Thousands rally across Pakistan against Israeli airstrikes in Gaza, urge Muslim states to act

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Updated 11 April 2025
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Thousands rally across Pakistan against Israeli airstrikes in Gaza, urge Muslim states to act

Thousands rally across Pakistan against Israeli airstrikes in Gaza, urge Muslim states to act
  • Jamaat-e-Islami, the country’s key religio-political party, called the protest across Pakistan
  • JI chief urges building a strong pro-Palestine movement and preparing for a nationwide strike

KARACHI: Thousands of supporters of a prominent Pakistani religio-political party poured into the streets of Lahore and other major cities on Friday to protest Israel’s military strikes in Gaza, with their leaders demanding urgent action from Muslim states to stop the bloodshed.

The call for nationwide demonstrations came from Jamaat-e-Islami (JI) after intensified conflict in Gaza, which began in October 2023. International efforts for a ceasefire have not held, with reports indicating the Palestinian death toll has surpassed 50,000, with a significant number of women and children among the casualties.

Pakistan has long advocated for an independent Palestinian state based on pre-1967 borders with Al-Quds Al-Sharif as its capital and does not recognize Israel.

Addressing a large gathering in Lahore, the JI chief, Hafiz Naeem-ur-Rehman, urged Muslim leaders to get united.

“Liberating this occupied land is the duty of every Muslim,” he said. “When our paths are blocked [as individuals], it becomes the responsibility of [Muslim] rulers and their armies. Even a small step forward can lead to a ceasefire.”

In his speech, Rehman emphasized the historical and ideological connections between Pakistan and Palestine, remembering how his country's founder, Muhammad Ali Jinnah, made them clear.

“When Israel was imposed as an illegitimate entity [over Palestinian territory and people] in 1948, Quaid-e-Azam [Jinnah] said that Israel was the illegitimate child of the West, a tool created for their use,” he continued.

The JI chief also highlighted the engagement of Dr. Muhammad Iqbal, Pakistan’s national poet-philosopher, with the Palestinian issue, mentioning his attendance at a conference in Palestine in 1931.

“That is the foundation of Pakistan’s connection with Palestine, and it was a stated policy of our country that we promised never to recognize Israel,” he added. “So, if anyone talks about a two-state solution, or speaks in favor of Israel in secrecy, we want to make it clear that there is only one state — the state of Palestine — and it is under occupation.”

Rehman called for sustained public pressure on governments around the world, hoping it would force them to address the issue.

“Pressurize your government through public protest,” he said. “Protests have erupted in Bangladesh, in India and across Europe and America — people are rising. Don’t let this flame of resistance die. Be ready for the struggle.”

He maintained he would consult religious scholars and speak with other parties to unite for a powerful movement.

“We are already in communication with the Palestinian leadership. One day, we will call for a complete nationwide strike across Pakistan,” he said, appealing to traders and the general public to prepare for future mobilization and boycott of Israeli and Western products.

“We do not stand with the oppressors,” he continued. “The Palestinian resistance is legitimate under the UN Charter.”

Meanwhile, in Karachi, hundreds gathered outside the Bait-ul-Mukarram Mosque in the Gulshan-e-Iqbal neighborhood, where the city’s JI chief, Munem Zafar, addressed the protesters.

“The massacre in Gaza continues unabated. Zionist forces are committing genocide. Over 60,000 people have been martyred in the last 18 months,” he said, adding that 90 percent of Gaza’s infrastructure had been destroyed by Israeli airstrikes.

Zafar announced a “Solidarity with Gaza March” to be held in Karachi on April 13 along Sharah-e-Faisal, to be led by Rehman, the party’s central chief.

“We want to awaken the conscience of the Muslim rulers,” he said. “We urge families — children, elders, women — to join in large numbers.”

The party also called for a boycott of goods produced by companies supporting Israel.

Hundreds of protests were also held outside various mosques after the Friday prayer congregations in Karachi and other Pakistani cities on JI’s call.


Pakistan says will explore ‘new solutions’ in polio eradication as cases hit 19 in 2025

Pakistan says will explore ‘new solutions’ in polio eradication as cases hit 19 in 2025
Updated 12 sec ago
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Pakistan says will explore ‘new solutions’ in polio eradication as cases hit 19 in 2025

Pakistan says will explore ‘new solutions’ in polio eradication as cases hit 19 in 2025
  • Top polio official emphasizes maintaining efforts in both high-risk hotspots and better-performing areas
  • Polio eradication efforts in Pakistan face setbacks due to vaccine misinformation and militant attacks on health workers

KARACHI: Pakistan will adopt new approaches in its fight against polio as the country confirmed its 19th virus case of the year, the country’s top polio official said on Friday, stressing the need for accountability and innovation ahead of the next nationwide vaccination drive next month.

