Pakistan expresses concern over ‘grave situation’ in Gaza, Kashmir

Pakistan expresses concern over ‘grave situation’ in Gaza, Kashmir
People walk inside a school housing displaced Palestinians in Jabalia in the northern Gaza Strip on February 27, 2025. (AFP)
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Updated 28 February 2025

Pakistan expresses concern over ‘grave situation’ in Gaza, Kashmir

Pakistan expresses concern over ‘grave situation’ in Gaza, Kashmir
  • Palestinian territory, encompassing Gaza Strip and West Bank, including East Jerusalem, has been occupied by Israel since 1967
  • Pakistan does not recognize Israel, calls for an independent Palestinian state based on “internationally agreed parameters”

ISLAMABAD: The foreign office said on Friday Pakistan had expressed concern over the “grave situation” in Gaza and Indian-administered Kashmir during foreign minister Ishaq Dar’s participation in a recent United Nations Security Council session on multilateralism and global governance. 

Palestinian territory – encompassing the Gaza Strip and West Bank, including East Jerusalem – has been occupied by Israel since 1967. Pakistan does not recognize Israel and has consistently called for an independent state of Palestine based on “internationally agreed parameters” and the pre-1967 borders with Al-Quds Al-Sharif as its capital.

Israel’s latest war on Gaza, which began after a Oct. 7, 2023 attack by Hamas, has killed more than 50,000 Palestinians and displaced almost all of Gaza’s 2 million population, laying waste to swathes of neighborhoods, schools and hospitals.

Earlier this month, the deputy prime minister and foreign minister of Pakistan, Ishaq Dar, traveled to New York to participate in a high-level meeting of the UNSC on practicing multilateralism and reforming and improving global governance.

“In his remarks [at UNSC meeting], the deputy prime minister and foreign minister emphasized the need for international cooperation and commitment to multilateralism and called for upholding principles of the UN Charter, including self-determination, the non-use of force, respect for sovereignty and the peaceful resolution of disputes,” Shafqat Ali Khan, the spokesperson for the foreign office, said.

“The deputy prime minister and foreign minister expressed deep concerns over the grave situation in occupied Palestine and Gaza and the Indian illegally occupied Jammu and Kashmir.”

Relations between India and Pakistan have stood frozen since New Delhi’s revocation in 2019 of the special autonomous status of the part of the Himalayan valley of Kashmir it rules. The two neighbors have fought three wars, two of them over Kashmir, which they both claim in full but rule in part.


Indian pilgrims find ‘warm welcome’ in Pakistan despite tensions

Indian pilgrims find ‘warm welcome’ in Pakistan despite tensions
Updated 05 November 2025

Indian pilgrims find ‘warm welcome’ in Pakistan despite tensions

Indian pilgrims find ‘warm welcome’ in Pakistan despite tensions
  • Thousands of Sikhs gather in Pakistan’s Nankana Sahib to celebrate 556th birth anniversary of religion’s founder
  • Deadly clashes in May killed over 70, closed the land border between nuclear-armed neighbors India and Pakistan 

NANKANA SAHIB: The streets were scrubbed clean and banners fluttered, welcoming Sikh pilgrims on Wednesday to the Pakistani city where the founder of their faith was born 556 years ago, now brimming with devotion and hope.

Many have come from neighboring India in the first major pilgrimage to cross into Pakistan since deadly clashes in May closed the land border between the nuclear-armed neighbors.

“We were worried about what the environment would be like on the Pakistan side and how people would treat us,” 46-year-old Inderjit Kaur told AFP.

“But it has been lovely. We were given a warm welcome.”

Officials say around 40,000 worshippers gathered at the shrine to Sikhism founder Guru Nanak in Nankana Sahib to mark the anniversary of his birth in the city in 1469.

Inside the shrine complex, marigold flowers adorned the walls and the air filled with religious hymns.

Men and women prayed passionately, some performing ritual dips in a pond.

“There is no fear here,” said Harjinder Pal Singh, 66, a retired banker from India.

“The way we celebrate Guru Nanak’s birthday in Delhi, it is being celebrated with the same passion here.”

Tensions, however, remain raw between Islamabad and New Delhi.

The fighting in May — the worst bout of violence between the two countries since 1999 — killed more than 70 people in missile, drone and artillery exchanges.

Yet inside the shrine, Sikhs from both sides embraced warmly, exchanged small gifts and snapped selfies together.

At the main gate, young Muslims and Hindus danced alongside Sikh pilgrims to the beat of the dhol drum.

“There is only a border that separates us, but there are no differences in our hearts,” Harjinder said.

‘BEYOND WORDS’

Outside the shrine, a 90-year-old Muslim man waited with his grandsons, scanning the crowds anxiously.

Muhammad Bashir was looking for someone he had never met: Sharda Singh, a Sikh whose family fled Pakistan during partition in 1947.

Both their fathers were close friends, and the two men had stayed in touch across the decades but never met again.

When Singh finally emerged from the crowd, the two men locked eyes, rushed toward each other and embraced, both breaking down in tears.

“I thought I would die without meeting you,” Bashir said, his voice shaking.

“But at last you are here. Now I can die in peace.”

Singh said he had dreamt of this moment for years.

“It feels as if we have reunited after ages,” he told AFP.

“The love we received here is beyond words. People care for each other deeply, but it is the governments that have differences.”

RETALS AND PRAYERS

The devotees, many barefoot, waved saffron flags as they processed through the shrine, singing hymns and reciting poetry.

Women volunteers chopped vegetables in giant communal kitchens as men stirred massive cauldrons of rice, chickpeas, lentils and sweets.

The food is then served to everyone, regardless of their faith.

As the procession spilled into the city streets, Muslims came out onto rooftops, showering the pilgrims below with rose petals.

Above, an aircraft circled, releasing more petals that drifted down.

“We are in love with the sacred soil of Pakistan,” said Giani Kuldeep Singh, an Indian pilgrim.

 “This is the land of our Guru. Our message is one of peace and brotherhood.”

Sardar Muhammad Yousaf, the religious affairs minister in Muslim-majority Pakistan, told the crowd that “religion is individual, but humanity is shared.”

The festival continues through November, including events in the border town of Kartarpur where Guru Nanak is buried.

A corridor opened there in 2019 remains closed from the Indian side since May.