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Islamabad to host speakers’ moot today featuring delegates from over 40 nations, including ֱ, Palestine

Islamabad to host speakers’ moot today featuring delegates from over 40 nations, including ֱ, Palestine
A general view of the Pakistan's Parliament House during the presidential election in Islamabad on March 9, 2024. (AFP/ file)
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Islamabad to host speakers’ moot today featuring delegates from over 40 nations, including ֱ, Palestine

Islamabad to host speakers’ moot today featuring delegates from over 40 nations, including ֱ, Palestine
  • This is Inter-Parliamentary Speakers’ Conference’s inaugural assembly since it was formed in April 2025
  • Conference is designed as platform for parliamentary leaders to discuss peace, security, legislative cooperation

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan will host a two-day Inter-Parliamentary Speakers’ Conference (ISC) in the capital city of Islamabad which will kick off from today, Tuesday, with representatives from over 40 nations including ֱ and Palestine attending, state media reported.

The ISC was constituted in Seoul in April 2025 under its founding chairman Syed Yousuf Raza Gilani, who also serves as Pakistan’s current Senate chairman. The ISC features more than 45 speakers of parliaments across the world as its members, according to its website. This will be its first assembly since it was formed earlier this year.

The two-day conference, which is being held in Islamabad from Nov. 11-12, brings together speakers, deputy speakers and parliamentary representatives from over 40 countries in an effort to expand Pakistan’s role in global parliamentary diplomacy, according to event organizers. It comes at a moment of heightened regional tensions, particularly surrounding the humanitarian crisis in Gaza and shifting alignments in the Middle East and South Asia.

“The delegations from ֱ, Malaysia, Palestine, Algeria, Barbados, Azerbaijan, Uzbekistan, Kenya, Tajikistan Morocco, Maldives, Serbia, Philippines and Rwanda have already arrived in Islamabad,” state broadcaster Radio Pakistan reported on Tuesday.

The state broadcaster said the ISC reflected Pakistan’s growing role in advancing global parliamentary diplomacy.

The conference is designed as a platform for parliamentary leaders to exchange views on peace, security, development and legislative cooperation, including how elected bodies can address shared global challenges. Organizers say discussions are expected to cover economic resilience, digital governance, conflict mediation, humanitarian relief cooperation, climate adaptation and parliamentary transparency.

Pakistan has stepped up parliamentary diplomacy in recent years, seeking to expand political ties beyond the executive branch and build coalitions on issues such as Gaza, Kashmir, climate vulnerability and developing-country debt reform.


Two assailants killed as Pakistani forces repulse attack on cadet college in northwest — military

Two assailants killed as Pakistani forces repulse attack on cadet college in northwest — military
Updated 10 November 2025

Two assailants killed as Pakistani forces repulse attack on cadet college in northwest — military

Two assailants killed as Pakistani forces repulse attack on cadet college in northwest — military
  • The attackers attempted to breach the security perimeter and rammed an explosive laden vehicle into the college’s gate
  • Three attackers, who managed to enter the college premises, have been ‘cornered in the college’s administrative block’

ISLAMABAD: Two assailants were killed as Pakistani security forces repulsed an attack on Wana Cadet College in the country’s northwest, the Pakistani military said on Monday, adding three other attackers had been “cornered.”

The assailants attempted to breach the security perimeter and rammed an explosive laden vehicle into the main gate of the facility in South Waziristan district that borders Afghanistan, according to the Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR), the military’s media wing.

Pakistani soldiers engaged the attackers and killed two of them, while three others managed to enter the college premises, who have been “cornered in the college’s administrative block.”

The military said the attackers were members of the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), who it says are sheltered by the Afghan Taliban and backed by India. Kabul and New Delhi deny the allegation.

“Khwarij (TTP militants) hiding inside college premises are in contact with their masters and handlers in Afghanistan and are getting instructions,” the ISPR said in a statement.

“This blatant act of barbarism orchestrated by Khwarij from Afghanistan is in contrast to assertions made by Afghan Taliban Regime claiming non-presence of these terrorist groups on their soil. Pakistan reserves the right to respond against terrorists and their leadership present in Afghanistan.”

The TTP distanced itself from the attack, while there was no immediate response from Kabul or New Delhi to the Pakistani military’s statement.

“Clearance operations are being conducted to eliminate leftover Indian-sponsored kharjis (militants),” the ISPR added.

Tensions between Pakistan and Afghanistan have surged in recent years following an uptick in militant attacks, mainly by the TTP, in Pakistan’s western regions that border Afghanistan. The group is separate from but is viewed by Pakistani officials as an ally of the Afghan Taliban.

Clashes erupted between the neighbors on Oct. 11 after Pakistan conducted airstrikes in Afghanistan against what it said were TTP-linked targets. The sides reached a ceasefire in Doha on Oct. 19.

Two subsequent rounds of talks between the neighbors have failed to yield results, with Pakistan seeking “verifiable” action against militant groups operating on Afghan soil.

Earlier on Monday, the ISPR said Pakistani security forces had killed 20 TTP militants in separate engagements in the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) province, where Wana Cadet College is located.