Pakistan’s government, political parties condemn Israeli minister’s ‘provocative’ visit to Al-Aqsa compound

People descend steps as they walk away from the Dome of the Rock shrine at the Aqsa mosque compound (also known as the Temple Mount complex to Jews) in the old city of Jerusalem on January 3, 2023. (AFP)
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Updated 04 January 2023
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Pakistan’s government, political parties condemn Israeli minister’s ‘provocative’ visit to Al-Aqsa compound

  • Israel’s new extreme right national security minister visited the site amid fraught political environment, raising international concern
  • Pakistan’s foreign office condemned the development while asking the Jewish state to respect the sanctity of Muslim religious sites

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s foreign office and top political parties on Wednesday condemned an Israeli minister’s visit to Al-Aqsa Mosque compound, calling on the Jewish state to respect the sanctity of Muslim religious sites.

Israel’s new extreme-right national security minister, Itamar Ben-Gvir, angered Palestinians and US allies in the Arab world, when he visited the holy site on Tuesday.

The mosque is one of the most revered places of worship for Muslims around the world. Under a longstanding status quo, non-Muslims can visit the place at specific times but are not allowed to pray there.

Western governments, including Washington, condemned the incident as well, warning that such moves threatened the fragile status quo at Jerusalem’s holy sites.

“Pakistan strongly condemns the insensitive and provocative visit of the Israeli Minister of National Security to the Holy Al-Aqsa Mosque compound,” the foreign office said in a statement.

It added the violation of the mosque’s sanctity offended the religious sensitivities of Muslims around the world.

“Israel must cease its illegal actions and respect the sanctity of Muslim religious sites in the occupied Palestinian territories,” the statement maintained.

It reiterated that Pakistan supported a viable, independent and contiguous Palestinian state.

Pakistan does not recognize Israel and has repeatedly called for an independent Palestinian state based on “internationally agreed parameters” and the pre-1967 borders with Al-Quds Al-Sharif as its capital.

The country’s top political leaders also condemned the Israeli minister and called for a strong and united response from the international community against the “unnecessary provocation.”

“This is a sad incident, and it has hurt the sentiments of hundreds of millions of people,” former foreign minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi, who is also the vice chairman of the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party, told Arab News.

“The PTI condemns this act which is an unnecessary provocation, as it does not seem to have any purpose other than to provoke the Palestinians in particular and Muslims around the world in general,” he continued.

Senior leader of the ruling Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) party Raja Zafar-ul-Haq said the Israeli minister’s high-handedness had even forced his country’s allies to condemn his act.

“It is a good thing that Israel’s western allies and Muslim countries, who established friendly ties with it, also condemned the act,” he told Arab News.

Haq maintained “Israel’s atrocities against innocent unarmed Palestinians” had increased in recent years, adding the world should not just rely on words to condemn the Jewish state but also take practical steps to protect the people of Palestine.

Dr. Samia Raheel Qazi of the Jamaat-e-Islami party said “growing Israeli aggression” was putting the whole Middle Eastern region.

“All Muslim countries should cut their ties with Israel and come up with a unified response to stop Israel from killings innocent Palestinians,” she added.

Senior leader of the Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) Faisal Karim Kundi said his political faction had always stood by the people of Palestine.

“We, as a party, are supporting the Palestinian cause since the time of Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto and condemn this act which was taken to provoke and hurt the sentiments of hundreds of millions of Muslims,” he said.

“The international community, United Nations and all Islamic countries have to act, instead of just issuing condemnations,” Kundi added. “Otherwise, this situation may escalate to a dangerous level.”


India’s clash with Pakistan sees use of Chinese missiles, French jets, Israeli drones, and more

Updated 6 sec ago
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India’s clash with Pakistan sees use of Chinese missiles, French jets, Israeli drones, and more

  • Claims on exactly what was hit in latest standoff and where have differed widely, with neither side releasing many specific details
  • Making ongoing conflict even more confusing, the Internet has been “flooded with disinformation, false claims and multimedia 

BANGKOK: India’s missile and bomb strikes on targets in Pakistan and Azad Kashmir have spiked tensions between the two nuclear-armed neighbors, with Pakistan’s leader calling the attacks an act of war.

