Chile to Skardu: Families of missing K2 climbers trek thin line between hope and despair

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Updated 15 February 2021
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Chile to Skardu: Families of missing K2 climbers trek thin line between hope and despair

  • Cousin and best friend of Chile’s JP Mohr arrive in Pakistan "to find answers", say waiting for a miracle
  • Sajid Sadpara, son of missing Pakistani climber Ali Sadpara, says mother broken-hearted, hope almost gone

ISLAMABAD: In the lobby of a small downtown hotel in the Pakistani capital of Islamabad, a stack of odd-shaped luggage lined along a wall on Saturday morning was nothing out of the ordinary at first glance. On closer inspection, the words “JP Mohr” could be seen scrawled in black on a number of blue porter's drums, a familiar part of treks through Pakistan's high mountains.

The 33-year-old Chilean mountaineer Juan Pablo Mohr is one of three climbers who went missing on February 5 during a historic push to summit K2 in winter - one of mountaineering’s last great feats, achieved for only the first time in history this year by a group of Nepali climbers. 

The arrival of Mohr's belongings in the capital over a week after he went missing coincided on Saturday with his two concerned relatives flying into Pakistan from Chile, saying they had been sent by the climber's immediate family to 'bring JP back,' as an arduous helicopter rescue mission continues the search to find him, Pakistan's Ali Sadpara and Iceland's John Snorri. 

"The family told us directly... we must come back with JP," Federico Scheuch, Mohr's manager and cousin, told Arab News in Islamabad.




Federico Scheuch (left), manager and cousin of missing K2 climber JP Mohr, and Mohr's childhood best friend Juan Pablo Diban, speak to Arab News in Islamabad, Pakistan on February 13, 2021 (AN Photo)

"The family has a lot of hope and we are waiting for the miracle," he said, adding that he would be flying to the northern town of Skardu the following morning, Sunday, so he could be "closer" to information about ongoing search and rescue attempts.

Back home, Scheuch described a country paralyzed with news of Mohr’s disappearance, with Chileans hoping against hope that one of the pioneer’s of the nation’s mountaineering culture would be found alive on the treacherous K2, the world's second highest mountain. 

"We're here for the Chilean people... for hope," he said.




In this photo taken on February 13, 2021, the luggage of Chilean mountaineer Juan Pablo Mohr can be seen in the lobby of a hotel in Islamabad, Pakistan. Mohr is one of three climbers who went missing on February 5 during a historic push to summit K2 in winter (AN photo by Amal Khan)

"The bag just came back from Skardu and I don't want to open it," Scheuch added. "It's scary... it's part of JP... all the things that are in there."

From Skardu, his voice breaking over the phone, Sadpara's son and expedition member Sajid Sadpara told Arab News hope for a positive recovery had all but faded. 

"They're saying the rescue operation is still underway up there... but hope is now close to gone," Sadpara said. "My mother is broken-hearted. She is so sad.”




In this photo taken on February 13, 2021, at a hotel in Islamabad, Pakistan, a porter’s drum can be seen with the words “JP Mohr” written on it - part of the recovered luggage of Chilean mountaineer Juan Pablo Mohr. Mohr is one of three climbers who went missing on February 5 during a historic push to summit K2 in winter (AN photo by Amal Khan)

Sajid was the last person to see the three climbers make their final push to the summit on Friday (February 5) morning, at what is considered the most difficult part of the climb: the Bottleneck, a steep and narrow gully just 300 metres shy of the 8,611 metre high K2. 

From there, Sajid, whose oxygen regulator malfunctioned, was asked by his father to climb back down. He made his way to Camp 3 and waited for over 24 hours for the team to descend. They never did.

"We are trying to be the first line of information," Juan Pablo Diban, Mohr's childhood best friend, told Arab News in Islamabad. "We've been watching the news all of last week, talking with anyone who can give us information,” he added, saying him and Scheuch had come to Pakistan "to get more answers."

Diban described Mohr, a father of three, as someone who could never still ever since he was a child and who was always joking and making others around him laugh. He was also hugely respected back home for his social work.

