Hindu devotees gather in Pakistan’s southwest to celebrate Hinglaj Mata festival

The picture posted on April 7, 2018, shows Hindu devotees celebrating the Hinglaj Mata festival at the Hinglaj Mata temple in Pakistan's Lasbela district. (Hinglaj Mata Mandir, Balochistan/Facebook)
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Updated 30 April 2023
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Hindu devotees gather in Pakistan’s southwest to celebrate Hinglaj Mata festival

  • Over 100,000 Hindu men, women and children annually visit an ancient cave temple in Balochistan to celebrate the festival
  • The sacred Hindu temple is also popular with people in India who long to visit the place to pay respect, perform religious rituals

QUETTA: With the rugged mountains of Pakistan’s southwestern Balochistan province to their left and a long road ahead, thousands of Hindu men, women, and children trudge along with water coolers in their hands and their belongings over their backs to reach the ancient Hinglaj Mata temple.

The ancient cave temple, located in Balochistan’s mountainous Hingol area in Lasbela district, is over 5,000 years old. It comes alive every year during the three-day Hinglaj Mata festival, arguably Pakistan’s largest Hindu festival, which attracts over 100,000 devotees from all parts of the country.




Hindu pilgrims are pictured climbing down the stairs of the Hinglaj Mata temple during the three-day Hinglaj festival in Pakistan's Lasbela district on April 28, 2023. (AN photo)

Pakistan, which gained independence from the British in 1947, is home to over 4.5 million Hindus. The festival, which began on Friday, will conclude today, Sunday, after three days of high priests chanting mantras and beseeching Hindu gods to accept the offerings of the devotees and bestow them with peace and prosperity.

According to Hindu mythology, Lord Vishnu cut up the body of the Hindu goddess Sati into 50 pieces, which fell to the earth. Her head, it is said, fell at Hinglaj, and it has since been the site of revered pilgrimage. According to another popular Hindu belief, Hinglaj Mata, a deity, came to fight against the oppressive monarch of Hingol. She fought and defeated the brutal tyrant and continued to live in the area.

Vesemal Kidwani, who is managing the annual festival as the general secretary of Hinglaj Welfare Society, has been visiting the site for the past 22 years.

“Hinglaj Mata temple is the holiest site for the entire Hindu community in the world, and we are lucky that this site is situated in Pakistan’s Balochistan province,” he told Arab News.

“Hundreds of thousands of devotees come to this site by walking about five kilometers, but you can see a smile on their face because they are optimistic that they will get something from this religious site,” he added.




The picture posted on April 13, 2017, shows Hindu devotees celebrating the Hinglaj Mata festival at the Hinglaj Mata temple in Pakistan's Lasbela district. (Hinglaj Mata Mandir, Balochistan/Facebook)

Hindu elders said the temple was also famous across the border in India, and many people in the neighboring state longed to visit the place. Jaswant Singh, the former foreign minister of the neighboring state, visited the cave temple in 2006 to foster peaceful relations between the two countries.

Pakistan inaugurated the Kartarpura Corridor in 2019, a visa-free border crossing which provides India’s Sikh community access to the birthplace of the founder of their religion in Pakistan’s Punjab province. A Pakistani senator, Dinesh Kumar, said the government wanted to do something similar for Indian Hindus to facilitate their pilgrimage to Hinglaj.

“We wanted to open a Kartarpur-like corridor for the Hindu community to visit Hinglaj, but due to the tense Pakistan-India relations, we could not implement the plan,” he told Arab News.




The picture posted on June 20, 2018, shows Hindu devotees heading toward the ancient Hinglaj Mata temple in Balochistan’s mountainous Hingol area in the Lasbela district. (Hinglaj Mata Mandir, Balochistan/Facebook)

Kumar said Hindu pilgrims spent three days outside the temple under the sky to attend the festival, adding the government was now constructing lodges for them by spending about Rs500 million ($178,597).

“Annually, more than one million Hindu pilgrims visit this site,” he continued. “We have the complete infrastructure for this religious site situated in the mountains while more facilities will be provided to Hindu worshippers.”




The picture posted on April 13, 2017, shows Hindu devotees heading toward the ancient Hinglaj Mata temple in Balochistan’s mountainous Hingol area in the Lasbela district. (Hinglaj Mata Mandir, Balochistan/Facebook)

Balochistan is a volatile province that has been the site of a prolonged insurgency, with several separatist and militant groups operating in the region, which boasts vast mineral resources.

Ravi Kumar, 53, came all the way from Pakistan’s southern Hyderabad city located over 300 kilometers away from the temple. He praised the security measures taken by the authorities, saying they had enabled thousands of Hindu men, women, and children to perform their religious obligations with ease in the area.

“Our gods and goddess Rama, Shiva, and Parvati visited this shrine thousands of years ago to pay homage to Hinglaj Mata,” he added. “Hence, thousands of Hindu devotees come here annually for worship.”