Claims on exactly what was hit and where have differed widely, with neither India nor Pakistan releasing many specific details. 

Making the ongoing conflict even more confusing, the Internet has been “flooded with disinformation, false claims, and manipulated photos and videos,” the Soufan Center think tank said in a research note Friday.

“This information warfare is compounded by both sides’ commitment to save face,” it said.

Still, some information can be gleaned from official statements and paired with what is known to gain greater insight into the clash:

Pakistan says it shot down 5 Indian planes involved in the attack

People look at a fuel tank of an aircraft in Wuyan, near Srinagar, on May 7, 2025. (AFP)

Hours after India’s attack early Wednesday, in retaliation for last month’s massacre of tourists in Indian-controlled Kashmir, Pakistan’s military spokesperson Lt. Gen. Ahmed Sharif claimed that the Pakistan air force had shot down five Indian attack aircraft: three French-made Rafales, a Russian-made SU30MKI and a Russian-made MiG-29.

He said that Pakistan’s air force suffered no casualties, and that all of its aircraft returned safely to base.

Pakistan’s Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif repeated the claim, saying that the Pakistan air force had the opportunity to shoot down 10 Indian planes, but exercised restraint and downed only the five that had fired on Pakistani targets.

He told Parliament that overall 80 Indian planes had been involved in the attack.

India, meantime, has not acknowledged any losses, though debris from three aircraft came down in at least three areas.

Did it happen that way?

India does have all three types of jets among its more-than 700 combat capable fighter aircraft, according to the International Institute for Strategic Studies’ Military Balance report.

All three aircraft are fighters with the capability of carrying bombs or missiles for ground attacks.

Pakistan and India have both said that their planes did not leave their home airspace, suggesting that if Pakistan’s account is accurate, rather than a dogfight in the skies over Kashmir, Pakistani pilots fired multiple air-to-air missiles over a long distance to take down Indian planes.

Presuming India fired back, even though Pakistan said none of its planes were hit, the aerial skirmish would have been quite the show. But there have been no eyewitness reports of it or video to emerge on social media.

What is known for sure is that Indian planes were in the air and attacked at least nine targets, and that debris from three has been found.

It’s also plausible that Pakistan used surface to air missiles to hit Indian planes — which the war in Ukraine has shown to be very effective and would not have meant risking any of its own planes.

Pakistan has a wide range of such missiles, primarily Chinese-made.

Test of Chinese tech?

People gather in front of the shattered glasses of a restaurant outside the Rawalpindi cricket stadium after an alleged drone was shot down in Rawalpindi on May 8, 2025. (AFP)

Pakistan’s air force includes American-made F-16s, the French Mirage, and the new Chinese-built J-10C, as well as the Chinese JF-17, which was developed jointly with Pakistan.

In addition to American air-to-air missiles, Pakistan also has several Chinese products in its arsenal, including the PL-12 and PL-15, both of which can be used to fire at targets beyond visual range.

Pakistan’s Foreign Minister Ishaq Dar told lawmakers it was the J-10C that shot down the Indian aircraft, raising the likelihood that Chinese-built missiles were also employed.

“It’s interesting that Pakistan is saying it is using Chinese jets that it has imported from China to shoot down Indian aircraft,” said Lisa Curtis, director of the Indo-Pacific security program at the Center for a New American Security, a Washington think tank.

In 2019, during the rivals’ previous military confrontation, “it was a Pakistani F-16 provided by the United States that was used to shoot down an Indian aircraft,” Curtis said in a conference call. “It’s interesting to see that Pakistan is relying more on its Chinese equipment than it did six years ago.”

The news convinced traders with shares in AVIC Chengdu Aircraft, which builds both the J-10C and J-17, to post large gains Wednesday and Thursday on the Shenzhen Stock Exchange.

Meanwhile, the stock of Dassault Aviation, the maker of the Rafale jet, which is among those Pakistan claims to have shot down, dropped sharply on Wednesday on the Paris Stock Exchange, though had recovered by close on Thursday.