Pakistan recorded its 19th polio case of the year this week after a five-month-old child tested positive in the northwestern Lakki Marwat district. Pakistan and Afghanistan remain the only two countries where polio is still endemic. 

Islamabad made significant progress in curbing the virus, with annual cases falling from around 20,000 in the early 1990s to just eight in 2018. Pakistan reported six cases in 2023 and only one in 2021, but the virus resurged sharply in 2024 with 74 reported cases.

“We will work differently this year, moving beyond traditional approaches and exploring new solutions,” said Ayesha Raza Farooq, the Prime Minister’s Focal Person on Polio, after chairing a meeting of the National Polio Management Team in Islamabad.

The meeting brought together the National Emergency Operations Center, provincial polio coordinators and international eradication partners to review the situation across all four provinces.

“The spread of the poliovirus has increased, but work is continuing toward improvement,” Farooq added. “The period before a polio campaign is crucial for results.”

Health authorities will begin the next nationwide polio vaccination campaign on September 1, with a special focus on high-risk and priority areas including southern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa.

Farooq directed teams in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, the worst hit province with 12 of the total 19 cases, to address security challenges in its southern districts and emphasized maintaining efforts in both high-risk hotspots and better-performing areas.

“Polio eradication requires real accountability at every level,” she said, adding that collaboration with routine immunization programs remained critical.

Pakistan’s efforts to eradicate the virus have been repeatedly undermined by vaccine misinformation and resistance from some religious hard-liners who claim that immunization is a foreign plot to sterilize Muslim children or a cover for Western espionage. Militant groups also frequently target polio vaccination teams, and the security personnel assigned to protect them, particularly in the KP and Balochistan provinces.


Saudi Arabia leads Pakistan’s July worker remittances as inflows hit $3.2 billion

Saudi Arabia leads Pakistan’s July worker remittances as inflows hit $3.2 billion
Updated 58 min 33 sec ago
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Saudi Arabia leads Pakistan’s July worker remittances as inflows hit $3.2 billion

Saudi Arabia leads Pakistan’s July worker remittances as inflows hit $3.2 billion
  • Steady inflows from Gulf economies, led by Saudi Arabia and UAE, have remained crucial for Pakistan’s balance of payments
  • According to State Bank of Pakistan, Saudi Arabia led all contributors during FY25, with remittances totaling $9.34 billion

KARACHI: Saudi Arabia was the top source of Pakistani workers’ remittances in July, as overall inflows reached $3.2 billion, up 7.4 percent year-on-year, the State Bank of Pakistan (SBP) said on Friday.

Remittances are a key pillar of Pakistan’s external finances, providing hard currency that supports household consumption, helps narrow the current-account gap and bolsters foreign exchange reserves. The steady pipeline from Gulf economies, led by Saudi Arabia and the UAE, has remained crucial for Pakistan’s balance of payments.

The SBP said July inflows were “mainly sourced from Saudi Arabia ($823.7 million), United Arab Emirates ($665.2 million), United Kingdom ($450.4 million) and United States of America ($269.6 million).”

“Workers’ remittances recorded an inflow of $ 3.2 billion during July 2025,” the central bank said in a statement.

Pakistan received a record $38.3 billion in workers’ remittances during the last fiscal year, reporting an increase of about $8 billion over a 12-month period that exceeds the country’s ongoing $7 billion International Monetary Fund (IMF) loan program.

According to the State Bank of Pakistan, Saudi Arabia led all contributors during FY25, with remittances totaling $9.34 billion, followed by the United Arab Emirates at $7.83 billion, the United Kingdom at $5.99 billion and the United States at $3.72 billion.

Remittances from Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries excluding Saudi Arabia and the UAE totaled $3.71 billion, while EU countries contributed $3.53 billion.

Economists say remittances function as a stabilizer for Pakistan’s economy, helping millions of households manage expenses while giving policymakers breathing room during periods of tight external financing conditions. With traditional sources in the Middle East still accounting for the bulk of transfers, the trajectory of regional labor demand remains central to Pakistan’s outlook on remittance flows.


