Islamabad calls national security meeting as New Delhi downgrades ties over militant attack

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Updated 23 April 2025
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Islamabad calls national security meeting as New Delhi downgrades ties over militant attack

Islamabad calls national security meeting as New Delhi downgrades ties over militant attack
  • Twenty-six people were killed and 17 injured when suspected militants opened fire at tourists in Indian-administered Jammu and Kashmir 
  • Indian says cross-border linkages of attack had been “brought out” at meeting of security cabinet, after which it decided to act against Pakistan

 ISLAMABAD: Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif has called a meeting of the National Security Committee today, Thursday, after New Delhi announced a raft of measures to downgrade its ties with the neighbor following a deadly militant attack in Indian-administered Kashmir.

The shooting, the deadliest attack on non-combatants in Kashmir in decades, occurred Tuesday afternoon in Pahalgam, a popular resort town in the Anantnag district, where armed men emerged from forest cover and opened fire on crowds of mostly domestic tourists. A little-known militant group, the “Kashmir Resistance,” claimed responsibility for the attack in a social media message. Indian security agencies say Kashmir Resistance, also known as The Resistance Front, is a front for Pakistan-based militant organizations such as Lashkar-e-Taiba and Hizbul Mujahideen.

Indian Foreign Secretary Vikram Misri told a media briefing that the cross-border linkages of the attack had been “brought out” at a special meeting of the security cabinet, after which it decided to act against Pakistan.

“Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif has convened the meeting of the National Security Committee on Thursday morning … to respond to the Indian government’s statement,” Deputy Prime Minister Ishaq Dar said on X. 

Among the measures announced by Misri was the suspension with immediate effect of the Indus Waters Treaty that allows for sharing the waters of the Indus river system between the two countries. The defense advisers in the Pakistani high commission in New Delhi were declared persona non grata and asked to leave within a week, Misri said, adding that the overall strength of the Indian high commission in Islamabad would be reduced to 30 from 55.

A main border crossing check post between the two countries would be closed immediately and Pakistani nationals would not be allowed to travel to India under special visas, Misri said.

“Pakistani nationals will not be permitted to travel to India under the SAARC Visa Exemption Scheme visas,” the Indian foreign secretary said.

“Any SVES visas issued in the past to Pakistani nationals are deemed canceled. Any Pakistani national currently in India under SVAS visa has 48 hours to leave India.”

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, who cut short a state visit to Saudi Arabia after the attack, called it an “heinous act” and pledged justice against the perpetrators.

The Pakistan army has not yet responded to the Indian measures. 




Indian Foreign Secretary Vikram Misri addresses a media briefing in New Delhi, India, on April 23, 2025. (MEA India/YT/Screengrab)

“RECKLESS”

Kashmir has been divided between India and Pakistan since 1947, which both claim fully but rule in part, and has been plagued by years of insurgent violence that New Delhi says is supported by Islamabad. Pakistan denies the accusations, saying it only provides diplomatic support to Kashmiris in their struggle for self-determination.

Such attacks have historically strained ties between India and Pakistan. In 2019, a suicide bombing in Pulwama that killed 40 Indian paramilitary personnel triggered cross-border air strikes, pushing the neighbors to the brink of war.

“It is not appropriate to vent anger over terrorism on Pakistan,” Deputy PM Dar told Pakistan’s Geo News in an interview, saying the foreign office would present its recommendations at the national security meeting on how to respond to India’s measures. 

“India has a habit of shifting the blame for its own problems onto Pakistan. If India has any evidence instead of mere accusations, it should present it,” he added, promising that Pakistan would give a “fitting response” to New Delhi’s actions.

Minister for Power Awais Leghari called India’s suspension of the Indus Waters Treaty “reckless” and an “act of water warfare, a cowardly, illegal move.”

The Indus Water Treaty is a 1960 agreement between India and Pakistan that divides the water of the Indus River system between the two countries. It allocates the eastern rivers (Ravi, Beas, and Sutlej) to India for unrestricted use, and the western rivers (Indus, Jhelum, and Chenab) to Pakistan, giving them a larger share of the total water flow. The treaty, brokered by the World Bank, has been a crucial factor in maintaining peace and cooperation between the two nations despite political tensions. 

