Pakistan opposition alliance calls for ‘national dialogue’ to resolve political crisis

Pakistan opposition alliance calls for ‘national dialogue’ to resolve political crisis
Pakistan opposition leader, Omar Ayub Khan, addresses a press conference with other opposition leaders in Islamabad on February 26, 2025. (Photo courtesy: Dawn/ YT)
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Updated 27 February 2025
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Pakistan opposition alliance calls for ‘national dialogue’ to resolve political crisis

Pakistan opposition alliance calls for ‘national dialogue’ to resolve political crisis
  • Alliance holds two-day conference demanding “supremacy of constitution” at Islamabad hotel 
  • Says current parliament does not have legal, moral or political status, demands fresh elections

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s multi-party opposition alliance on Thursday called on the country’s political leadership to hold a “National Dialogue” to resolve the prevalent political crisis, rejecting the results of the 2024 elections and urging the government to hold free, fair and transparent polls. 

The Tehreek-i-Tahaffuz-i-Ayeen-i-Pakistan (TTAP) — or the Movement for the Protection of the Constitution of Pakistan— kicked off its two-day conference on Wednesday to demand “supremacy of the constitution” at a local hotel in Islamabad. The alliance claimed on Wednesday that the government was pressurizing the administration of the hotel to cancel the event, allegations that the government rejected. 

As per local media reports, Islamabad authorities sealed the Legend Hotel where the conference was being held on Thursday morning. Opposition parties’ members forcibly entered the premises after some of them climbed the gate and opened it from inside, allowing others to enter. Subsequently, opposition leaders announced that they would hold the conference in the hotel lobby while police personnel and the paramilitary Frontier Corps personnel remained stationed outside.

Pakistan’s leading opposition parties accuse the ruling coalition government of cracking down on their supporters, resorting to rights abuses, interfering in judicial matters, passing legislation to stifle dissent. It also says the 2024 polls were heavily rigged by the caretaker government at the time. The ruling coalition government rejects these allegations and accuses the opposition of creating hurdles in its mission to reform Pakistan’s economy. 

“The only way forward out of current political crisis, is to go for free, fair & transparent elections, and therefore [alliance] calls for a unified strategy by all political leadership of the country, with their unequivocal support for restoration of democracy, and hence calls for a national dialogue with consensus, in order to implement the solution, across the board,” a joint statement from the TTAP read. 

The alliance said that the results of the “rigged” elections of Feb. 8, 2024, are responsible for the current political, economic and social crisis in the country. 

The statement said Pakistan’s constitution does not allow citizens to be harassed, arrested or imprisoned for taking part in political activities, calling on the government to release all political prisoners immediately. 

The TTAP said Pakistan’s current parliament does not have any moral, political or legal status, demanding the government abolish the recently approved amendments to the Prevention of Electronic Crimes Act (PECA) act as they aim to stifle dissent. 

“The opposition parties of Pakistan pledge to continue the collective practical struggle to implement the provisions of this agreement and this struggle will continue until the problems of Pakistan are resolved and the welfare of the people is ensured,” the statement said. 

Leaders from the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI), led by former prime minister Imran Khan, the Sunni Ittehad Council (SIC), Awam Pakistan, Majlis Wahdat-e-Muslimeen (MWM) and Pashtunkhwa Milli Awami Party (PkMAP) parties as well as lawyers, journalists and members of the civil society attended the conference. 

Pakistan has been plagued with political turmoil since Khan was ousted as prime minister via a parliamentary vote in April 2022. He was later convicted in a slew of charges and sent to jail in August 2023. 

Khan denies the charges and says they are politically motivated to keep him and his party away from power. He accuses the country’s powerful military of orchestrating his removal from office and backing his political rivals in the government. 

The military denies Khan’s allegations and insists it does not interfere in political matters. 


