Ramadan on patrol: Pakistani policeman balances duty with devotion in Islamabad

Malik Mohammed Ikram, who leads a team of three other cops, says the iftar hour is particularly ‘unpredictable.’ (AN photo)
Malik Mohammed Ikram, who leads a team of three other cops, says the iftar hour is particularly ‘unpredictable.’ (AN photo)
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Updated 18 March 2025
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Ramadan on patrol: Pakistani policeman balances duty with devotion in Islamabad

Ramadan on patrol: Pakistani policeman balances duty with devotion in Islamabad
  • Constable Malik Mohammed Ikram says iftar hour is particularly ‘unpredictable’ as they are often caught up in patrolling, chasing suspects or responding to emergencies
  • The 47-year-old, who always wanted to contribute to society’s betterment, says iftar and sahoor are secondary and duty to the public comes first

ISLAMABAD: As the daylight fades and residents sit together to break their fast amid a call for Maghreb prayer in the Pakistani capital of Islamabad, Constable Malik Mohammed Ikram breaks his fast with a date and water while on duty.

The 47-year-old, who has been serving in the Islamabad police for 18 years and is currently part of their Dolphin patrolling squad, says he is proud of efficiently carrying out his duty, which takes on a different meaning during Ramadan, testing not only his endurance but also his devotion to faith.

Ikram’s schedule remains the same during Ramadan as any other day of the year, with an eight-hour shift varying between 7 a.m. to 3 p.m., 3 p.m. to 11 p.m. or 11 p.m. to 7 a.m. But the fatigue feels different while fasting, he said.




A police officer stands guard during the holy month of Ramadan in Islamabad. (AN photo)

“Indeed, performing our duties during Ramadan feels different,” he told Arab News, while on duty in Islamabad’s G-6 sector within the remits of the Aabpara Police Station.

“Nonetheless, it is our responsibility and our profession. We can choose to work with a positive attitude or do it out of obligation, so we try to do it happily.”

The capital city police department does not provide any formal iftar or sahoor meals but offers whatever it can to on-duty staff, according to Ikram. The policemen manage to have quick sahoor meals before heading out for duty on most days, and if not, they swing by a government mess or food stalls at the nearby G-6 market for a quick bite.

FASTFACT

According to Pakistani policeman Malik Mohammed Ikram, being patient is part of the job, particularly during Ramadan, as fatigue and hunger can flare up tempers that hamper their duty.

Ikram, who leads a team of three other cops, says the iftar hour is particularly “unpredictable” as they often break their fast with dates, water and fruit while being caught up in patrolling, chasing suspects or responding to emergency calls.

“If we’re on duty during iftar, we have to manage on our own,” he said. “If there’s a station nearby, we go there, but there are times when the adhan is being called and we’re going for some task.”

Ikram recalls how he received an emergency call from the police control room about an accident near Zero Point just as he was about to break his fast this month and had to rush to the site to respond to the situation.

“If we are having iftar and we get a call regarding an emergency case or an accident, we have to leave everything and respond to the call,” he explained. “We also need to report our response time to the control room, letting them know how long it took us to respond after receiving the call.”

He said he was able to save a young man’s life following that call from the police control room.

“I felt really happy from the bottom of my heart,” he said, reminiscing on moments like this that remind him why he joined the police force. “The life of the man was saved due to timely treatment.”

For policemen, being patient is part of the job, particularly during Ramadan, as fatigue and hunger can flare up tempers that hamper their duty, according to Ikram.

“Our profession and the nature of duties are such that anger cannot work here, and we have to be patient,” he said.

Recalling another incident, Ikram said they were stationed near a traffic signal in the G6 sector when his team signaled for two youths riding a bike to stop, but they sped up and were eventually stopped after a long chase.

“We verified and found out that their bike was stolen. That’s why they tried to flee,” he said, highlighting that his team calmly handled the situation even though it could have turned tense.

Ikram says he is often assigned to the Red Zone, a high-security area housing key government buildings, embassies and key institutions, where shifts can run up to 16 hours even during Ramadan, but he accepts it as part of his calling.

The officer, whose other family members have also served in the police, says he always wanted to contribute to society’s betterment, which was the reason he joined the force.

“If there is an emergency during Ramadan, duty comes first,” he said. “I took up this profession because firstly, it’s all about rizq (livelihood) — Allah had written our rizq in this profession. Secondly, it was my personal choice to join the Islamabad police.”

Looking back at his years of service, Ikram says he finds fulfillment in small yet powerful moments.

“Iftar and sahoor are secondary. Duty is our responsibility, and the government pays us for it. So, duty always comes first,” he said as he picked up his radio and moved on with the routine patrol while fasting.