The suspension removes current restrictions, allowing India more freedom to control water flows from the western rivers.

“Every drop is ours by right, and we will defend it with full force, legally, politically, and globally,” Leghari said on the Indus Waters Treaty’s suspension. 

HISTORY OF CONFLICT

A violent separatist insurgency has simmered in the Indian-administered part of Kashmir since the late 1980s, although militant violence had declined in recent years.

After partition of the subcontinent in 1947, Kashmir was expected to go to Pakistan, as other Muslim majority regions did. Its Hindu ruler wanted to stay independent but, faced with an invasion by Muslim tribesmen from Pakistan, acceded to India in October 1947 in return for help against the invaders.

Kashmir ended up divided among Hindu-majority India, which governs the Kashmir Valley, Jammu, and Ladakh; Muslim-majority Pakistan, which controls Azad Kashmir (“Free Kashmir“) and the Northern Areas, and China, which holds Aksai Chin.

Indian-administered Kashmir has a population of around 7 million, of whom nearly 70 percent are Muslim.

Article 370 of the Indian constitution which provided for partial autonomy for Jammu & Kashmir was drafted in 1947 by the then prime minister of the state, Sheikh Abdullah, and accepted by India’s first prime minister Jawaharlal Nehru. Although intended as temporary, it was included in India’s Constitution in 1949 by the constituent assembly.

In August 2019, Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government revoked Kashmir’s semi-autonomous status in a move it said would better integrate the region with the rest of the country. The state was reorganized into two federally administered union territories- Jammu and Kashmir, and Ladakh. Pakistan strongly objected, downgrading diplomatic ties with India and cutting off trade.

India and Pakistan have fought three wars since independence, two of them over Kashmir, in 1947 and 1965. A third in 1971 led to the creation of Bangladesh. In 1999, they clashed again in the Kargil region in what was described as an undeclared war. A UN-brokered ceasefire line, the Line of Control, now divides the region.

Many Muslims in Indian Kashmir have long resented what they see as heavy-handed rule by India. In 1989, an insurgency by Muslim separatists began. India poured troops into the region and tens of thousands of people have been killed.

India accuses Pakistan of arming and training militants, which Islamabad denies, saying it offers only moral and diplomatic support.

Modi says his 2019 decision brought normalcy to Kashmir after decades of bloodshed. Violence has tapered off in recent years, according to Indian officials, with fewer large-scale attacks and rising tourist arrivals. Targeted killings of civilians and security forces, however, continued to be reported.

In 2024, Jammu and Kashmir held its first local elections since the 2019 revocation of autonomy. Several newly elected lawmakers urged a partial restoration of Article 370. Key regional parties had boycotted or criticized the polls, saying the winners would not get any real political power.

With inputs from Reuters


Chinese official discusses security with delegation from Pakistan’s Balochistan

Chinese official discusses security with delegation from Pakistan’s Balochistan
Updated 26 May 2025
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Chinese official discusses security with delegation from Pakistan’s Balochistan

Chinese official discusses security with delegation from Pakistan’s Balochistan
  • Chinese nationals have been in crosshairs of separatist militants in Balochistan where China has a strategic port and mining interests
  • Beijing has been pushing Pakistan to allow its own security staff to provide protection to thousands of Chinese citizens working there

BEIJING: China’s Assistant Minister of Foreign Affairs Liu Bin met with a delegation from Pakistan’s southwestern province of Balochistan on Monday, according to a ministry statement.

The two sides exchanged views on issues including security and cooperation between China and the province.

Chinese nationals have been in the crosshairs of separatist militants who believe Beijing is helping Pakistan exploit minerals in the underdeveloped province of Balochistan, where China has a strategic port and mining interests.

Beijing has been pushing Pakistan to allow its own security staff to provide protection to thousands of Chinese citizens working there, frustrated by the string of attacks on its citizens.

The push came after a bombing at the Karachi airport last October killed two Chinese engineers who were returning there to work at a power plant.