Pakistan signs deal with China for first astronaut mission to Tiangong space station

Pakistan signs deal with China for first astronaut mission to Tiangong space station
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Pakistan signs deal with China for first astronaut mission to Tiangong space station

Pakistan signs deal with China for first astronaut mission to Tiangong space station
  • Both countries have deepened space cooperation, marked by satellite development and a lunar mission
  • Pakistani astronaut will train as a scientific payload specialist, conduct research aboard the space station

ISLAMABAD: In a landmark development, Pakistan’s space agency signed a cooperation agreement with China on Friday, setting the stage for the country’s first astronaut to embark on a mission to a Chinese space station, prompting Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif to applaud the development.

Pakistan and China have deepened their space cooperation, marked by joint satellite development and a planned lunar mission. Last month, the two nations signed a memorandum of understanding for the South Asian nation’s first lunar rover to be included in China’s Chang’e 8 mission in 2028.

The rover, developed by Pakistan’s Space & Upper Atmosphere Research Commission (SUPARCO), will land at the lunar south pole, carrying scientific instruments designed by Pakistani, Chinese and European scientists. Pakistani scientists will operate the rover from Earth, conducting surface mapping, soil analysis and radiation studies.

Pakistan previously made its mark in lunar exploration in 2024, when its first lunar satellite, ICUBE-Q, developed by students at the Institute of Space Technology (IST) in collaboration with Shanghai Jiao Tong University, was deployed aboard China’s Chang’e 6 mission to capture lunar images and collect magnetic field data.

SUPARCO has now signed a deal with the China Manned Space Agency (CMSA) to train and send a Pakistani astronaut to Tiangong, China’s space station, in an initiative expected to boost Pakistan’s presence in space research.

“It’s a great opportunity and a wonderful event where we have just witnessed the signing ceremony between Pakistan and China on extending our cooperation to promote space cooperation and getting ready to train our first Pakistani astronaut on a space flight to the Chinese space station,” Sharif said at the ceremony.

“This is yet another wonderful gesture from the Chinese government to further deepen our cooperation in this field and many other fields over the last many decades,” he added.

Sharif thanked Chinese President Xi Jinping for supporting Pakistan, saying the two countries’ collaboration had transformed his country’s economy.

An official SUPARCO statement detailed the agreement, confirming two Pakistani astronauts will initially undergo training at the Astronaut Center of China, with one ultimately selected as a scientific payload specialist to conduct research aboard the Chinese space station. The astronaut selection process will be completed by 2026, with a planned spaceflight in an upcoming mission.

The mission will focus on scientific experiments across multiple disciplines, including biological and medical sciences, aerospace, applied physics, fluid mechanics, space radiation, ecology, material sciences, microgravity studies and astronomy.

“The China Space Station is equipped with state-of-the-art experimental racks and external adaptors, facilitating multi-domain research,” the statement said, adding that findings from the experiments are expected to contribute to medical research, environmental monitoring and space technology with potential benefits for life on Earth.


Russian delegation in Pakistan to discuss ‘economic cooperation’ — embassy

Russian delegation in Pakistan to discuss ‘economic cooperation’ — embassy
Updated 28 February 2025
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Russian delegation in Pakistan to discuss ‘economic cooperation’ — embassy

Russian delegation in Pakistan to discuss ‘economic cooperation’ — embassy
  • Pakistan, Russia have strengthened ties in recent years through increased dialogue, trade
  • In 2023, Islamabad began purchasing discounted Russian oil banned from European markets

ISLAMABAD: A Russian delegation arrived in Pakistan today, Friday, for a day-long visit to discuss economic cooperation, the Russian embassy in Islamabad said.

The visit comes days after state media reported Russian Ambassador to Pakistan Albert P. Khorev had announced cooperation with Islamabad this year in the energy and industrial sectors, including the modernization of a state-owned steel mill.

Pakistan and Russia, once Cold War rivals, have strengthened ties in recent years through increased dialogue and trade. In 2023, Islamabad began purchasing discounted Russian crude oil banned from European markets due to Russia’s war in Ukraine and also received its first shipment of liquefied petroleum gas from Moscow. 