 "The whole of Chile is paralyzed by this news," Diban said. "JP is so much of a giver. He gives happiness to a lot of people."

Speaking about Mohr's decision not to carry supplemental oxygen - the only one in the group not to do so - Diban and Schuech called him a mountaineering purist who just liked doing things the old-fashioned way.

"He preferred to...summit without oxygen. He didn't use sherpas (porters) ... if he can help it, he doesn't use ropes," Schuech said. 

"He just wanted to do it that way for the pureness of the sport," Diban added.

Then he laughed softly: "We also don't want to open his bags... because he is so messy.”


Police in Islamabad briefly detain senior rights activists protesting Israel’s war in Gaza

Updated 30 May 2025
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Police in Islamabad briefly detain senior rights activists protesting Israel’s war in Gaza

  • Tahira Abdullah and Samina Khan were detained by police outside the Islamabad Press Club
  • No charges were specified, and both rights activists were released by the police later in the day

ISLAMABAD: Two senior human rights activists, Tahira Abdullah and Samina Khan, were briefly detained by police on Friday outside the Islamabad Press Club for ostensibly protesting against Israel’s war in Gaza before their release later in the day.

A video purportedly showing their arrest depicts them wearing Palestinian flags and keffiyeh scarves as they are escorted away by women police personnel, along with a man and three youths.

Abdullah can be seen asking a policeman why they are being taken away. She then tells the female police personnel not to push her and Khan, and requests that they be moved to a separate car instead of the police truck.

“They [Abdullah and Khan] were illegally picked up from outside the Islamabad Press Club premises and taken away to the women police station in G-7,” lawyer Hadi Ali Chattha told Arab News.

“They aren’t allowed to meet their counsel to discuss options,” he continued. “Station House Officer (SHO) Misbah Waqas is refusing to let their families and counsel meet them.”

Police did not specify any charges against the two rights activists. Islamabad police spokesperson Dr. Taqi Javed also did not respond to a query from Arab News in this regard.

Last year in May, Abdullah was among the protesters who staged a demonstration at Islamabad’s D-Chowk in support of the Palestinians. She had urged everyone to come out in large numbers, saying the Pakistani government would not pay heed to their demands otherwise.

The Islamabad Press Club is a key venue in Pakistan’s capital where journalists and activists hold press conferences and protests. It serves as a platform for raising awareness and drawing media attention to political and social issues. Protesters use it to voice demands and push for government action.

A video of Abdullah and Khan that was later shared by lawyer Chattha shows them stepping out of the police precinct after being released, chanting the slogan, “Free, free Palestine.”

Pakistan does not recognize Israel and supports an independent Palestinian state based on pre-1967 borders, with Jerusalem as its capital.


Farhan and Abrar star as resurgent Pakistan win Bangladesh series

Updated 30 May 2025
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Farhan and Abrar star as resurgent Pakistan win Bangladesh series

  • This is Pakistan’s first Twenty20 home series win since December 2021
  • Pakistan also won the first match against Bangladesh by 37 runs in Lahore

LAHORE: Opener Sahibzada Farhan notched his maiden half century and spinner Abrar Ahmed grabbed three wickets to guide Pakistan to another convincing 57-run win over Bangladesh in Lahore on Friday.

Farhan smashed a 41-ball 74 and Hasan Nawaz unbeaten 51 off 26 balls to help the home team post 201-6 before Abrar grabbed 3-19 to keep Bangladesh to 144-9 in 19 overs, with the last man Shoriful Islama unable to bat due to injury.

Pakistan, who won the first match by 37 runs at the same venue, take an unassailable 2-0 lead with the final match on Sunday, also in Lahore.

The win also gives a kickstart to Pakistan’s new white-ball head coach Mike Hesson appointed earlier this month to stem a slide which saw them win just three of their last 13 T20s before this series.

Bangladesh raced to 32 in the first two overs but openers Parvez Hossain (eight) and Tanzid Hasan (19-ball 33 with five boundaries and a six) fell within two runs of each other.

From 46-2, Bangladesh slumped to 56-5 with Abrar dismissing Tohid Hridoy (five) and Jaker Ali (nought) off successive deliveries while pacer Hasan Ali had skipper Litton Das for six.