Saudi business delegation to arrive in Pakistan today to explore investment opportunities 

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Saudi business delegation to arrive in Pakistan today to explore investment opportunities 

  • Saudi deputy investment minister, representatives of 30-35 Saudi companies part of delegation, says Pakistani minister
  • Saudi Arabia recently reaffirmed its commitment to expedite investment package for Pakistan worth $5 billion

ISLAMABAD: A high-level Saudi business delegation led by the Kingdom’s deputy investment minister will arrive in Pakistan today, Sunday, to explore investment opportunities in various economic sectors, Federal Minister for Petroleum Musadik Malik confirmed a day earlier. 

Pakistan and Saudi Arabia, who enjoy fraternal ties rooted deep in shared culture, religion and economic cooperation, have witnessed a flurry of official visits in recent weeks. Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Faisal bin Farhan traveled to Islamabad earlier in April before Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif’s two-day visit to the Kingdom to attend a World Economic Forum meeting where he met Saudi officials. 

“The Saudi Deputy Investment Minister is visiting Pakistan tomorrow,” Malik, who is also the focal person for Saudi-Pak bilateral collaboration, told reporters at a news conference in Lahore on Saturday. 

“He is bringing representatives from 30 to 35 companies whose CEOs are coming here.”

The Pakistani minister maintained his country had always cherished cordial ties with the Kingdom, though it had not managed to turn this “relationship of friendship into a relationship of stability and progress.”

He said Pakistan mostly discussed its financial concerns with the Saudi authorities and requested their support. However, the present government wanted to change that by focusing its bilateral conversations on mutually beneficial progress and development, not aid and assistance.

The minister said the two sides discussed a new refinery project during the recent engagements that would be used for export purposes to earn foreign revenue. Additionally, food security was also discussed to further strengthen Pakistan’s agricultural sector.

He informed that Prime Minister Sharif wanted the country’s “private sector to take the lead on this path to progress.”

“That is why Saudi investors have been invited to come here,” he continued. “They will sit with Pakistani companies and figure out ways to connect the Pakistani talent with the capital and investment needed at the international level for the IT revolution.”

Malik said the bilateral collaboration would primarily benefit small businesses, particularly the technology companies established by young students who were likely to get a significant amount of investment from Saudi entrepreneurs.

He expressed optimism that chemical, energy and agricultural companies would also gain an advantage from the ongoing bilateral collaboration between the two sides.

Apart from Pakistan and Saudi Arabia’s fraternal ties, the Kingdom is particularly important to Islamabad as it is home to over 2.7 million Pakistani expatriates and serves as the top source of remittances to the cash-strapped South Asian country.

Both Pakistan and Saudi Arabia have been closely working to increase bilateral trade and investment deals, and the Kingdom recently reaffirmed its commitment to expedite an investment package worth $5 billion.


Pakistan urges Hajj pilgrims to get vaccinated five days before departure to Saudi Arabia

Updated 11 min 31 sec ago
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Pakistan urges Hajj pilgrims to get vaccinated five days before departure to Saudi Arabia

  • Pakistani pilgrims require to vaccinate themselves against meningitis, seasonal influenza and polio
  • The vaccinations are done at Hajji camps during the day in all major cities around the country

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s religious affairs ministry on Saturday asked Hajj pilgrims to get themselves vaccinated at least five days before departure to Saudi Arabia to avoid inconvenience.
Hajj pilgrims must comply with strict vaccination requirements set by the Saudi Ministry of Health to ensure public safety during one of the world’s largest annual gatherings.
Mandatory vaccines include the meningitis shot, with additional recommendations for the seasonal influenza vaccine, while travelers from regions prone to yellow fever and polio must also provide corresponding immunization certificates.
These precautions are vital to prevent the spread of infectious diseases among millions of pilgrims converging in the kingdom from across the globe.
“The intending pilgrims are advised to visit their respective Hajji camps five days (from 9 am to 5 pm) before their flight to receive vaccination against meningitis, seasonal influenza and polio, besides obtaining a yellow card,” the state-owned Associated Press of Pakistan (APP) news agency quoted a statement issued by the ministry.
“This is a mandatory requirement,” it added.
Hajj is one of the Five Pillars of Islam, which include the core beliefs and practices every Muslim is expected to follow.
The pilgrimage is required to be performed at least once in a lifetime by all adult Muslims who meet the necessary conditions of health and financial stability to travel to and perform the rituals in Makkah.
Pakistan plans to launch the special Hajj flight operation from May 9 that will continue until June 10.


Security forces kill six militants in northwest Pakistan

Updated 04 May 2024
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Security forces kill six militants in northwest Pakistan

  • The intelligence-based operation was carried out in North Waziristan that led to an intense exchange of fire
  • The targeted militants were involved in violent attacks against security forces and civilians in the volatile area

ISLAMABAD: Pakistani security forces carried out an intelligence-based operation in North Waziristan tribal district in the early hours of Saturday, killing six militants after a heavy exchange of fire.
Located in the tribal belt along the Pakistan-Afghanistan border, North Waziristan has historically been known as a volatile region with significant militant activity.
The Pakistani military carried out several major operations in the area to dismantle militant networks and had success in reducing violence.
However, there have been reports of renewed militant activities in the region, prompting the Pakistani security forces to once again increase its focus on these challenges.
“On night 3/4 May 2024, security forces conducted an intelligence based operation in North Waziristan District, on reported presence of terrorists,” the military’s media wing, ISPR, said in a statement.
“During the conduct of operation, intense fire exchange took place between own troops and the terrorists,” it continued, adding that six militants were killed as a result.
The statement informed that the security forces also destroyed militant hideout during the operation and launched a “sanitization operation” in the area while trying to locate any remnants of the militant group.
“The killed terrorists remained actively involved in numerous terrorist activities against security forces as well as target killings of innocent civilians in the area,” the ISPR added.