 


UK, Ireland to set out new framework to address legacy of Northern Ireland’s ‘Troubles’

UK, Ireland to set out new framework to address legacy of Northern Ireland’s ‘Troubles’
Updated 11 sec ago
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UK, Ireland to set out new framework to address legacy of Northern Ireland’s ‘Troubles’

UK, Ireland to set out new framework to address legacy of Northern Ireland’s ‘Troubles’

BELFAST: Britain and Ireland will jointly announce a new framework on Friday to address the legacy of decades of sectarian violence in Northern Ireland and replace a controversial British law that offered amnesties to ex-soldiers and militants. The agreement will fulfil a pledge by Prime Minister Keir Starmer to repeal the previous Conservative government’s Legacy Act, a section of which offered immunity from prosecution for those who cooperate with a new investigative body — a provision that was ruled incompatible with human rights law.

The law halted inquests into cases from the three decades of conflict between Irish nationalist militants seeking a united Ireland, pro-British “loyalist” paramilitaries and the British military. It was opposed by victims’ families, all political parties in Northern Ireland, including pro-British and Irish nationalist groups, and the Irish government, which brought a legal challenge against Britain at the European Court of Human Rights.

Britain’s Northern Ireland Minister Hilary Benn said this month that the plans would significantly reform the contested new investigative body, make it capable of referring cases for potential prosecution and give it independent oversight.

A separate information recovery body, as envisioned in a 2014 UK-Irish legacy agreement that was never implemented and overridden by the Legacy Act, will also be included, a source familiar with the framework said. Dublin has said it would revisit its legal challenge against Britain if a new framework is put in place and is human rights-compliant. Starmer’s government has sought to reset relations with Ireland that were strained during Brexit.

The previous Conservative government defended its approach by arguing that prosecutions linked to the events of up to 57 years ago — also known as the Troubles — were increasingly unlikely to lead to convictions and that it wanted to draw a line under the conflict. While some trials have collapsed in recent years, the first former British soldier to be convicted of an offense since the peace deal was given a suspended sentence in 2023. The trial of the sole British soldier charged with murder over the 1972 “Bloody Sunday” killings of 13 unarmed Catholic civil rights marchers also began this week. 


Strong quake off Russia Far East, tsunami alert issued

Strong quake off Russia Far East, tsunami alert issued
Updated 4 min 30 sec ago
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Strong quake off Russia Far East, tsunami alert issued

Strong quake off Russia Far East, tsunami alert issued
  • The US Pacific Tsunami Warning Center issued an alert for possible hazardous waves along nearby coastlines, but said several hours later that the threat had passed

MOSCOW: A powerful 7.8-magnitude earthquake struck off the coast of Russia’s far eastern Kamchatka peninsula early Friday, rocking buildings and prompting authorities to issue a tsunami alert, later lifted.

Videos posted on Russian social media showed furniture and light fixtures shaking in homes, while another showed a parked car rocking back and forth on a street.

The quake struck 128 kilometers (80 miles) east of the region’s capital, Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky, and at a shallow depth of 10 kilometers (six miles), the US Geological Survey (USGS) reported.

The local branch of Russia’s state geophysical service gave a lower estimated magnitude of 7.4. It reported at least five aftershocks.

The US Pacific Tsunami Warning Center issued an alert for possible hazardous waves along nearby coastlines, but said several hours later that the threat had passed.

“This morning is once again testing the resilience of Kamchatka residents,” the governor of the region, Vladimir Solodov, said on Telegram.

“There are currently no reports of damage. I ask everyone to remain calm,” he added.

The Kamchatka peninsula lies on a tectonic belt known as the Ring of Fire, which surrounds most of the Pacific Ocean, and is a hotspot for seismic activity.

In July, an 8.8-magnitude mega-quake off the region’s coast triggered a tsunami that swept part of a coastal village into the sea and sparked warnings around the Pacific.

 

 


US lawmaker wants Trump to restrict Chinese flights over rare earths access

US lawmaker wants Trump to restrict Chinese flights over rare earths access
Updated 6 min 43 sec ago
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US lawmaker wants Trump to restrict Chinese flights over rare earths access

US lawmaker wants Trump to restrict Chinese flights over rare earths access
  • US airlines are flying only a percentage of flights to China they are allowed to operate given persistent low demand between the two nations

WASHINGTON: The chair of a US House of Representatives committee on China on Thursday called on the Trump administration to restrict or suspend Chinese airline landing rights in the US unless Beijing restores full access to rare earths and magnets.

Representative John Moolenaar, a Republican, also said the US should review export control policies governing the sale of commercial aircraft, parts and maintenance services to China.

“These steps would send a clear message to Beijing that it cannot choke off critical supplies to our defense industries without consequences to its own strategic sectors,” Moolenaar said.

Rare earths are a group of 17 elements used in products from lasers and military equipment to magnets found in electric vehicles, wind turbines and consumer electronics. China is sensitive about rare earths and its control over supply, adding several rare earth items and magnets to its export restriction list in April in retaliation for US tariff hikes.

US airlines are flying only a percentage of flights to China they are allowed to operate given persistent low demand between the two nations.

Reports suggest China is consideringbuying as many as 500 Boeing airplanes as part of trade talks with the US

On Wednesday, the US Transportation Department approved another six-month extension that allowed United Airlines, American Airlines and Delta Air Lines to fly just 48 total flights weekly to China out of 119 approved. Chinese carriers fly an equivalent number to the US.