Tanzim Hasan, who topscored with a career best 31-ball 50, and Mehidy Hasan Miraz, 23 off 17 balls, added 33 for the eighth wicket but it was too late, too little.

Pakistan’s first T20 home series win since December 2021 delighted skipper Salman Agha.

“It feels good, I didn’t know it was three and a half years ago that we won a series at home,” said Agha of Pakistan’s last win over the West Indies at home.

“This is what I want, we should always have players who can come in and replace anyone, any captain would love that,” said Agha, praising the new coach.

“It’s been a few days and we are loving the environment, credit to Hesson. He has managed to gel the team really well and built a nice environment, he has done that very quickly.”

Bangladesh skipper Litton Das rued loss of wickets in cluster.

“There were back-to-back wickets and in cricket you have to follow basics, sometimes you don’t follow the basics that cost you,” said Das. “We still have a game to comeback strongly.”

Earlier, Pakistan posted a consecutive 200-plus total with Farhan and Nawaz ably supported by Mohammad Haris whose 41 came off 25 balls after the home team won the toss and batted.

After losing fellow opener Saim Ayub to a run out for four, Farhan put the innings on a solid footing with a 103-run second wicket stand of 54 balls with Haris.

The Farhan-Haris duo smashed Bangladesh bowlers to all corners, with Farhan hitting six sixes and four boundaries while Haris’s knock had two sixes and four boundaries.

Farhan was finally caught by Litton Das off leg-spinner Rishad Hossain in the 12th over. His previous best of 39 was against Australia in Dubai in 2018.

Nawaz gave a final polish to the innings by hitting three sixes and two boundaries as Pakistan added 40 in the last five overs.

Agha fell for 19 and Shadab Khan made seven.

For Bangladesh Tanzim finished with 2-36 and Hasan Mahmud took 2-47.


Senior Pakistani official killed in Balochistan as government blames ‘Indian-backed’ militants

Updated 30 May 2025
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Senior Pakistani official killed in Balochistan as government blames ‘Indian-backed’ militants

  • Balochistan CM says Hidayatullah Buledi was shot dead when he tried to protect civilians in a local market
  • Pakistan’s PM and army chief say the country’s war will continue until militant violence is fully eradicated

KARACHI: The Pakistani government on Friday condemned the killing of a senior administration official in a gun attack in the volatile southwestern Balochistan province, with top officials attributing the assault to what they described as “Fitna Al-Hind” — or Indian-sponsored proxies — fueling unrest in the region.

Additional Deputy Commissioner (ADC) Hidayatullah Buledi was shot dead by armed militants in the Sorab area as he reportedly intervened to protect civilians, including women and children, during an armed assault in a local market.

In a post on social media platform X, the province’s chief minister, Sardar Sarfraz Bugti, said the attack was carried out by militants affiliated with the Baloch Liberation Army (BLA), a separatist group banned in Pakistan, which he said was backed by the neighboring Indian state.

“Despite holding the office of ADC Revenue, when terrorists of Fitna Al-Hind BLA opened fire on women and children in Sorab today, Hidayatullah Buledi honored the traditions of Baloch valor and sacrificed his life in defense of the Pakistani state,” he said in the post while praying for the deceased officer and his family.

Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif also issued a statement, condemning the “cowardly attack” on a local bank, civilians and public officials in Sorab and paying tribute to Buledi for defending his community.

“The entire nation stands with the family of Shaheed [martyr] Hidayatullah Buledi,” he said, vowing to bring the perpetrators to justice.

“Their attack reflects a mindset that is openly hostile to Pakistan’s progress and stability in Balochistan,” he added.

The prime minister also praised the efforts of the Pakistani armed forces and reiterated the government’s commitment to eradicating militant violence from the country.

Pakistan’s army chief, Field Marshal Asim Munir, who was in Quetta during the day to address officers at the Command and Staff College, also promised to take Pakistan’s war against militancy to its “logical conclusion.”