Pakistan says IMF approved $1 billion loan tranche ‘on merit’ despite Indian push for review

Pakistan says IMF approved $1 billion loan tranche ‘on merit’ despite Indian push for review
Updated 26 May 2025
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Pakistan says IMF approved $1 billion loan tranche ‘on merit’ despite Indian push for review

Pakistan says IMF approved $1 billion loan tranche ‘on merit’ despite Indian push for review
  • India has raised concerns with IMF on its loans to Pakistan after militant attack Delhi blamed on Islamabad
  • Last week, India announced plans to approach Financial Action Task Force to place Pakistan on grey list again

ISLAMABAD: Finance Minister Muhammad Aurangzeb said on Monday the International Monetary Fund (IMF) had approved a $1 billion disbursement for Pakistan on “merit” despite India leaving “no stone unturned” to convince the lender to review the payout.

Pakistan secured a $7 billion bailout program from the IMF last year and was granted a new $1.3 billion climate resilience loan in March. Earlier this month, Pakistan received the second tranche of special drawing rights worth $1,023 million from the IMF under the extended fund facility (EFF) program, bringing disbursements to $2 billion within the latest bailout. 

The program is critical to the $350 billion economy and Pakistan has said it has stabilized under the bailout that helped it stave off a default threat.

India raised concerns with the IMF on its loans to Pakistan, asking for a review earlier this month as tensions soared after an attack on Hindu tourists in Indian-administered Kashmir that New Delhi blamed on Islamabad — an accusation it denies. The tensions erupted into military fighting as the two nuclear-armed nations launched missiles and drones deep into each other’s territories and exchanged gunfire on their de facto border, the Line of Control, until a ceasefire was announced on May 10. Nearly 70 people combined were killed on both sides of the border.

“Our armed forces and political leadership, the way they stood up against the [Indian] aggression, the entire nation has celebrated it, and rightly so,” Aurangzeb told reporters in Islamabad. 

“At the same time, there was no stone left unturned in terms of ensuring that the [IMF board] meeting doesn’t happen and if the meeting does happen, then these items are not on the agenda, whether it’s the second tranche [of $7 billion loan] under the EFF or the RSF [Resilience and Sustainability Facility] of $1.3 billion in terms of our climate resilient facility.”

The finance minister said he was thankful that the IMF went on to discuss and decide the Pakistan case “on merit.”

Last week, India also announced plans to approach the global financial watchdog, the Financial Action Task Force (FATF), to place Pakistan on its grey list and said it would oppose a World Bank plan to focus $20 billion in lending to the cash-strapped nation over the coming decade on development issues like the impact of climate change as well as boosting private-sector growth.

Pakistan was removed from the FATF grey list in 2022, receiving a clean bill of health on terror financing, which significantly improved its standing with international lenders, crucial for its crisis-hit economy.
 


Iranian president calls for cooperation with Pakistan to combat militant activity on shared border 

Iranian president calls for cooperation with Pakistan to combat militant activity on shared border 
Updated 26 May 2025
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Iranian president calls for cooperation with Pakistan to combat militant activity on shared border 

Iranian president calls for cooperation with Pakistan to combat militant activity on shared border 
  • Iran and Pakistan have variously accused each other of not doing enough to stamp out militants allegedly sheltering across shared border
  • Last year, Iran launched strikes inside Pakistan’s border, saying it had destroyed terror bases, with Islamabad responding with strikes of its own 

ISLAMABAD: Islamabad and Tehran should increase cooperation to combat militant activity on their shared border, Iran’s President Masoud Pezeshkian said on Monday during a televised news conference with Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif. 

Sharif arrived in Iran on Monday after a visit to Istanbul as part of a regional diplomacy tour that will also include trips to Azerbaijan and Tajikistan. 

Relations between Iran and Pakistan have been strained in recent years, with both sides accusing each other of not doing enough to stamp out militants allegedly sheltering across their shared border.

“We believe that the joint borders between Iran and Pakistan should be free from any insecurity and free from the presence and activity of terrorist and criminal groups,” Pezeshkian said during a joint press conference with Sharif.

“In this regard, we believe we need to promote cooperation at the border areas to fight against those who are trying to create trouble.”

President of Iran, Masoud Pezeshkian (R) and Prime Minister of Pakistan Shehbaz Sharif shake hands after a joint press statement, at Sa'dabad Palace in Tehran on May 26, 2025. (PMO)

Last year, Iran launched strikes inside Pakistan’s border, saying it had destroyed two bases of Jaish al Adl, a Pakistan-based group that Tehran accuses of attacking Iranian security forces. Pakistan launched strikes on separatist militants inside Iran in response, saying it hit bases of the separatist Baloch Liberation Front and Baloch Liberation Army.