A group representing the US carriers declined to comment. The Chinese Embassy in Washington did not immediately comment.

Last year, major US airlines and aviation unions successfully urged former President Joe Biden’s administration to pause approvals of additional flights between China and the US, citing ongoing “anti-competitive policies of the Chinese government.”

Flights between China and the US were a point of contention during the COVID-19 pandemic.


Walt Disney executives to meet with Kimmel, assess talk show future, Bloomberg News reports

Walt Disney executives to meet with Kimmel, assess talk show future, Bloomberg News reports
Updated 23 min 3 sec ago
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Walt Disney executives to meet with Kimmel, assess talk show future, Bloomberg News reports

Walt Disney executives to meet with Kimmel, assess talk show future, Bloomberg News reports
  • The suspension of Kimmel’s show marked the latest action taken against media figures

Walt Disney executives will meet with suspended talk-show host Jimmy Kimmel to discuss the future of his program, Bloomberg News reported on Thursday, citing three people with knowledge of the matter.

The parties will discuss whether there is a way to return “Jimmy Kimmel Live” to the air, the report said.

Disney-owned ABC said on Wednesday it was pulling Kimmel’s show off the air over comments by the late-night show host about the assassination of conservative activist Charlie Kirk.

The suspension of Kimmel’s show marked the latest action taken against media figures, academic workers, teachers and corporate employees over their remarks about Kirk following his assassination.

Kimmel, who has frequently targeted US President Donald Trump on his late-night comedy show, drew fire for remarks he made about the killing in his monologue.

“We hit some new lows over the weekend, with the MAGA gang desperately trying to characterize this kid who murdered Charlie Kirk as anything other than one of them, and doing everything they can to score political points from it,” Kimmel said.

His comments led to a response from Federal Communications Commission Chair Brendan Carr, who urged local broadcasters to stop airing “Jimmy Kimmel Live” on ABC.

Carr suggested that the commission could open an investigation and that broadcasters could potentially be fined or lose their licenses if there was a pattern of distorted comment.

Trump, during a state visit to Britain on Thursday, said Kimmel had been punished for saying “a horrible thing” about Kirk, a close political ally of the president who is credited with building support for Trump among young conservative voters.

Disney did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment.

 


US again vetoes UN Security Council resolution demanding permanent Gaza ceasefire

US again vetoes UN Security Council resolution demanding permanent Gaza ceasefire
Updated 18 September 2025
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US again vetoes UN Security Council resolution demanding permanent Gaza ceasefire

US again vetoes UN Security Council resolution demanding permanent Gaza ceasefire
  • It marks the 6th time the US has used its power of veto to block such a move since the war between Israel and Hamas began nearly 2 years ago
  • The other 14 members of the council voted in favor of the resolution, which was tabled by its 10 elected members

NEW YORK: The US on Thursday vetoed a UN Security Council resolution that called for an immediate and permanent ceasefire in Gaza, as well as the lifting of all restrictions on humanitarian aid deliveries to the enclave.

The draft resolution, tabled by the 10 elected members of the 15-member council, received 14 votes in favor. It was the sixth time since the start of the war between Israel and Hamas nearly two years ago that the US has used the power of veto it holds as one of the five permanent members of the council.

The veto was delivered by US representative Morgan Ortagus and the resolution therefore failed despite the near-unanimous support.

Washington has consistently argued that UN ceasefire resolutions risk undermining peace negotiations on the ground, as well as Israel’s ability to take action against Hamas and its “right to self-defense.” Critics accuse US authorities of shielding Israel from international accountability.

“Colleagues, US opposition to this resolution will come as no surprise,” Ortagus, a senior US policy adviser, said before the vote.

“It fails to condemn Hamas or recognize Israel’s right to defend itself, and it wrongly legitimizes the false narratives benefiting Hamas, which have sadly found currency in this council.”

Other council members “ignored” US warnings about the “unacceptable” language and instead adopted “performative action designed to draw a veto,” she added.

The text of the resolution expressed alarm at reports of a growing famine and worsening humanitarian crisis in Gaza, condemned the use of starvation as a weapon of war, and voiced concern over the expansion of Israeli military operations. It also reaffirmed obligations on states under the principles of international law, including the protection of civilians and the rejection of forced displacements.

It demanded three key measures: an immediate, unconditional and permanent ceasefire agreement respected by all parties; the immediate and unconditional release of all hostages held by Hamas and other groups; and the lifting of all Israeli restrictions on the entry and distribution of humanitarian aid, alongside the restoration of essential services in Gaza. It asked the UN secretary-general to report back to the council within 30 days on implementation of the resolution.

Algeria, one of the leading proponents of the resolution, expressed dismay at another failure by the Security Council to act on the situation in Gaza, and apologized to Palestinians for not doing enough to save the lives of civilians.

The country’s ambassador to the UN, Amar Bendjama, said that despite the failure to pass the resolution, “14 courageous members of this Security Council raised their voice. They have acted with conscience and in the cause of the international public opinion.”