What else is known?

India hasn’t talked about what assets were involved in the attacks. The Indian Defense Ministry said that the strikes targeted at least nine sites “where terrorist attacks against India have been planned.”

Pakistan, meantime, has said 31 civilians were killed, including women and children, in Pakistan-administered Kashmir and the country’s Punjab province, and that buildings hit included two mosques.

India did show video of eight of the strikes at a briefing on Wednesday. four in Pakistan-controlled Kashmir and four in Pakistan.

Both sides have talked about missile strikes, but it was clear from the video that bombs were also dropped on some targets, possibly from drones. In addition to claiming the five Indian aircraft shot down, Pakistan also said it downed an unspecified number of drones on Wednesday.

Indian officials said the strikes were precision attacks, and from the videos shown, it did appear that specific areas of installations were targeted with individual missiles or bombs, rather than widespread areas.

What happened next?

India sent multiple attack drones into Pakistan on Thursday, with Pakistan claiming to have shot down 29 of them.

The drones were identified as Israeli-made Harop, one of several in India’s inventory.

One drone damaged a military site near the city of Lahore and wounded four soldiers, and another hit the city of Rawalpindi, which is right next to the capital Islamabad., according to the Pakistani army.

India did not deny sending drones, but the Defense Ministry said its armed forces “targeted air defense radars and systems” in several places in Pakistan, including Lahore. It did not comment on the claims of 29 being shot down.

India similarly did not comment on Pakistani claims to have killed 50-60 soldiers in exchanges along the Line of Control, though it did say one of its soldiers was killed by shelling on Wednesday.

Pakistani Information Minister Attaullah Tarar, meantime, denied Indian accusations that Pakistan had fired missiles toward the Indian city of Amritsar, saying in fact an Indian drone fell in the city.


Indian state encouraging ‘disinformation’ to create pretext for aggression against Pakistan — FO

Updated 32 min 40 sec ago
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Indian state encouraging ‘disinformation’ to create pretext for aggression against Pakistan — FO

  • Wave of online disinformation risks further inflaming passions, escalating India-Pakistan conflict in an electronic fog of war
  • Indian media outlets have in past 24 hours claimed Delhi damaged Pakistan’s main port in Karachi, captured Pakistani capital

ISLAMABAD: The foreign office on Friday accused the Indian state of encouraging “disinformation” by its media to create a pretext for further aggression toward Pakistan and “exploit misinformation for political and military ends.”

As hostilities rose this week between India and Pakistan and they engaged in the worst fighting in decades, a wave of online disinformation on both sides is risking further inflaming passions and escalating the conflict in an electronic fog of war.

On May 6, multiple Indian news channels uploaded a widely shared video from Gaza showing a series of massive explosions and people running helter-skelter, with captions claiming it was footage of Indian air strikes against Pakistani targets.

Even India’s ruling Bharatiya Janata Party shared a collage of nine videos on May 7, claiming they were of India’s strikes on Pakistan. Boom, an Indian fact-checking organization, found that the first clip was from Iran’s October 2024 strikes on Israel and the third was from Israel’s air strikes on Gaza from October 2023.

Indian media outlets have over the past 24 hours claimed that Delhi has damaged or destroyed Pakistan’s main port in Karachi, captured the Pakistani capital of Islamabad and militants had taken over the southwestern city of Quetta. India media has also said Pakistan attacked multiple locations in parts of Indian-administered Kashmir and mainland India, reports Islamabad has rejected as “reckless.”

“The conduct of Indian media last night [Thursday] was extremely irresponsible and jingoistic, and frankly, disinformation is one thing, but the conduct of Indian media yesterday was indeed farcical, encouraged by the Indian state,” the foreign office spokesman said in a weekly press briefing. 

“Repeated pattern of leveling accusations against Pakistan without any credible investigation reflects a deliberate strategy to manufacture a pretext for aggression and to further destabilize the region. Such actions not only further endanger regional peace but also reveal a disturbing willingness to exploit misinformation for political and military ends.”