The militant groups operate in an area that includes Pakistan’s southwestern province of Balochistan and Iran’s southeastern Sistan-Baluchestan province. Both regions are restive, mineral-rich and largely underdeveloped and wracked by decades-long separatist insurgencies. 

The tit-for-tat conflict quickly de-escalated and the foreign minister of Iran visited Islamabad, with both nations saying they respected each other’s sovereignty and territorial integrity and would expand security cooperation in a bid to mend ties.

The most notable deal between the neighboring countries — a 2010 gas pipeline agreement from Iran’s South Fars field to Pakistan’s Balochistan and Sindh — also remains stalled.

During meetings on Monday, the two countries discussed the spectrum of bilateral ties. 

“We discussed expanding bilateral relations in different sectors including politics, economy, culture as well as international cooperation between the two countries,” Pezeshkian said at the joint press conference. 

In May, Iranian Foreign Minister Seyyed Abbas Araghchi visited Pakistan to help ease tensions between Pakistan and India during the worst military confrontation in decades between the nuclear-armed neighbors. 


Pakistani PM makes peace offer to India during visit to Iran 

Pakistani PM makes peace offer to India during visit to Iran 
Updated 26 May 2025
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Pakistani PM makes peace offer to India during visit to Iran 

Pakistani PM makes peace offer to India during visit to Iran 
  • PM Sharif says ready to discuss water sharing, terrorism and Kashmir dispute if India was “serious”
  • PM arrived in Iran after visit to Turkiye as part of regional diplomacy tour following India standoff

ISLAMABAD: Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif made a peace offer to India during a visit to Tehran today, Monday, saying Islamabad was ready to hold talks on water sharing, countering terrorism and the Kashmir dispute if New Delhi was “serious.”

The two nuclear-armed nations have just emerged from their worst military conflict in decades earlier this month, when they launched missiles and drones deep into each other’s territories and exchanged gunfire on their de facto border, the Line of Control, until a ceasefire was announced on May 10. Nearly 70 people combined were killed on both sides of the border. 

India had hit Pakistan first, saying it targeted “terrorist infrastructure” in response to an April 22 militant attack in Indian-administered Kashmir that New Delhi accused Islamabad of being behind — a charge it denies. After the attack, India also unilaterally suspended the 1960 Indus Waters Treaty that governs the sharing of river waters between the two neighbors. 

The Muslim-majority Himalayan region of Kashmir is claimed by both India and Pakistan and has been the focus of several wars and diplomatic stand-offs.

“We wanted peace, we want peace and we will work for peace in the region through talks, on the table, and resolve our outstanding issues,” Sharif said in a joint press conference with Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian.

Among the issues Pakistan wanted to discuss, the PM said, was the Kashmir conflict, which he said needed to be resolved according to several resolutions passed by the UN Security Council, including one which says a plebiscite should be held to determine the future of the mostly Muslim region of Kashmir.

“We are ready to talk for the sake of peace on water issues with our neighbor, we are ready to talk to promote trade and also counter terrorism if they are serious, but if they choose to remain the aggressor then we shall defend our country and territory,” Sharif said. 

“But if they accept my offer of peace, then we will show that we really want peace, seriously and sincerely.”

The Iranian president also welcomed the ceasefire established between Pakistan and India. 

“Undoubtedly, settling differences through dialogue and through a peaceful manner is the precondition for sustainable peace and development at the national, regional and international levels,” Pezeshkian said. 

“We believe that in the region, sustaining the sustainable security and trying to create friendly relations with our neighboring countries is among the common policies of Iran and Pakistan.”

REGIONAL DIPLOMACY TOUR

Sharif arrived in Iran today, Monday, after a visit to Turkiye as part of a regional diplomacy tour following the latest military standoff with India. 

Iran’s foreign minister Abbas Araqchi had called for restraint and visited both nations following India’s first strikes on Pakistan on May 7, setting off nearly four days of fighting.