“The nation’s fight against terrorism will be driven to a logical conclusion — success against all forms and manifestations of terrorism,” the military’s media wing, Inter-Services Public Relations, quoted him as saying in a statement.

Balochistan, Pakistan’s largest but least developed province, has long been the site of a separatist insurgency, with militants blaming the state for exploiting the mineral resources of the region without doing much for the local population.

The government has repeatedly denied the allegation, pointing to the infrastructure and livelihood projects it has been carrying out in the area for years.

Pakistan has also frequently accused India of funding and arming militant groups, a charge New Delhi denies.


Afghans married to Pakistanis fear split from families amid deportation drive

Updated 30 May 2025
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Afghans married to Pakistanis fear split from families amid deportation drive

  • Around 1.3 million Afghans, both undocumented and those with Afghan Citizen Cards, have left Pakistan since expulsion drive started in 2023
  • Afghans married to Pakistanis have found themselves in a legal limbo and have had to leave families and lives behind after being deported

PESHAWAR: Muhammad Alam, 40, wakes up daily to the laughter and noise of his seven children as they begin their day at the family’s rented home in the northwestern Pakistani city of Peshawar while their mother prepares breakfast in a small kitchen.

These days, Alam’s heart is full of dread, and he is having frequent arguments with his wife over whether she and the children, six daughters and one son, will accompany him to Afghanistan if he has to leave. 

Alam is an Afghan refugee who is married to a Pakistani woman. Under an ongoing repatriation drive targeting "illegal" foreigners that was launched by the Pakistan government in November 2023, Alam may have to leave the country soon. If that happens, he will be separated from his family, all of whom are Pakistani nationals and are refusing to accompany him. 

Around 1.3 million Afghans have left Pakistan since the expulsion drive was started.

“We are in trouble because of the deportation drive,” Alam told Arab News at his home in Peshawar, the capital of the northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province. 

“I can’t refuse to leave but who will convince my family? Just for me, these seven children will not go to Afghanistan and I can’t leave these seven behind.”

Alam holds a Proof of Registration (PoR) card, a document issued by the National Database and Registration Authority that provides temporary legal status and freedom of movement for registered Afghan refugees. It serves as an identification document, allowing Afghan refugees to legally reside in Pakistan. The PoR card was initially issued in 2007 and has been extended multiple times, currently valid until June 30, 2025.

Alam is unsure what will happen after that deadline passes next month: “If the government arrests and deports me, who will take care of my family?”

When he spoke to his children about going to Afghanistan with him, one of them replied: “You are an Afghan, you should go.”

Alam’s wife holds a Pakistani Computerized National Identity Card (CNIC) and his children all have the Form-B, an important document for children under 18 years old in Pakistan, serving as a child's identification document and necessary for various purposes like school admissions, passports, and international travel.

One of Alam’s daughters Laiba, 14, said the government should make a special case for her father as he had a Pakistani family. 

“We and our mother have Pakistani identification documents, only he doesn’t have it. He should be given the [CNIC] card, the whole fight will end,” she said. 

“What will we do in Afghanistan? We have neither seen nor gone there.”

Troubles have already begun for the family. 

Laiba said she was refused enrollment in the 8th standard after she failed to present a Pakistani CNIC for her father. 

“They asked for my mother’s [CNIC] card, I produced it. Then they asked for my father’s card. My father didn’t have a [CNIC] card, from where should I have produced it? So, they expelled me from the school,” the teenager said. 

“Our school is gone already. What should we do?”

Qudratullah, 38, another Afghan refugee from Jalalabad who is married to a Pakistani women, is facing the same issue, saying his children and wife were refusing to accompany him to Afghanistan.

While he has an Afghan passport, his Pakistan visa had expired, after which he was deported to Afghanistan in October 2024. It took him nearly four months to get a new visa from Afghanistan and return to Pakistan in February this year, with a multiple-entry family visit visa that expires in February 2026. 

“I have married a Pakistani woman but my wife doesn’t want to go with me to [Afghanistan],” Qudratullah told Arab News. “When I tell her to go, she starts fighting with me. She doesn’t want to go with me at any cost.”

Qudratullah's wife Nasreen Bibi described the situation as “too difficult.”