Court sentences three men to five years in prison amid Pakistan crackdown on illegal currency trade

Court sentences three men to five years in prison amid Pakistan crackdown on illegal currency trade
Updated 08 August 2025
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Court sentences three men to five years in prison amid Pakistan crackdown on illegal currency trade

Court sentences three men to five years in prison amid Pakistan crackdown on illegal currency trade
  • The crackdown was prompted by a slide in worth of rupee, which fell to a 22-month low of Rs284.97 against the US dollar last month
  • Burdened by over $58 billion in imports in last fiscal year, Pakistan faces severe inflationary pressure whenever greenback strengthens

ISLAMABAD: A Pakistani court has sentenced three men each to five years in prison for running an illegal currency exchange, the Federal Investigation Agency said on Friday, amid a widening crackdown on illegal currency trade.

Pakistan authorities have been cracking down on currency smugglers and illegal exchanges since a depreciation in worth of rupee, which fell to a 22-month low of Rs284.97 against the US dollar last month and raised widespread concerns.

The crackdown followed a meeting of Maj. Gen. Faisal Naseer, an official of the Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI), Pakistan’s powerful military-run spy agency, with exchange company representatives in Islamabad on July 22.

On Friday, a local court in the southern Pakistani district of Sukkur sentenced three accused, Qamar Shahzad, Muhammad Zeeshan and Zubair Asghar, to five years in prison and imposed a fine of Rs1 million ($3,517) on each, according to the FIA.

“The accused were found involved in illegal currency exchange,” the FIA said, adding it had seized Rs1 million, $20,700 and 147,000 Saudi riyals from the accused persons.

“The court has ordered the deposit of the recovered currency in national kitty.”

Pakistan operates a multi-tiered currency market, with rates diverging between the official interbank channel, the open market, and an unregulated “grey market” where many traders and informal hawala dealers operate.

Burdened by over $58 billion in imports in the last fiscal year, Pakistan faces severe inflationary pressure whenever the dollar strengthens. The rupee has lost 2 percent of its value between January and July this year, despite Pakistan’s current account recording a surplus of $2.1 billion, according to central bank data.

On July 27, the FIA said it had arrested five suspects involved in illegal currency exchange and transfer of money in the southwestern Balochistan province that borders Iran and Afghanistan.

Officials seized 684,000 Pakistani rupees, 230.5 million Iranian rials, more than 135,000 Afghanis, 700 US dollars, 200 Saudi riyals and 150 Australian dollars during raids in Balochistan’s Quetta and Chaman.

“Cheque books, hawala-hundi receipts and bank deposit slips were also recovered from the suspects,” the FIA said.

“The suspects were involved in currency exchange without a license. They could not give a satisfactory answer to the authorities regarding the recovered currency.”


Pakistan’s Punjab extends summer break for schools until Aug. 31

Pakistan’s Punjab extends summer break for schools until Aug. 31
Updated 08 August 2025
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Pakistan’s Punjab extends summer break for schools until Aug. 31

Pakistan’s Punjab extends summer break for schools until Aug. 31
  • Authorities did not specify a reason for the decision which comes amid an intense monsoon season
  • The province also declared an early summer break for schools in late May due to prolonged heatwave

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s most populous Punjab province has extended summer vacations for all private and public schools till Aug. 31, the provincial government said on Thursday.

While the reason for the decision was not explicitly mentioned by authorities, it comes amid intense monsoon showers that have flooded several Punjab cities in recent weeks.

The province has reported the highest number of deaths at 164 and 580 injuries since the rains first began on June 26, according to the National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA).

The rains and floods have also caused widespread destruction of homes and swept away livestock and crops.

“It is hereby notified that summer vacations in all public and private schools in province of Punjab are extended w.e.f (with effect from) Aug. 14 to Aug. 31, 2025,” the Punjab School Education Department said in a notification.

“All schools (public and private) shall reopen on Monday, Sep. 1, 2025 resuming a full/normal week for all classes.”

The decision marks a change in the academic calendar of schools which were previously scheduled to open on Aug 14.

Punjab Education Minister Rana Sikandar Hayat also confirmed the decision in a post on X, but did not mention the reason either.

Pakistan has seen erratic changes in its weather patterns which have led to frequent heat waves, untimely rains, cyclones and droughts in recent years. Scientists have blamed the events on human-driven climate change.

