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Pakistan says monitoring situation after ‘disturbing’ protests in Indian-administered Kashmir

Pakistan says monitoring situation after ‘disturbing’ protests in Indian-administered Kashmir
Indo-Tibetan Border Police (ITBP) personnel patrol along a road during a curfew after unrest in Leh on September 26, 2025. (AFP)
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Updated 1 min 34 sec ago

Pakistan says monitoring situation after ‘disturbing’ protests in Indian-administered Kashmir

Pakistan says monitoring situation after ‘disturbing’ protests in Indian-administered Kashmir
  • The statement came hours after Indian police detained a prominent activist over the protests in Ladakh
  • Modi’s government split Ladakh off from Indian-administered Kashmir in 2019, imposing direct rule on both

ISLAMABAD: Islamabad is monitoring the situation after “extremely disturbing” protests in Ladakh area of the disputed Kashmir region that is split between Pakistan and India, the Pakistani foreign office said on Friday.

The statement came hours after Indian police detained prominent activist Sonam Wangchuk over violent protests in the Himalayan territory of Ladakh that left at least five people dead, a lawyer said.

Demonstrations demanding greater political autonomy for the sparsely populated, high-altitude region bordering China and Pakistan turned deadly on Wednesday when security forces opened fire.

New Delhi blamed the unrest on “provocative speeches” by Wangchuk, who had been on a hunger strike demanding either full federal statehood for Ladakh or constitutional protections for its tribal communities, land and fragile environment.

“We are monitoring the situation,” the Pakistani foreign office said, describing the developments that unfolded in Ladakh as “extremely disturbing.”

“They demonstrate the Indian authorities’ willingness to go to any extent to curb a protest. They are also another manifestation of India’s iron-fisted approach in that occupied territory.”

The Himalayan territory of Kashmir has been divided between Pakistan and India since their independence from British rule in 1947. Both sides claim it in full but rule in part and have fought multiple wars over the region.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government split Ladakh off from Indian-administered Kashmir in 2019, imposing direct rule on both. New Delhi has yet to fulfil its promise to include Ladakh in the “Sixth Schedule” of India’s constitution, which allows people to make their own laws and policies.

India’s army maintains a large presence in Ladakh, which includes disputed border areas with China. Troops from the two countries clashed there in 2020, killing at least 20 Indian and four Chinese soldiers.

Mustafa Hajji, a lawyer for the Apex Body Leh that is spearheading the protests, told AFP that Wangchuk was “picked up” by the police from his village of Uley Tokpo on Friday.

“Charges against him are not known yet,” Hajji said.

An engineer by training, Wangchuk, 59, is best known for pioneering water conservation projects in the Himalayas. He received the prestigious Ramon Magsaysay Award in 2018 for his environmental work and contributions to reforming local schooling in Ladakh.

Wangchuk, who is a vocal advocate for Ladakh’s environmental protection and tribal rights, was briefly detained by Delhi Police last year during a protest march. Indian authorities on Thursday canceled his non-profit’s foreign funding license.


Analysts hail revival in US-Pakistan ties but warn partnership remains transactional

Analysts hail revival in US-Pakistan ties but warn partnership remains transactional
Updated 56 min 4 sec ago

Analysts hail revival in US-Pakistan ties but warn partnership remains transactional

Analysts hail revival in US-Pakistan ties but warn partnership remains transactional
  • Visit by Pakistani PM and army chief to White House marks diplomatic breakthrough, analysts say
  • Experts caution that while ties are warming, expectations must be kept modest

KARACHI: This week’s White House visit by Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif and Army Chief Field Marshal Syed Asim Munir marks a dramatic revival of engagement with Washington but is unlikely to evolve into a deep strategic alliance, analysts said, as both sides navigate a relationship still rooted in transactional interests.

The joint appearance before President Donald Trump was widely seen as symbolizing a new phase in bilateral ties and underscoring Islamabad’s renewed relevance to Washington’s evolving security and geopolitical priorities. But experts said the future of the relationship will depend on whether exploratory talks translate into tangible cooperation on trade, counterterrorism, and Middle East diplomacy.

Michael Kugelman, a Washington-based South Asia analyst, described the visit as “significant” for several reasons, including the fact that it was the first time a Pakistani prime minister had been invited to the White House since Imran Khan’s trip in 2019.

Khan was never invited during President Biden’s four years in office despite repeated overtures, making the invitation from Trump to Sharif and Munir politically significant in Islamabad. More than just a sideline conversation in New York, Kugelman said, the formal invitation to Washington “gives the meeting a certain level of prominence and prestige.”