There has been misinformation on the Pakistani side too. After India said it had struck ‘terror camps’ at nine sites inside Pakistan, a years-old video resurfaced on social media that falsely claimed it depicted explosions at an Indian ammunition depot targeted by Pakistani forces. The footage has in fact appeared in news reports about a fire near an army garrison in the Pakistani city of Sialkot in March 2022. 

Social media users also shared an old clip falsely claiming it showed wreckage of an Indian warplane shot down by Pakistani troops. The video showed a fighter jet that crashed in western India after its pilots reported a technical snag.

A division of the Pakistani Economy Ministry denied Friday that it had appealed to its international partners “for more loans after heavy losses inflected by enemy” in a now-deleted post on X. Officials said the account had been hacked.

Meanwhile, New Delhi ordered X to block over 8,000 accounts in India, subject to potential penalties including significant fines and imprisonment of the company’s local employees.

“The orders include demands to block access in India to accounts belonging to international news organizations and prominent X users,” X’s Global Government Affairs team said on its account, adding it was unable to publish the executive orders at this time due to “legal restrictions.”

“The Indian government has not specified which posts from an account have violated India’s local laws. For a significant number of accounts, we did not receive any evidence or justification to block the accounts.”

The platform said it disagreed with the Indian government’s demands, describing the blockade of accounts as “contrary to the fundamental right of free speech.”

“X is exploring all possible legal avenues available to the company,” it said. “We encourage all users who are impacted by these blocking orders to seek appropriate relief from the courts.”

With inputs from AFP and Reuters.


Over 2,700 pilgrims complete training in Pakistan’s southwest to undertake Hajj journey

Updated 59 min 58 sec ago
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Over 2,700 pilgrims complete training in Pakistan’s southwest to undertake Hajj journey

  • Each of the devotees has attended two sessions to have better understanding of the Hajj rituals
  • Officials say supporting the devotees with everything, including accommodation, visas and tickets

QUETTA: More than 2,700 Pakistani pilgrims in the southwestern city of Quetta have completed training to undertake the annual pilgrimage that is expected in June, with officials voicing on Thursday their satisfaction over the arrangements made by Saudi authorities.
Nearly 89,000 Pakistani pilgrims are expected to travel to Saudi Arabia under the government scheme and another 23,620 Pakistanis will perform the pilgrimage through private tour operators. The total quota granted to Pakistan was 179,210, which could not be met.
Each pilgrim in Pakistan’s Balochistan province has attended two training sessions at Hajji Camp in Quetta, where they have also been facilitated with passports, visas and tickets for their travel to Saudi Arabia.
“Everything is running smoothly here because our instructors and the staff are fully cooperating with the pilgrims,” said Muhammad Jan, a 62-year-old resident of Balochistan’s Naseerabad district who will be performing Hajj under the government scheme for the first time.
Jan, who completed his two training sessions in February and April, was visiting Hajji Camp in Quetta to collect his travel documents.
“There are hundreds of thousands of people [at Hajj each year], so if there are some minor shortcomings, then I think [it’s not a big deal],” he told Arab News.
“But from what we have heard, their [Saudi government] management is very good, they are facilitating [pilgrims] very well.”
This year, only 2,779 pilgrims from 34 districts across Pakistan’s sparsely populated Balochistan province will travel to Saudi Arabia.
“We have thoroughly guided our Hajj pilgrims about traveling guidelines, Hajj rules set by the Saudi government and the Hajj rituals,” a senior official at the Hajji Camp, who was not authorized to speak to media, told Arab News.
“We are satisfied with the Hajj arrangements by the Saudi government and there is a colossal coordination between the Pakistan and Saudi governments regarding the Hajj pilgrimage.”
Abdul Hadi, who also came to collect his documents from the Pishin district, urged authorities to expedite the process as some pilgrims had to wait “for hours.”
“They should have set up all documents with numbers so the pilgrims could get their documents in sequence by standing in queues. Now we have to wait for our names, that is a time-consuming procedure,” the 65-year-old said.
“When [Pakistani] pilgrims go to Saudi Arabia, they must keep in view our country’s reputation and protect it. They must not do anything there that may disgrace our country.”
Faizullah Abid, a volunteer at Hajji Camp, said they had regularly been handing over passports, visas and tickets to pilgrims.
“If any pilgrim does not wish to go back home [before departure for Hajj], then they are being provided accommodation and food here, then the Ministry of Religious Affairs will transport them to airport in their vehicles,” he added.
Pakistan launched its Hajj flight operation on April 29 which will continue till May 31. Pilgrims will continue to leave for Madinah during the first 15 days of the operation and afterwards, they will land in Jeddah and travel directly to Makkah.