“It is a trade delegation that came to discuss economic cooperation between Russia and Pakistan,” Russian Embassy Public Relations Officer Igor Kolesenkove told Arab News. “More details will be revealed later.”

He did not respond to questions on whether Pakistan Steel Mills would be on the talks’ agenda. 

A team of technical experts from Russia visited Pakistan in January to assess Pakistan Steel Mills, one of several state-owned firms Islamabad aims to privatize to revive loss-making entities and deliver reforms under a $7 billion International Monetary Fund bailout.

During a meeting earlier this month between Ambassador Khorev and Interior Minister Mohsin Naqvi, both countries agreed to activate a bilateral anti-terrorism dialogue and discussed enhancing cooperation in counter-terrorism and anti-narcotics efforts, with Pakistani officers invited to participate in anti-narcotics training programs in Moscow and Siberia.

Last year, Russian Deputy Prime Minister Alexei Overchuk visited Pakistan to discuss trade, energy, connectivity, and defense ties. 


‘Don’t care’: Hosts’ exit deflates Champions Trophy buzz in Pakistan

‘Don’t care’: Hosts’ exit deflates Champions Trophy buzz in Pakistan
Updated 28 February 2025
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‘Don’t care’: Hosts’ exit deflates Champions Trophy buzz in Pakistan

‘Don’t care’: Hosts’ exit deflates Champions Trophy buzz in Pakistan
  • The South Asian country has been gradually returning to hosting international teams after years of militancy marked it a no-go zone
  • Security in cities has vastly improved in recent years, including in Karachi, Lahore and Rawalpindi, where the matches are being held

KARACHI: Champions Trophy fever in Pakistan has plummeted after the hosts crashed out of the first major cricket event in the country in three decades without winning a game.
“It feels like attending a wedding where you don’t know the bride or groom,” said Kashan Khan, a medical student who watched Pakistan get beaten by New Zealand by 60 runs in the opening match in Karachi last week.
The defending champions then lost to great rivals India by six wickets to seal their fate, before their dead-rubber last group game against Bangladesh on Thursday was washed out.
“Pakistan’s poor performance has drained my enthusiasm. I don’t care about watching other teams now,” added Khan.
Pakistan’s failure to advance beyond the group phase or even win a game was a huge letdown in a country that has been gradually returning to hosting international teams after years of militancy saw it marked as a no-go zone.
Security in cities has vastly improved in recent years, including in Karachi, Lahore and Rawalpindi, where the matches are being held.
But disheartened fans have begun abandoning the tournament.
Outside Rawalpindi Stadium ticket-holders were seen trying to sell their unwanted seats ahead of Pakistan’s match against Bangladesh, but there were no takers.
“I had three tickets but no one wanted to buy them,” said Farooq Ali.
“I even tried giving them away for free, but my friends weren’t interested.”
For many, the final on March 9 holds little appeal, particularly given its location is still undecided.
Arch-rivals India, with which Pakistan has fought several wars, refused to visit its neighbor and are playing all their matches in Dubai.
In painful contrast to Pakistan’s woes, India are into the semifinals and if they reach the title decider, the final will be moved from Lahore to Dubai.
“If Pakistan isn’t playing in it, why should we care?” asked Amna Mashadi, who watched the tournament on television.
Pakistan’s latest flop dealt a severe blow not just to supporters, but also to the financial ecosystem surrounding the eight-nation event.
With Pakistan out, TV viewership has nose-dived, advertising revenues have shrunk and sponsors are demanding reductions in their campaign costs.
Pakistan’s stated-owned PTV and Ten Sports bought the joint broadcast shares of the 15 matches, each paying 1.2 billion rupees ($4.25 million).
Sources with knowledge of the broadcast deal told AFP that the two broadcasters have already lost close to 180 million rupees in two rained off matches in Rawalpindi.
Broadcasters are bracing for losses as they search for takers for the usually prime advertising spots in the semifinals and final.
“Sports advertising is always a gamble,” said a senior employee at a Pakistani company, one of the tournament’s top advertisers.
“Sponsorship deals cover the whole tournament, so pulling out isn’t an option.
“But when the national team exits early, consumers go away and the sale of the product suffers.”
Shopkeeper Mohammad Rizwan — he coincidentally has the same name as the Pakistan captain — had anticipated selling 60,000 cricket shirts of the home team.
Instead he only sold about a third of that.
“The demand for Pakistan shirts was overwhelming and in the week leading up to the event, I doubled my order,” Rizwan told AFP.
“But as soon as the team started losing, the demand plummeted. Now, I have huge unsold stock in my warehouse.
“It’s a massive loss.”
Renowned television and film actor Adnan Siddiqui fears that Pakistan’s underwhelming performance might push young fans away from the sport altogether.
“I grew up watching cricket late at night or early in the morning,” Siddiqui told AFP.
“But after these defeats, my son has lost interest completely. The real loss here is of the next generation of players and fans.”
Siddiqui flew to watch the India-Pakistan match in Dubai on Sunday and returned heartbroken.
“We used to beat India frequently but now they are well ahead of us in terms of skill and bravery. Our team looked scared.”
Despite the gloom some remain hopeful.
“This is a low point but the sun will rise again,” said Khalil Khan, a club-level cricket coach in Karachi.
“Cricket is the only sport that puts Pakistan on the global map and I’m sure our team will bring joy again in the future.”