The symbolism of Sharif and Munir appearing together was not lost on observers. 

Kugelman noted that while a prime minister and army chief had previously visited Washington together, this time Munir’s role was far more prominent. 

That visibility, he said, “conveys a strong sense of civil military solidarity,” a rare alignment in a country where tensions between civilian and military leaders are frequent. 

Pakistan’s military has long been the country’s most powerful institution, often shaping foreign policy and security decisions even under elected governments. In light of this, some observers, Kugelman added, may see the joint appearance as “a major blow to democracy” given “the power of an unelected leader” in foreign policy decisions.

Pakistan’s former special representative on Afghanistan, Asif Durrani, dismissed concerns about civil-military imbalance, saying both leaders were representing the state, not individual offices. 

“When you go abroad, you talk about the state of Pakistan,” he said. “Both would have been expressing the views which Pakistan has.”

Beyond optics, analysts said the discussions were likely dominated by strategic and economic issues, including US access to Pakistan’s critical minerals and other commercial opportunities. 

Kugelman described the recent flurry of engagements as “focused on aspirational and exploratory forms of cooperation,” with “very little substantive cooperation” so far beyond counterterrorism. 

He cautioned that the relationship remains “transactional in nature,” raising questions about “who wants what and who’s getting what.” 

US–Pakistan ties have historically been shaped by specific security or counterterrorism goals, from Cold War cooperation to the post-9/11 alliance, rather than broader strategic alignment.

Counterterrorism was almost certainly a major topic, he added, with Pakistan “confronting a very significant terrorist threat” from militants on its western border and likely urging US support against the Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), a banned Pakistani Taliban group responsible for dozens of deadly attacks in recent years and operating largely from safe havens in neighboring Afghanistan. 

Washington, Kugelman said, will expect Islamabad to continue helping monitor and track groups like the regional affiliate of Daesh active in Afghanistan and Pakistan.

Durrani said Pakistan’s priorities included “robust trade ties and, of course, cooperation in counter-terrorism, including terrorism emanating from Afghanistan.”

The two sides also likely discussed Pakistan’s potential role as a diplomatic go-between in the Middle East. 

Kugelman said Washington “may want Pakistan to serve the role of a messenger” to interlocutors like Iran, where US access is limited. But differences over Israel’s war in Gaza and Pakistan’s refusal to recognize the state would “impose limits” on how far cooperation could go. 

Israel’s ongoing military campaign in Gaza, launched in October 2023, has killed tens of thousands of Palestinians and provoked widespread condemnation across the Muslim world.

Durrani reaffirmed Islamabad’s stance, saying Pakistan “condemned the Israeli atrocities” and remains “part of the consensus … which calls for two states with Jerusalem as its capital of Palestine.”

RECALIBRATION

Despite Trump’s more confrontational approach toward India — including higher tariffs and public criticism over Russian oil purchases — Durrani said Washington’s decades-old strategic partnership with New Delhi remains intact. 

New Delhi has sharply increased imports of discounted Russian crude since Moscow’s 2022 invasion of Ukraine, straining ties with Washington and prompting Trump to raise tariffs on Indian goods. 

“It’s more than two decades that they have forged a strategic tie,” Durrani said. “It’s not going to go away with the arrival of Trump.”

He also added that Pakistan’s “deep-rooted” relationship with China was not affected by renewed engagement with Washington.

America is not a strategic partner in the same way, he said.

China is Pakistan’s largest trading partner and main infrastructure investor, anchoring its Belt and Road Initiative projects in the region.

The White House meeting also has domestic implications.

Veteran journalist Mazhar Abbas said the visit has strengthened the government’s position at home. 

“President Trump’s warm reception of both the Prime Minister and the army chief send a strong message of US support for the current administration,” he said. 

Modi’s absence from Washington, he added, “has further worked in the government’s favor.” Yet he warned that worsening violence in Gaza could “strengthen the opposition’s narrative” against the government.

Kugelman urged Islamabad to temper its expectations, warning that Trump is “very mercurial” and prone to “U-turns.” 

Renewed warmth could evaporate quickly, he said, particularly if Washington’s ties with India rebound or if US interest in Pakistan’s mineral or energy sectors wanes.

 “We’re looking at a revitalized relationship,” Kugelman said, “but not a new strategic partnership.”

Durrani said Pakistan “should be ready to deal with new realities with open eyes” while taking advantage of the current “bonhomie.”

In May 2025, Pakistan and India exchanged artillery, missile and drone strikes during a four-day conflict that killed dozens before a US-brokered ceasefire halted hostilities in a key moment in which Trump positioned himself as a mediator in South Asia’s most volatile rivalry. 