Pakistan telecom authority seeks review of tax agency directive to block SIMs of non-filers

Updated 04 May 2024
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Pakistan telecom authority seeks review of tax agency directive to block SIMs of non-filers

  • Federal Board of Revenue issued a list of over half a million people who did not file tax returns in 2023
  • Reports indicate that telecom companies showed reluctance to block the SIMs of so many subscribers

ISLAMABAD: The Pakistan Telecommunication Authority (PTA) on Saturday showed reluctance to implement the instructions of the country’s tax collection body to block the SIMs of non-filers, while asking the authority to review its decision.
The development came after the Federal Board of Revenue (FBR) issued a list of over half a million people who did not file income tax returns for 2023, instructing the PTA to block their cellphone SIMs as a penalty.
However, media reports indicated that telecom companies were reluctant to carry out the directives affecting so many subscribers, prompting an official meeting on Friday in which the government decided to act against anyone opposing FBR’s orders.
Still, the PTA circulated a brief notification on Saturday, seeking a review of the FBR’s decision.
“On the issue of blocking of mobile phone SIMs under section 114-B of Income Tax Ordinance, 2001, Pakistan Telecommunication Authority (PTA) has communicated to FBR that the Income Tax General Order (ITGO) in the manner as referred to the Authority needs review before its execution by the concerned entity/entities,” the notification said.
“In the meanwhile, PTA has also initiated consultation with stakeholders on the subject issue,” it added.
Pakistan has traditionally faced the challenge of convincing people to file their tax returns.
However, the government has decided now to implement stringent measures to address the problem, particularly in the context of negotiations for a new International Monetary Fund (IMF) program.
The IMF has frequently urged Pakistan to enhance its revenue collection from non-filers as part of broader economic reforms to support social and development initiatives.
In response, the FBR is taking steps like blocking the SIM cards of non-filers and considering other punitive measures to enforce tax compliance and widen the tax net.


Pakistan’s deputy PM, Saudi foreign minister discuss Muslim world issues at OIC summit

Updated 04 May 2024
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Pakistan’s deputy PM, Saudi foreign minister discuss Muslim world issues at OIC summit

  • Ishaq Dar stresses the significance of ceasefire in Gaza during his meetings with the Kuwaiti, Qatari and Egyptian FMs
  • He also calls for more investment for his country and greater employment opportunities for Pakistanis in the Middle East

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s newly appointed Deputy Prime Minister Ishaq Dar met with Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Faisal bin Farhan and other Arab officials on the sidelines of the Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) summit in Gambia on Saturday, emphasizing collective action to address the problems confronting the Muslim world.
The OIC summit is being held against a backdrop of widespread anger over Israel’s military actions in Gaza, which have resulted in the death of nearly 35,000 Palestinians along with a massive destruction of hospitals, schools and residential neighborhoods in the area.
There has been a clear uptick in Islamophobic sentiments and incidents in different parts of the world, particularly since the outset of the conflict last year in October.
The Pakistani deputy prime minister arrived in Gambia on Wednesday to present his country’s perspective on a wide range of issue, including the war in Gaza and the rights situation in the Indian-administered Kashmir.
“Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Mohammad Ishaq Dar @MIshaqDar50 today met Foreign Minister of Saudi Arabia H.R.H. Prince Faisal bin Farhan Al Saud @FaisalbinFarhan in Banjul, The Gambia,” the foreign office said in a social media post.
“They discussed strengthening strategic and economic relations between Pakistan and Saudi Arabia and enhancing economic cooperation and investment,” it continued. “They called for a ceasefire in Gaza and emphasized the importance of OIC’s role in addressing challenges concerning the Muslim Ummah including Islamophobia and the situations in Palestine and Kashmir.”

Dar also held separate meetings with the foreign ministers of Kuwait, Egypt and Qatar.
During his conversation with Abdullah Ali Al Yahya of Kuwait, he discussed the possibility of further strengthening bilateral cooperation.
He noted the government wanted to transform the “traditionally fraternal ties with Kuwait into a mutually beneficial economic partnership.”
Dar also discussed further consolidation in trade and investment with Qatar’s Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al Thani while seeking more employment opportunities for young Pakistanis.
He emphasized on an immediate ceasefire in Gaza during his interactions for all Arab officials, commending Egypt’s role in supporting international humanitarian assistance for Palestine in his meeting the Egyptian Foreign Minister Sameh Hassan Shoukry.