sites can continue.”


Pakistan reports second polio case of 2025 from southern Sindh province

Pakistan reports second polio case of 2025 from southern Sindh province
Updated 13 February 2025
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Pakistan reports second polio case of 2025 from southern Sindh province

Pakistan reports second polio case of 2025 from southern Sindh province
  • Latest polio case has been reported from country’s southern Badin district, Pakistani health authorities say
  • Development takes place days after Pakistan conducted its first national anti-polio vaccination drive of 2025

KARACHI: Pakistani health authorities this week confirmed the country’s second polio case of 2025 in the country’s southern Sindh province, days after concluding a national immunization campaign against the infection. 
Polio is a paralyzing disease with no cure and to ensure immunity, health experts say it is crucial that all children under five complete the oral polio vaccine series. The South Asian country last year reported 74 polio cases in 2024, a sharp increase from just six in 2023.
The second polio case of the year was reported from district Badin in Sindh, Pakistan’s Polio Eradication Program said in a statement on Wednesday. The first case of the infection was reported in the Dera Ismail Khan district in the northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) province last month. 
“The Regional Reference Laboratory for Polio Eradication at the National Institute of Health has confirmed the detection of the second wild poliovirus type 1 (WPV1) case of 2025,” Pakistan’s Polio Eradication Program said. 
Of Pakistan’s 74 polio cases reported last year, 27 were from Balochistan, 22 from Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, 23 from Sindh, and one each from Punjab and Islamabad.
The Pakistan polio program runs several mass vaccination drives annually. This year’s first anti-polio drive was conducted from Feb. 3 to 9 during which over 45 million children were vaccinated. 
Pakistan and Afghanistan are the last two countries where polio remains endemic. In the early 1990s, Pakistan reported around 20,000 cases annually but in 2018 the number dropped to eight cases.
Pakistan’s polio program began in 1994, but efforts to eradicate the virus have been hampered by vaccine misinformation, opposition from some religious hard-liners who view immunization as a foreign plot, and frequent attacks on polio vaccination teams by militant groups.


Rizwan and Salman smash tons as Pakistan defeat South Africa in record chase

Rizwan and Salman smash tons as Pakistan defeat South Africa in record chase
Updated 12 February 2025
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Rizwan and Salman smash tons as Pakistan defeat South Africa in record chase

Rizwan and Salman smash tons as Pakistan defeat South Africa in record chase
  • Pakistan will face New Zealand on Feb. 14 in final of tri-series, a warm-up for Champions Trophy tournament 
  • Rizwan and Salman built a match-changing stand of 260, a new record for the fourth wicket for the green shirts

KARACHI: Mohammad Rizwan and Salman Agha cracked centuries to guide Pakistan into the tri-series final with a thumping six-wicket win over South Africa in Karachi on Wednesday.

Rizwan led Pakistan’s highest successful chase in all one-day internationals of 353 in 49 overs with a magnificent 122 not out while Salman slammed 134 for his maiden century at the National Stadium.

Pakistan will now face New Zealand at the same venue on Friday in the final of the event which is a key warm-up for the Champions Trophy which starts next week.

The hundreds made by Rizwan and Salman overshadowed Matthew Breetzke’s record of scoring most runs by a batsman in his first two one-day internationals of 150 and 83.

Breetzke’s innings had set up an imposing South Africa total of 352-5.

Rizwan and Salman built a match-changing stand of 260, a new record for the fourth wicket for Pakistan, improving on the 206 scored by Shoaib Malik and Younis Khan against India at Centurion in 2009.

Their blistering innings should also erase doubts over the team’s vulnerable batting as they improved on Pakistan’s previous highest successful chase of 349 against Australia in Lahore in 2022.

Rizwan hit nine boundaries and three sixes off 128 balls while Salman’s 103-ball knock had 16 boundaries and two sixes.

Earlier, Breetzke followed his highest-ever debut score against New Zealand in Lahore on Monday with an attractive 84-ball 83, spiced with a six and 10 boundaries, after South Africa won the toss.

Breetzke bettered West Indian Desmond Haynes’s aggregate of 195 runs in his first two matches in 1978 before he fell to a brilliant catch off spinner Khushdil Shah.

Pakistan’s vaunted bowling attack failed to stop the tourists from scoring a big total, with skipper Temba Bavuma (82) and Heinrich Klaasen (87) also chipping in.

With wickets not falling, frustrated Pakistan fast bowler Shaheen Afridi angrily clashed with Breetzke as the batsman attempted to complete a run.

Shaheen made physical contact and exchanged words with his rival before umpire Asif Yaqoob separated the pair.

Bavuma and Tony de Zorzi (22), one of four changes in the South African team, put on 51 for the opening stand. The captain then built a second-wicket stand of 119 with Breetzke.

Bavuma was run out after cracking 13 boundaries in his 96-ball knock.

Klaasen lifted the tempo with a rapid 56-ball knock, smashing three sixes and 11 boundaries as the South Africans added 110 runs in the last 10 overs.

Kyle Verreynne and Corbin Bosch remained not out with 44 and 15 respectively to take South Africa past 350.


Pakistan vows to provide capacity-building assistance, training to Rwanda’s air force

Pakistan vows to provide capacity-building assistance, training to Rwanda’s air force
Updated 12 February 2025
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Pakistan vows to provide capacity-building assistance, training to Rwanda’s air force

Pakistan vows to provide capacity-building assistance, training to Rwanda’s air force
  • Rwandan air chief Let. Gen. Jean Jacques Mupenzi meets Pakistani counterpart with high-level delegation in Islamabad 
  • His visit reflects Rwanda’s desire to restructure air force using Pakistan’s professional expertise, says military’s media wing 

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s Air Chief Marshal Zaheer Ahmed Baber Sidhu on Wednesday reiterated his unwavering support to provide capacity building assistance to Rwanda’s air force and share his force’s operational training expertise with the African country to help meet its security challenges, the military’s media wing said. 

A high-level defense delegation from Rwanda led by Rwanda Air Chief Let. Gen. Jean Jacques Mupenzi called on Sidhu at the Air Headquarters in Islamabad, the Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR) said in a statement. 

Sidhu shared insights into various ongoing modernization projects of the Pakistan Air Force’s (PAF) operational construct, force goals and plans for the force structure with a keen focus on future warfare, the ISPR said. 

“The Air Chief reiterated PAF’s unwavering support to provide capacity-building assistance to the Rwandan Air Force in upgradation of its human resource, maintenance parameters and operational training,” the ISPR said. 

Mupenzi admired PAF’s professional training standards, modernized infrastructure and multi-domain capabilities, the military’s media wing said. The Rwandan air chief emphasized the need for a major overhaul and collaboration to enhance the capabilities of Rwanda’s Air Force with assistance from the PAF to meet “contemporary security challenges,” the ISPR said.

“The visiting dignitary also expressed a strong desire for a partnership with Pakistan Air Force aimed at establishing comprehensive training programs for basic-level training of aircrew and technical training of ground crew of Rwandan Air Force,” the ISPR said. 

The delegation was given a detailed briefing on the PAF’s operational capabilities during their visit to the National ISR & Integrated Air Operations Center and PAF Cyber Command in Islamabad, the ISPR said.

“This visit of Lt. Gen. Jean Jacques Mupenzi to Air Headquarters, Islamabad is testament to strong desire of Rwandan side to restructure their Air Force, utilizing the professional expertise of Pakistan Air Force,” the military’s media wing said.