On Sunday, Sharif reached Turkiye as the first stop in the diplomacy tour to nations that were either supportive of Islamabad during the latest crisis with India, or that helped mediate the conflict. After Iran, he will go onwards to Tajikistan and Azerbaijan.

Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan spoke by phone with Sharif on May 7 to convey his solidarity after India first hit Pakistan and Azad Kashmir with missiles. Leaders from the two nations had several contacts subsequently and it is widely believed that Turkiye played an important role, besides the US, UAE and Saudi Arabia, in convincing India and Pakistan to back off and agree to a ceasefire. The two nations have strong ties, both being largely Muslim countries and sharing historical links.

Iran’s leadership also offered to mediate the conflict and there were several contacts between its foreign minister and the Pakistani PM and other leaders. 


Pakistan says border control ‘sovereign right’ as UNHCR flags at-risk Afghans amid expulsions

Pakistan says border control ‘sovereign right’ as UNHCR flags at-risk Afghans amid expulsions
Updated 26 May 2025
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Pakistan says border control ‘sovereign right’ as UNHCR flags at-risk Afghans amid expulsions

Pakistan says border control ‘sovereign right’ as UNHCR flags at-risk Afghans amid expulsions
  • Afghan journalists, activists, minorities, artists, ex-government workers among 110,000 declared at “high-risk”
  • Foreign office says over 44,000 Afghans approved for relocation to Western nations remain in Pakistan 

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s foreign office said on Monday the country had a “sovereign right” to secure and regulate its borders, as the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) identified around 110,000 Afghans who faced the risk of persecution at home if deported. 

Facing economic and security crises, Pakistan launched a repatriation drive targeting “illegal” foreigners in November 2023, with approximately 1.3 million Afghan refugees, both undocumented and those with Afghan Citizen Card holders, deported since. 

Pakistan has vowed to continue with the deportations until all “illegal” foreigners have been expelled. As of October 2023, there were over 4 million Afghans, registered and illegals, residing in Pakistan.

According to the latest UNHCR Resettlement Factsheet, some 110,000 refugees and asylum-seekers have high-risk profiles with increased international protection needs and vulnerabilities that could qualify them for resettlement in a third country. The agency has said all returns should be voluntary, dignified, and sustainable.

Speaking to Arab News on Monday, foreign office spokesperson Shafqat Ali Khan said the illegal foreign repatriation plan (IFRP) was consistent with both Pakistan’s obligations under international law and its domestic legal framework. 

“The right to secure and regulate our borders is a sovereign right and an internationally recognized practice, which is by no means unique to Pakistan,” he said, adding that IFRP was neither an “indiscriminate nor an arbitrary measure,” and that Afghans would always be welcome to visit Pakistan through a proper visa regime, whether for business, tourism, or education.

Khan said Pakistan had urged all concerned nations to expedite the repatriation process for Afghans awaiting resettlement in third countries.

“On Afghan nationals awaiting evacuation to a third country, we are in touch with those countries and urged them to expedite the process of evacuation,” the FO spokesman said. 

“We are engaged with relevant UN bodies for the protection of people in vulnerable situations, and our legal safeguards and remedies remain functional and effective to address any complaints.”

UNHCR Pakistan spokesperson Qaiser Khan Afridi said approximately 600,000 Afghans had entered Pakistan following the Taliban’s takeover of Kabul and the withdrawal of US and allied forces in August 2021, with about 490,000 seeking asylum through UNHCR due to the absence of a national refugee law.

“We conducted a verification exercise a year ago and ... around 110,000 have high-risk profiles and qualify for resettlement in a third country,” Afridi told Arab News.

He said these were people who could not return to Afghanistan due to “vulnerabilities and safety concerns.”

“There are journalists, human rights activists, religious minorities, ethnic minorities, musicians, singers, or some people who have worked in previous governments, or they are female only families,” the UNHCR official added.

“We spoke with the Pakistani government, urging them not to send these people back to Afghanistan as their lives are at risk,” Afridi said, adding that the UN agency had also requested that the Pakistan government establish a mechanism to allow these individuals to live in the country temporarily.

According to the foreign office, over 44,000 Afghans approved for relocation to Western countries were still in Pakistan, awaiting resettlement.

The resettlement program has been active since the 1980s, with over 20,000 vulnerable refugees sent to third countries since.