Pakistan says in ‘daily contact’ with Gulf states, China as hostilities rise with India

Updated 32 min 22 sec ago
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Pakistan says in ‘daily contact’ with Gulf states, China as hostilities rise with India

  • Defense minister says top officials speaking regularly with UAE, Saudi, Qatar, China
  • Saudi minister of state for foreign affairs to visit Pakistan on Friday after Delhi visit

ISLAMABAD: Defense Minister Khawaja Asif said on Friday Pakistan was in “daily contact” with Gulf countries including Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates (UAE) and Qatar, as well as longtime ally China, amid growing fears that the worst confrontation in two decades with India could escalate further.
Tensions between the nuclear-armed South Asian neighbors have been at fever-pitch since Wednesday when India struck multiple locations in Pakistan in response to a deadly Apr. 22 attack targeting tourists in Indian-administered Kashmir that killed 26. New Delhi blames the attack on Islamabad.
Pakistan, denying any involvement in the Kashmir violence, said it shot down five Indian fighter jets in retaliation for the Indian strikes. Violence has escalated since, with both Pakistan and India accusing each other of carrying out waves of drone attacks.
World powers from the US to China have urged the two countries to calm tensions.
“On a daily basis we are in contact with our brothers in the Arab Gulf,” Asif said while addressing the National Assembly. “Similarly our foreign minister, who is also the deputy prime minister, is in daily contact with UAE, Saudi, Qatar and even China.”
He added that Türkiye, China and Azerbaijan had “declared open support” for Pakistan while the rest of the world was staying “neutral” in the conflict. 
Asif said the Iranian foreign minister had visited Pakistan this week and “discussed various options” to de-escalate tensions.
US Vice President JD Vance on Thursday also reiterated the call for de-escalation.
“We want this thing to de-escalate as quickly as possible. We can’t control these countries, though,” he said in an interview on Fox News show “The Story with Martha MacCallum.”
The Saudi minister of state for foreign affairs Adel Al-Jubeir is scheduled to visit Pakistan on Friday. 
Al-Jubeir was in India on Thursday and met Indian Foreign Minister Subrahmanyam Jaishankar, who said he “shared India’s perspectives on firmly countering terrorism” with him.
The relationship between India and Pakistan has been fraught with tension since they gained independence from colonial Britain in 1947. The countries have fought three wars, two of them over Kashmir, and clashed many times since. 
The countries, which both claim Kashmir in full and rule over parts of it separately, acquired nuclear weapons in the 1990s.


Pakistan says India sending drones to detect location of weapons system, 77 shot down

Updated 09 May 2025
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Pakistan says India sending drones to detect location of weapons system, 77 shot down

  • India and Pakistan have since Thursday accused each other of carrying out waves of drone attacks
  • India has targeted cities in Pakistan’s mainland provinces for first since their full-scale war in 1971

ISLAMABAD: Defense Minister Khawaja Asif said on Friday a wave of drone attacks launched by India this week was aimed at detecting the location of Pakistani weapons systems, as PTV state television reported that 77 drones had been shot down. 

India and Pakistan have since Thursday accused each other of carrying out waves of drone attacks in the worst confrontation between the nuclear-armed South Asian neighbors in nearly three decades.

Pakistan’s army said it shot down 29 Indian drones on Thursday while New Delhi accused Islamabad of launching overnight raids with “drones and missiles” and claimed it destroyed an air defense system in Lahore, which Islamabad denied. 

“Pakistani forces have destroyed a total of 77 Indian drones,” Pakistan Television reported on Friday. 

“By the evening of May 8, 29 Indian drones had been shot down, while another 48 drones had been destroyed between last night [Thursday] and today [Friday].”