That episode and Washington’s recent outreach underscore how shifting geopolitical dynamics are shaping the recalibration of US–Pakistan relations, even as both sides remain cautious about how far this new engagement can go.

Dr. Asfandyar Mir, a senior fellow at the Stimson Center, said Trump’s current posture reflects that shift. “

Unlike previous administrations during the war on terror era, I don’t see him placing heavy expectations or demanding specific commitments from Pakistan,” he said. 

“He likely wants Pakistan to be supportive on Middle East issues as they unfold, because that’s a priority for him. This kind of presidential attention and engagement will likely translate into improvements in functional cooperation across commercial, economic, and security domains.”


China briefs Pakistan on J-35, unmanned fighter jets as Islamabad seeks to bolster air defenses

China briefs Pakistan on J-35, unmanned fighter jets as Islamabad seeks to bolster air defenses
Updated 26 September 2025

China briefs Pakistan on J-35, unmanned fighter jets as Islamabad seeks to bolster air defenses

China briefs Pakistan on J-35, unmanned fighter jets as Islamabad seeks to bolster air defenses
  • The statement comes months after Pakistan declared victory in a military standoff with India that saw Islamabad use China’s J-10Cs fighter jets
  • Over past five years, China has supplied 81 percent of Pakistan’s imported weapons, according to Stockholm International Peace Research Institute

ISLAMABAD: Chinese authorities have briefed Pakistan President Asif Ali Zardari on advanced J-35 stealth fighter jets and unmanned aerial combat aircraft during his recent visit to China, with Pakistan expressing interest in modern Chinese defense technology, a senator who accompanied the president on his recent China visit told reporters on Friday.

President Zardari this month visited China on a 10-day official trip, where he became the "first" foreign leader to visit Aviation Industry Corporation of China's (AVIC) Advanced Aircraft Complex in Chengdu, according to his office.

Zardari was briefed on the J-35 stealth multirole combat aircraft, J-20 stealth fighter aircraft, J-10 fighter jet, co-production of JF-17 Thunder with Pakistan, unmanned aerial vehicles, fully automated units, and integrated command-and-control systems for multi-domain operations.

Senator Saleem Mandviwalla, a member of Zardari's Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) who accompanied him to China, said that the transfer of modern technology and defense equipment takes time, but said Islamabad would not let its neighbor dominate Pakistan in defense field, in an obvious reference to India.

“One thing is certain Pakistan will not allow its neighboring [enemy] country to dominate it and will remain its equal in the defense field,” he said.

In the coming times, Mandviwalla said, defense cooperation between the two countries will further increase, bringing the "world’s best technology to Pakistan."

A rising military superpower, China hasn’t fought a major war in more than four decades but has raced under President Xi Jinping to modernize its armed forces, pouring resources into developing sophisticated weaponry and cutting-edge technologies. It has also extended that modernization drive to Pakistan, long hailed by Beijing as its “ironclad brother.”

Over the past five years, China has supplied 81 percent of Pakistan’s imported weapons, according to data from the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI). Those exports include advanced fighter jets, missiles, radars and air-defense systems. Some Pakistan-made weapons have also been co-developed with Chinese firms or built with Chinese technology and expertise.

The development comes months after Pakistan declared victory in a four-day military conflict with India, saying its air force used Chinese J-10C aircraft to shoot down six Indian fighter jets, including three French Rafales. Though Indian officials have acknowledged losses, they have not specified the number of jets downed by Pakistan.

Murtaza Solangi, the president's spokesman, said Zardari during his visit to the sprawling complex in Chengdu boarded a J-10 fighter jet, which was "instrumental" in Pakistan’s four-day standoff with India in May.

"The president was briefed on China’s latest aerospace capabilities," he said.

The president’s visit was aimed at strengthening social ties with China, according to PPP members.

"During the visit, six agreements were signed between Pakistan and China, four of which were business-to-business deals," Mandviwalla said.


Pakistan vaccinates 9 million girls against cervical cancer despite online backlash

Pakistan vaccinates 9 million girls against cervical cancer despite online backlash
Updated 26 September 2025

Pakistan vaccinates 9 million girls against cervical cancer despite online backlash

Pakistan vaccinates 9 million girls against cervical cancer despite online backlash
  • The 13 million girls targeted in the initial campaign were in Punjab and Sindh provinces and in Azad Kashmir
  • Pakistan plans to expand the coverage to additional areas by 2027, hoping to eliminate cervical cancer by 2030

KARACHI: Pakistan has vaccinated about 9 million adolescent girls against the virus that causes cervical cancer, as part of a continuing national campaign that has overcome early setbacks fueled by skeptics online, the health minister said Friday.