“Sometimes he [my husband] gets a visa and sometimes the visa is rejected, and he sometimes gets stuck there [in Afghanistan] and we are left alone,” she said at the couple’s home in Peshawar. 

“We have children who are studying here, we have a house. We can’t go with him there, our children can’t live in that country.”

“HOSPITALITY”

Nauman Mohib Kakakhel, a Peshawar High Court advocate, has fought cases for families, where a Pakistani is married to an Afghan with Proof of Registration (POR) or Afghan Citizen Cards (ACC). The ACC is a document issued by the Pakistan government to undocumented Afghan nationals, allowing them to legally reside in Pakistan for a limited time and provides temporary protection from deportation.

“We filed a case for hundreds of families, and it was decided by the Peshawar High Court that since NADRA already has records of these families in the shape of Afghan Citizen Cards or Proof of Registration cards, as they enjoy refugees’ status in Pakistan and that’s a legal status,” Kakakhel said.

“And now they have got married to a Pakistani citizen, so this should be sufficient for them to get permanent residency in Pakistan.”

As per the law, children born to a couple where one partner is Pakistani and the other is Afghan, will automatically be entitled to the citizenship of Pakistan by descent when they turn 21, the lawyer explained.

After they turn 21, they must opt for the nationality of one country while Pakistani women married to an Afghan can hold the citizenship of both countries under Pakistani law.

Speaking to Arab News, Qaisar Afridi, a spokesperson for UNHCR in Pakistan, said Afghans, including human rights activists, journalists and others married to Pakistani nationals, were facing challenges in Pakistan:

“As the Pakistani government and the people of Pakistan have hosted Afghans for the past 40-45 years, we request the government of Pakistan that this hospitality should be continued until the situation in Afghanistan improves.”


Pakistan formally initiates talks with US on ‘reciprocal tariffs’ amid export concerns

Updated 30 May 2025
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Pakistan formally initiates talks with US on ‘reciprocal tariffs’ amid export concerns

  • US imposed a 29% tariff on Pakistani goods as Islamabad pushes for export-led growth
  • Pakistan says it sees the move as both a challenge and an opportunity to reset trade ties

KARACHI: Pakistan has formally begun negotiations with the United States over newly imposed “reciprocal tariffs,” an official statement said on Friday, with Finance Minister Muhammad Aurangzeb holding a conference call with US Trade Representative Ambassador Jamieson Greer to launch the process.

The talks come after US President Donald Trump imposed steep tariffs on a number of countries earlier this year, a move widely viewed as a setback for the global economy still recovering from the coronavirus pandemic. Defending the action, Trump said the tariffs were necessary to correct trade imbalances and counter what he described as unfair treatment of American goods abroad.

Pakistan was among the countries affected, with a 29 percent tariff placed on its goods at a time when Islamabad is pushing for export-driven growth.

Aurangzeb called the development both a challenge and an opportunity to reset trade ties in April, adding that a high-level delegation would soon travel to Washington to pursue the matter further.

“Pakistan’s formal negotiations on US reciprocal tariffs kick-started between Mr. Muhammad Aurangzeb, Pakistan’s Finance Minister and Ambassador Jamieson Greer, United States Trade Representative through a telephonic/conference call on 30th May, 2025,” the finance ministry said.

“The two sides exchanged their viewpoint through a constructive engagement with the understanding that technical level detailed discussions would follow in the coming few weeks,” it added.

The ministry said both sides expressed confidence in advancing the negotiations toward a successful conclusion at the earliest.

The US is Pakistan’s largest export destination, and the newly imposed duties threaten to undermine Islamabad’s fragile economic recovery.

According to Pakistan’s central bank, the country exported $5.44 billion worth of goods to the US in 2024. From July to February of the current fiscal year, exports to the US reached $4 billion, up 10 percent from the same period last year.

Nearly 90 percent of those exports are textiles, which analysts say will be hardest hit.

Experts have also warned previously the tariffs could reduce Pakistan’s competitiveness, especially if regional exporters such as China, Bangladesh and Vietnam redirect more goods to Europe, intensifying competition in alternative markets.