The fighting comes two weeks after New Delhi blamed Islamabad for backing an April 22 militant attack in which 26 were killed at the Pahalgam tourist site on the Indian-administered side of disputed Kashmir. Pakistan has denied involvement. On Wednesday, India said it had struck “terrorist camps” at nine sites inside Pakistan. Islamabad vowed retaliation and said it had shot down five Indian fighter jets. 

The longstanding rivals have fought multiple wars over the disputed Kashmir valley since they were carved out of the sub-continent at the end of British rule in 1947. But while the conflict has been confined in recent decades mostly to the mountainous region of Kashmir, which both nations claim in full but rule in part, the air strikes on Wednesday morning, which also hit the towns of Bahawalpur and Muridke in the country’s largest and most populous province of Punjab, and the drone incursions into some of the country’s largest cities on Thursday, were seen in Islamabad as a major escalation.

One drone was shot down over the garrison city of Rawalpindi, home to the Pakistan army’s heavily fortified headquarters. Another hit a military target near Lahore, the capital and largest city of the province of Punjab, and the second-largest city in Pakistan after Karachi. The army said four military personnel were injured in that attack. 

Other places where drones were neutralized were Gujranwala, Chakwal, Attock, Bahawalpur, Miano, Chor and near Karachi, which is the country’s largest city and commercial capital.

The drone attacks have raised questions about how the drones were able to get so far inside Pakistan’s airspace.

Speaking in parliament, Defense Minister Khawaja Asif said the Indian drone attacks were launched to detect the location of Pakistani defense systems. 

“That is why they weren’t intercepted, so that our locations are not leaked or located. When they came down to a safe limit, we shot them down,” Asif said.

A local resident shows a piece of shell fired by Indian forces, at his damaged house in Haveli Kahuta, a district of Azad Kashmir, Pakistan, on Friday, May 9, 2025. (AP)

Air defense officials have backed this version, with one saying, on condition of anonymity, that the drones were mounted with Electronic Support Measures (ESMs), a technology for passive collection and interpretation of electromagnetic signals, such as e.g. radar pulses. Two or more coordinated ESM sensors can use information to geolocate the emitting radar.

“Their purpose is to detect radiations of ground-based air defense systems, and through a data link transmit the location to their [Indian] command centers,” one official said, declining to be named. “Through that their [Pakistani weapons systems] locations could get disclosed.”

He said once Pakistan understood the purpose of the drones, “it was decided that we will not engage them with long-range air defense that work on missile guidance systems.”

“We decided we either have to use soft kill, that is to make them fall through jamming or if they come lower down, then we shoot them with gun weapon systems … Henceforth, when the drones reduced altitude, they were shot down with guns.”

“OFFENSIVE ACTIONS”

The Indian army said on Friday Pakistani troops had resorted to “numerous ceasefire violations” along the countries’ de-facto border in Kashmir, called the Line of Control. 

“The drone attacks were effectively repulsed and a befitting reply was given to the CFVs (ceasefire violations),” the army said, adding all “nefarious designs” would be responded to with “force.”

Pakistan Information Minister Attaullah Tarar said the Indian army’s statement was “baseless and misleading,” and that Pakistan had not undertaken any “offensive actions” targeting areas within Indian-administered Kashmir or beyond the country’s border.

In Pakistani Kashmir, which is known as Azad Kashmir, officials said heavy shelling from across the border killed five civilians, including an infant, and injured 29 in the early hours of Friday.

World powers from the US to China have urged the two countries to calm tensions, and US Vice President JD Vance on Thursday reiterated the call for de-escalation.

“We want this thing to de-escalate as quickly as possible. We can’t control these countries, though,” he said in an interview on Fox News show “The Story with Martha MacCallum.”

The Saudi minister of state for foreign affairs Adel Al-Jubeir is also scheduled to visit Pakistan on Friday. Al-Jubeir was in India on Thursday and met Indian Foreign Minister Subrahmanyam Jaishankar, who said he “shared India’s perspectives on firmly countering terrorism” with him.

With inputs from Reuters