Health Minister Mustafa Kamal said the campaign that began Sept. 15 is aiming to vaccinate 13 million girls aged 9 to 14 against the human papillomavirus, or HPV, which causes most cervical cancers. He said the program so far achieved 70 percent of its goal.

The program has overcome what Kamal said were baseless rumors spread by some parents that the vaccine could cause infertility. He gave the vaccine to his own daughter live on stage at an event in Karachi this week to build confidence.

“By the grace of God, administering the vaccine to my daughter publicly had a huge impact,” Kamal told The Associated Press. “From the fifth day of the campaign, refusal rates began dropping and acceptance climbed to 70–80 percent in some districts.”

However, many parents are still reluctant.

“I have heard that the vaccination is being used to make women infertile and reduce the population of Muslims,” said a mother of two in Karachi, the capital of Sindh province.

She said that “social media is full of such claims,” and that she was advised by relatives not to allow health workers to vaccinate her daughters.

Health worker Shamim Anwar, 52, said the job of administering the vaccines has been exhausting.

“It is very difficult work. Many parents refuse because of rumors and hesitate to let us vaccinate their daughters,” she said.

“Sometimes we even face humiliation, but we tolerate it because we have to complete the vaccination target,” she said, as she went door-to-door for the campaign in Karachi.

Cervical cancer is the third most common cancer among Pakistani women after breast and ovarian cancers. Globally, it is the fourth most common. Each year, between 18,000 and 20,000 women in Pakistan die of the disease, according to health authorities.

Experts promoted the campaign under the slogan “one jab will do the job.” Authorities set up vaccination centers and deployed teams to schools nationwide to reach as many girls as possible.

Kamal acknowledged that during the first days of the drive, refusals outnumbered acceptances, fueled by false claims that the vaccine campaign is a Western plot to cause infertility.

Officials say the vaccine, offered free of charge, typically causes only minor side effects.

The 13 million girls targeted in the initial campaign were in Punjab and Sindh provinces and in Azad Kashmir. The country plans to expand the coverage to additional areas by 2027, hoping to eliminate cervical cancer as a public health problem by 2030. It became the 149th country to add the HPV vaccine to its immunization schedule.


At UNGA, Sharif calls for Gaza ceasefire, praises Trump’s role in South Asia peace

At UNGA, Sharif calls for Gaza ceasefire, praises Trump’s role in South Asia peace
Updated 26 September 2025

At UNGA, Sharif calls for Gaza ceasefire, praises Trump’s role in South Asia peace

At UNGA, Sharif calls for Gaza ceasefire, praises Trump’s role in South Asia peace
  • Shehbaz Sharif denounces Israeli strikes against Hamas leaders in Qatar as ‘rogue behavior’
  • The Pakistan premier once again praises President Trump for role in ceasefire with New Delhi

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif on Friday reiterated a call for an immediate ceasefire in Gaza as he described Israeli actions in the Middle East as a “rogue behavior,” while offering archrival New Delhi to hold a dialogue for last peace in South Asia.

The Pakistan prime minister was speaking at the 80th session of the United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) in New York, with global leaders in attendance. Sharif spoke about intensifying conflicts, violations of international law, humanitarian crises, terrorism, climate change and a number of other issues threatening the world.

The UNGA session, themed as “Better together: 80 years and more for peace, development and human rights,” comes in the backdrop of Israel’s nearly two-year war on Gaza, which has killed over 65,000 Palestinians since Oct. 2023, and its military actions in against other Middle Eastern states as well as raging conflicts elsewhere in the world.

Speaking of the situation in Gaza, he said the Israeli leadership has unleashed a shameful campaign against the innocent Palestinians in blind pursuit of its “nefarious goals,” which history will always remember as one of its darkest chapters, calling on the international community to find a path to ceasefire.

“For nearly 80 years, the Palestinians have courageously endured Israel’s brutal occupation of their homeland. In the West Bank, each passing day brings new brutality, illegal settlers who terrorize and kill with impunity, and nobody can challenge them and question them. And in Gaza, Israel’s genocidal onslaught has unleashed unspeakable terror upon women and children in a manner we have not witnessed in annals of history,” Sharif said.

“We must find a path to a ceasefire now and just now... Pakistan firmly supports the demand of the Palestinian people for the establishment of a sovereign Palestinian state with pre-1967 borders and Al-Quds Sharif as its capital. Palestine can no longer remain under Israeli shackles. It must be liberated and liberated with full commitment and full force.”