The Punjab government also declared an early summer break in late May for all public and private schools due to a prolonged heatwave across the province.


Pakistan top court declines real estate giant’s plea seeking to stay auction of properties

Pakistan top court declines real estate giant’s plea seeking to stay auction of properties
Updated 08 August 2025
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Pakistan top court declines real estate giant’s plea seeking to stay auction of properties

Pakistan top court declines real estate giant’s plea seeking to stay auction of properties
  • The court order comes a day after authorities auctioned three of six properties linked to Bahria Town, its chairman
  • Pakistan’s anti-graft body says auction is part of efforts to recover ‘defrauded funds’ from a court-approved plea bargain

KARACHI: Pakistan’s top court on Friday turned down a plea by real estate giant, Bahria Town, that sought to stay auction of its commercial properties in an ongoing graft case that has caught widespread public attention.

The development came a day after Pakistan’s National Accountability Bureau (NAB) said it had auctioned three out of six properties, owned by Bahria Town and its founder Malik Riaz Hussain, saying the move was part of its efforts to recover “defrauded funds” from a court-approved plea bargain tied to a £190 million settlement with Britain’s National Crime Agency (NCA).

The auction was held after the Islamabad High Court (IHC) this week dismissed a petition by the firm against the planned auction of its properties by the anti-corruption watchdog. The six properties up for auction include one in Islamabad and five in Rawalpindi.

NAB said the sale aims to recover unpaid amounts from the settlement deal involving Hussain, the founder of Bahria Town who has spoken publicly for months about being pressured due to “political motives” and facing financial losses as NAB opens cases against his property development projects across Pakistan.

“The decision on the stay order will not be one-sided. We will decide after hearing the other side,” Justice Aminuddin Khan, who headed a three-member Supreme Court bench, said during a hearing in Islamabad on Friday.

The six properties are among a total of eight real estate assets that Hussain previously handed over to NAB after entering a plea bargain with the watchdog.

“Now the accused says the plea bargain was not voluntary but made under pressure,” Justice Naeem Akhtar Afghan noted, saying the real estate giant had filed a miscellaneous application, but its main appeals had not been fixed for hearing.

In the past, Hussain also requested the NAB chairman to cancel the plea bargain.

“After the application to cancel the plea bargain, the case has returned to its initial stage,” Justice Afghan said, adding the properties will be confiscated once the accused is convicted.

Farooq H Naik, the counsel representing Bahria Town, said the company’s request to cancel the plea bargain arrangement and the NAB reference had both been pending before courts.

Of the six Bahria Town properties up for auction, one in Islamabad and two in Rawalpindi were sold, while three remained unsold due to a lack of qualifying bids, according to NAB.

Rubaish Marquee in Islamabad fetched Rs508 million ($1.78 million), Rs20 million above its reserve price. Conditional offers of Rs876 million and Rs881.5 million were received for two corporate offices in Rawalpindi.

“NAB remains committed to transparent recovery of public funds and strict enforcement of accountability laws,” the bureau said in a statement.

The sales are part of a widening crackdown on Hussain, once regarded as Pakistan’s most influential businessman for his real estate ventures and connections with political, media and military elites.

In recent months, Information Minister Attaullah Tarar has accused Hussain and Bahria Town of involvement in laundering billions of rupees, allegations they have yet to address publicly. Hussain has previously said he is facing politically motivated pressure and financial losses due to multiple NAB cases.

The controversy is closely linked to the Al-Qadir Trust case, in which former prime minister Imran Khan and his wife were accused of receiving land from Hussain in exchange for favors. Khan, who denies wrongdoing, was sentenced in January to 14 years in prison over the case.

The UK’s NCA said in 2019 that Hussain had agreed to hand over £190 million to settle a civil investigation into whether the funds were the proceeds of crime. The assets were to be returned to Pakistan, but prosecutors say Khan’s government used the money to pay fines imposed on Hussain for illegal land acquisitions in Karachi.

Hussain, who has not appeared before NAB despite multiple summons, denies the allegations and says his property empire is on the brink of collapse. In a statement on social media platform X on Tuesday, he said Bahria Town’s bank accounts had been frozen, vehicles seized, and dozens of employees detained, forcing operations to a near standstill.

Earlier this year, NAB warned the public against investing in Hussain’s new real estate venture to build luxury apartments in Dubai.