Pakistan says 13 armed forces personnel killed in latest India conflict

Pakistan says 13 armed forces personnel killed in latest India conflict
A Pakistan Army soldier stands in front of damaged Bilal Mosque after it was hit by an Indian strike in Muzaffarabad, the capital of Azad Kashmir on May 7, 2025. (REUTERS/File)
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Updated 14 May 2025

Pakistan says 13 armed forces personnel killed in latest India conflict

Pakistan says 13 armed forces personnel killed in latest India conflict
  • An army personnel and air force senior technician succumbed to their injuries, says Pakistani military
  • India and Pakistan engaged in four days of armed conflict last week, worst between them since 1999

KARACHI: Pakistani military media’s wing said on Wednesday 13 members of the armed forces had been killed in the latest military confrontation with India, paying tribute to their courage and “unshakeable patriotism.”

The Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR), the military’s media wing, said on Tuesday that 11 armed forces personnel had been killed in Pakistan’s latest standoff with India while 78 had been injured. Forty civilians had also been killed and 121 were injured.

India and Pakistan engaged in four days of armed conflict last week, the worst between them since 1999, pounding each other with fighter aircraft, missiles, drones and artillery fire. The conflict erupted when India fired missiles into Pakistan last Wednesday night after weeks of tensions over an attack in Indian-administered Kashmir on April 22. New Delhi blamed the attack on Pakistan, while Islamabad denied involvement.

“While defending the motherland with exemplary courage and unwavering resolve, 2 more valiant sons of the soil embraced shahadat today who were hospitalized, bringing the total number of martyred personnel of the Pakistan Armed Forces to 13 while 78 have sustained injuries in the line of duty,” the ISPR said, referring to India’s attacks on the night of May 6.

The army’s Havaldar Muhammad Naveed Shaheed and Senior Technician Muhammad Ayaz of the Pakistan Air Force were the latest armed forces personnel who succumbed to their injuries, the ISPR said.

“Their noble sacrifice stands as a timeless testament to their courage, devotion to duty, and unshakeable patriotism,” it added.

After India struck multiple Pakistani cities last Wednesday with missiles, claiming it had targeted “terrorist” camps in response to the April 22 attack, Islamabad vowed to retaliate saying it had shot down five Indian fighter jets.

Things came to a head on Saturday morning when Pakistan said India had attacked three bases, and it struck back with attacks on multiple bases in India, including a missile storage site in India’s north.

Hours later, US President Donald Trump announced he had brokered a ceasefire between the two states, calming fears of an all-out war.

Both countries claimed victory as the fragile ceasefire came into force, with Pakistan saying it targeted several Indian military sites on Saturday and destroyed an S-400 missile defense system as part of its retaliatory ‘Operation Bunyan-un-Marsoos’ operation, which translates to “Wall of Lead” in Arabic, in response to India attacking three air bases.

India has also released new satellite images showing serious damage to air strips and radar stations at what Indian defense officials say are multiple Pakistani military bases crippled by massive Indian airstrikes.

Bitter rivals India and Pakistan have fought two of their three wars over Kashmir, a region split between them, since gaining independence from British colonial rule in 1947. Both nations are nuclear-armed, raising global alarm every time an armed conflict breaks out between them.


Traders, experts urge dialogue as Pakistan, Afghanistan border clashes suspend trade

Traders, experts urge dialogue as Pakistan, Afghanistan border clashes suspend trade
Updated 13 October 2025

Traders, experts urge dialogue as Pakistan, Afghanistan border clashes suspend trade

Traders, experts urge dialogue as Pakistan, Afghanistan border clashes suspend trade
  • Authorities say no new exchange of fire has been reported since Sunday along the 2,611-kilometer-long border
  • Traders say perishable goods are rotting on both sides of border after Pakistan's closure of border terminals

ISLAMABAD: The recent border clashes between Afghanistan and Pakistan have brought bilateral trade to a standstill as thousands of traders remain stranded and goods worth millions stuck at key crossings for a second day on Monday, traders said, with stakeholders and experts calling for a dialogue to defuse tensions between the neighbors.

The fighting began Saturday night, when Afghan forces struck multiple Pakistani military posts. Afghanistan officials claimed to have killed 58 Pakistani soldiers in response to what they said were repeated violations of Afghan territory and airspace.

Pakistan’s military gave lower figures, saying it lost 23 soldiers and killed more than 200 “Taliban and affiliated terrorists” during retaliatory fire along the border. Foreign governments, including , China and Russia, expressed concern and urged restraint as a ceasefire appeared to be holding.

Pakistan has closed all eight border crossing points with Afghanistan after the clashes along the 2,611-kilometer border, leading to the formation of long queues of vehicles carrying hundreds of tons of perishable goods.

“The border closure is not only hurting Pakistan-Afghanistan trade but also affecting exports to Central Asia, causing daily losses of millions of dollars,” Junaid Ismail Makda, president of the Pakistan-Afghanistan Joint Chamber of Commerce and Industry (PAJCCI), told Arab News.

Pakistan imports fruit, vegetables and dry fruit from Afghanistan and exports textiles, rice and plastics in return, according to the Pakistani commerce ministry. The annual bilateral trade is valued at around $2 billion, while Afghanistan also depends on Pakistan’s transit corridor for global imports.

Although, Pakistan and Afghanistan have eight border crossing points but most of the goods pass through the Torkham border crossing in Pakistan's northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province and Chaman in the southwestern Balochistan province.