Top cleric among six killed in suspected suicide blast in Pakistan’s northwest

Top cleric among six killed in suspected suicide blast in Pakistan’s northwest
Updated 28 February 2025
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Top cleric among six killed in suspected suicide blast in Pakistan’s northwest

Top cleric among six killed in suspected suicide blast in Pakistan’s northwest
  • The incident took place at a religious seminary known to have close links with the Afghan Taliban movement
  • Nine people, including a paramilitary solider, have also been killed in a separate IED attack in Balochistan

PESHAWAR: A top cleric from a renowned religious seminary, along with five others, was killed in a suspected suicide blast at a mosque during Friday prayers in Pakistan’s northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) province, confirmed the provincial administration spokesman and a rescue official.
Darul Uloom Haqqania, one of Pakistan’s largest and most influential seminaries, was founded in 1947 and is located in the town of Akora Khattak in KP’s Nowshera district. It has played a key role in shaping religious discourse in the region and has been linked to the Afghan Taliban.
Until a few years ago, the seminary was run by Maulana Samiul Haq, a Pakistani cleric and politician often referred to as the “Father of the Taliban” due to his seminary’s ties with the group. Haq led his own faction of the Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam (JUI-S) party before being assassinated in 2018 in Rawalpindi.
Friday’s blast at the mosque occurred when a large number of worshippers were present for the prayer congregation.
“Today, during Friday prayers, a blast took place inside Darul Uloom Haqqania Akora Khattak, in which Maulana Hamidul Haq Haqqani, the head of Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam-Sami (JUI-S) and a prominent cleric, has embraced martyrdom amid reports of other people martyred with him,” Barrister Muhammad Ali, KP government spokesperson, said in a video statement.
“A number of people were also wounded,” he continued. “This tragic incident apparently seems to be a suicide attack, but details of the nature of the blast are still coming.”
Speaking to Arab News, Bilal Faizi, spokesperson for Rescue 1122 in KP, said a total of six people had died in the blast.
“Hamid-ul-Haq is among the dead,” he informed. “Twelve other people are also wounded.”
KP’s provincial cabinet expressed condolences for those who died in the explosion while praying for the swift recovery of the injured.
Earlier, as the blast took place, Maulana Yousuf Shah, the seminary’s spokesperson who is currently in Saudi Arabia, told Arab News that Hamid-ul-Haq Haqqani was the apparent target of the attacker.
“It was a suicide blast targeting Maulana Hamid-ul-Haq Haqqani, who suffered serious injuries among others in the attack,” he said. “Haqqani has been rushed to the Combined Military Hospital in Nowshera and is struggling for life.”
Darul Uloom Haqqania is widely believed to have been a launching pad for the Taliban movement in the 1990s and is still often described as an incubator for militants, though the seminary denies the claims.
Mullah Muhammad Omar, who founded the Taliban movement following the Soviet withdrawal from Afghanistan in 1989, was a student of the seminary.
The Afghan Taliban administration also condemned a attack on the Pakistani religious seminary in the northwest.
IED BLAST IN QUETTA
In a separate incident, nine people, including a paramilitary solider of the Frontier Corps, were injured in a remotely controlled explosive device in Quetta, Balochistan’s provincial capital, on Friday.
Abid Mengal, Station House Officer at the Industrial Police Station, told Arab News the blast took place when an improvised explosive device mounted on a motorbike went off at Jan Muhammad Road.
“The IED exploded with a remotely controlled device when a convoy of paramilitary Frontier Corps was passing through the area,” he said.
“Nine people, including one soldier of FC Balochistan, were injured in the attack on security forces,” he added.
The responsibility for both attacks has yet to be claimed by any militant group, but Pakistan has been battling twin insurgencies — one mounted by religiously motivated groups like the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan and the other by ethnic separatists in Balochistan.
With inputs from Saadullah Akhter in Quetta