The prime minister denounced Israel’s attack against Hamas leaders in Doha and said Tel Aviv’s continued violations of the sovereignty and territorial integrity of numerous countries were reflective of its ‘rogue behavior.”

“Pakistan stands unwaveringly with our brothers and sisters in Qatar,” he said. “We also support all efforts for a peaceful resolution of the we also support all efforts for a peaceful resolution of the Ukraine conflict in line with the UN Charter to end human sufferings and global turmoil caused by this protected war.”

About Pakistan’s four-day military conflict with India in May, Sharif said New Delhi sought to “extract political gains” from a militant attack in Indian-administered Kashmir’s Pahalgam, which killed 26 tourists in April. India blamed Pakistan for the attack, a charge denied by Islamabad.

“It [India] attacked our cities and targeted our innocent civilians. When our territorial integrity and national security were violated, our response was in accordance with the right of self-defense under Article 51 of the United Nations Charter,” he said.

“Our falcons [fighter pilots] took flight and etched their answer across the skies, resulting in seven of the Indian jets turned to scrap and dust. A decisive response to the aggressor that will echo through the annals of history.”

The four-day conflict, the deadliest between India and Pakistan in more than two decades, killed nearly 70 people on both sides before President Donald Trump announced a ceasefire on May 10.

“Though in a position of strength, Pakistan agreed to a ceasefire facilitated by President Donald Trump’s bold and visionary leadership. We express our deep appreciation to him and his team for their active role in bringing about the ceasefire. President Trump’s efforts for peace helped avert a more threatening war in South Asia,” Sharif said.

“Pakistan stands ready for a composite, comprehensive, and result-oriented dialogue with India on all outstanding issues.” The treaty ensures water for 80 percent of Pakistani farms from the Indus river system.

“South Asia requires, ladies and gentlemen, proactive rather than provocative leadership. India’s unilateral and illegal attempt to hold the Indus Water Treaty in abeyance defies the provisions of the treaty itself, as well as the norms of international law,” Sharif said.

“Pakistan has made it abundantly clear, and let there be no doubt, once again, in anybody’s mind, as I said last year in this hall, from this podium, we will definitely and ardently defend, inshallah, the inseparable right of our 240 million people on these waters. To us, any violation of this Indus Treaty represents an act of war.”


Pakistan, Russia conduct counter-terror exercise focusing on drone warfare

Pakistan, Russia conduct counter-terror exercise focusing on drone warfare
Updated 26 September 2025

Pakistan, Russia conduct counter-terror exercise focusing on drone warfare

Pakistan, Russia conduct counter-terror exercise focusing on drone warfare
  • The development comes as militants in Pakistan have started using quadcopter drones to drop bombs on security forces
  • It also follows a four-day conflict between Pakistan, India in May that saw the large-scale use of unmanned aerial systems

KARACHI: Pakistan and Russia have been conducting a joint military exercise that focuses on drone warfare among other things, the Pakistani military said on Friday.

The development comes as militants in Pakistan have started using commercially acquired quadcopter drones to drop bombs on security forces in the country’s northwest, police say, in a potentially dangerous development in the volatile region.

It also follows a four-day conflict between Pakistan and India in May that saw the large-scale use of unmanned aerial systems (UAS), fighter jets and artillery, leaving nearly 70 people dead on both sides.

Pakistan and Russia have been conducting the Druzhba-VIII exercise from Sept. 15 till Sept. 27, with senior military officials from Russia in attendance, according to the Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR), the Pakistani military’s media arm.

“The exercise was aimed at refining the drills, procedures and techniques involved in Counter Terrorism operations with focus on drone warfare, fighting in built-up areas and counter improvised explosive devices through joint training, besides harnessing the historic military to military relations among the friendly countries,” the ISPR said in a statement.

Pakistan and Russia, once Cold War rivals, have warmed up to each other in recent years through regular political, business, trade and defense interactions. In March, a Russian navy flotilla arrived in the southern Pakistani port city of Karachi to conduct joint exercises with Pakistan Navy.

The latest exercise comes ahead of the Indian military’s plans to test drone and counter drone systems next month in a major exercise to toughen its air defenses, Reuters reported this week, citing a senior officer.

Since the four-day clash, both neighboring countries have ramped up drone development in what analysts describe as a drone arms race. India has also announced plans to build an indigenous air defense system, dubbed ‘Sudarshan Chakra’, by 2035 — an initiative officials have likened to Israel’s ‘Iron Dome’.