Pakistan expresses concern over ‘grave situation’ in Gaza, Kashmir

Pakistan expresses concern over ‘grave situation’ in Gaza, Kashmir
Updated 28 February 2025
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Pakistan expresses concern over ‘grave situation’ in Gaza, Kashmir

Pakistan expresses concern over ‘grave situation’ in Gaza, Kashmir
  • Palestinian territory, encompassing Gaza Strip and West Bank, including East Jerusalem, has been occupied by Israel since 1967
  • Pakistan does not recognize Israel, calls for an independent Palestinian state based on “internationally agreed parameters”

ISLAMABAD: The foreign office said on Friday Pakistan had expressed concern over the “grave situation” in Gaza and Indian-administered Kashmir during foreign minister Ishaq Dar’s participation in a recent United Nations Security Council session on multilateralism and global governance. 

Palestinian territory – encompassing the Gaza Strip and West Bank, including East Jerusalem – has been occupied by Israel since 1967. Pakistan does not recognize Israel and has consistently called for an independent state of Palestine based on “internationally agreed parameters” and the pre-1967 borders with Al-Quds Al-Sharif as its capital.

Israel’s latest war on Gaza, which began after a Oct. 7, 2023 attack by Hamas, has killed more than 50,000 Palestinians and displaced almost all of Gaza’s 2 million population, laying waste to swathes of neighborhoods, schools and hospitals.

Earlier this month, the deputy prime minister and foreign minister of Pakistan, Ishaq Dar, traveled to New York to participate in a high-level meeting of the UNSC on practicing multilateralism and reforming and improving global governance.

“In his remarks [at UNSC meeting], the deputy prime minister and foreign minister emphasized the need for international cooperation and commitment to multilateralism and called for upholding principles of the UN Charter, including self-determination, the non-use of force, respect for sovereignty and the peaceful resolution of disputes,” Shafqat Ali Khan, the spokesperson for the foreign office, said.

“The deputy prime minister and foreign minister expressed deep concerns over the grave situation in occupied Palestine and Gaza and the Indian illegally occupied Jammu and Kashmir.”

Relations between India and Pakistan have stood frozen since New Delhi’s revocation in 2019 of the special autonomous status of the part of the Himalayan valley of Kashmir it rules. The two neighbors have fought three wars, two of them over Kashmir, which they both claim in full but rule in part.