Both provinces have witnessed a surge in militant attacks in recent years. Islamabad's has frequently accused Afghanistan of allowing the use of its soil by militant groups, particularly the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), and India of backing them for attacks inside Pakistan. Kabul and New Delhi deny those allegations.

The weekend clashes between Pakistan and Afghanistan also followed the killing of more than a dozen Pakistani soldiers in KP.

Abdul Waris, a goods clearing agent in Chaman, said hundreds of containers with perishable produce were stuck on the Afghan side of the border.

“Businessmen in Lahore, Karachi and Peshawar have already paid Afghan farmers and now their goods are rotting,” he told Arab News.

Traders say the closure of border crossings has affected livelihoods on both sides.

“Trade between the two countries benefits hundreds of thousands of people and now their income has stopped,” said Shahid Shinwari, a former senior vice president of the Sarhad Chamber of Commerce in KP.

He said Afghanistan cannot afford a prolonged closure of border as it heavily relies on Chaman and Torkham crossings, hoping that the two countries "will resolve their issues through talks for the better future of [their] peoples."

Arab News contacted Pakistan’s military to know when the border crossings are expected to reopen but did not receive a response.

Experts say the Taliban's attack on Pakistani posts after last week's alleged airstrikes in Afghanistan shows they want to project their "independence from Pakistan."

“They are trying to dispel the perception of being under Islamabad’s influence,” he added.

The Pakistan-Afghanistan skirmishes come at a time when Afghan foreign minister Amir Khan Muttaqi is visiting India, where he said on Saturday that Pakistan should not blame Afghanistan for its internal problems.

His comment was a reference to Islamabad's complaints about rising attacks by TTP militants, who Pakistani officials say have sanctuaries in Afghanistan.

Asked about Muttaqi's visit to India, Asif Durrani, Pakistan’s former special envoy to Kabul, said it is the right of Afghanistan to establish relations with India.

Durrani said Pakistan had to respond to the Taliban attacks on its outposts but maintained that talks are the only way to end the crisis.

“Clashes are not good for the region. The only solution is talks,” he added.


Pakistan PM credits Trump as world leaders sign Gaza ceasefire document in Egypt

Pakistan PM credits Trump as world leaders sign Gaza ceasefire document in Egypt
Updated 13 October 2025

Pakistan PM credits Trump as world leaders sign Gaza ceasefire document in Egypt

Pakistan PM credits Trump as world leaders sign Gaza ceasefire document in Egypt
  • The declaration was signed during an international summit hosted by Egypt in Sharm El-Sheikh after Israel, Hamas exchanged hostages, prisoners
  • President Trump said the ceasefire document would be spelling out ‘rules and regulations and lots of other things’ and that ‘it’s going to hold up’

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif on Monday hailed President Donald Trump for his exemplary leadership as world leaders signed a declaration meant to cement a ceasefire in Gaza.

Trump made a lightning visit to Israel, where he addressed parliament, before flying to Egypt for a Gaza summit where he and the leaders of Egypt, Qatar and Turkiye signed the declaration as guarantors to the Gaza deal.

The document was signed during an international summit hosted by Egypt in the Red Sea resort of Sharm El-Sheikh after Israel and Hamas exchanged hostages and prisoners, with Trump calling it a “tremendous day for the Middle East.”

Speaking at the ceremony, Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif lauded Trump for his untiring efforts in materializing the peace deal, saying the world would remember him as a man who went out of the way to stop several wars.

“Today is a one of the greatest days in contemporary history, because peace has been achieved after untiring efforts led by President Trump who is genuinely a man of peace, who has relentlessly and untiringly worked throughout these months, day in and day out, to make this world a place to live with peace and prosperity,” he said.

Sharif also thanked the leaders of , Qatar, Egypt and Turkiye for their mediation to bring an end to Israel’s two-year war on Gaza, which has killed more than 67,000 Palestinians.

As part of Trump’s plan to end the Gaza war, Hamas on Monday freed the last 20 surviving hostages it held after two years of captivity in Gaza. In exchange, Israel released 1,968 mostly Palestinian prisoners held in its jails, its prison service said.

“This is a tremendous day for the world, it’s a tremendous day for the Middle East,” Trump told as more than two dozen world leaders in Sharm El-Sheikh.

“The document is going to spell out rules and regulations and lots of other things,” he said before signing, repeating twice that “it’s going to hold up.”


Pakistan, Turkiye, Azerbaijan summit calls for collective efforts to curb use of militant proxies

Pakistan, Turkiye, Azerbaijan summit calls for collective efforts to curb use of militant proxies
Updated 13 October 2025

Pakistan, Turkiye, Azerbaijan summit calls for collective efforts to curb use of militant proxies

Pakistan, Turkiye, Azerbaijan summit calls for collective efforts to curb use of militant proxies
  • The development comes amid Islamabad’s accusations against Afghanistan and India of backing militant groups for attacks inside Pakistan
  • Pakistan, Afghanistan exchanged cross-border fire over the weekend that killed 23 Pakistani soldiers and over 200 Afghan Taliban fighters

ISLAMABAD: A trilateral meeting of parliamentary speakers of Pakistan, Turkiye and Azerbaijan on Monday called for collective efforts to curb the use of militant proxies to destabilize any state, describing terrorism as a global menace.

The development comes amid Islamabad’s repeated accusations in recent months against Afghanistan of allowing the use of its soil by militant groups, particularly the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), and India’s backing of them for attacks inside Pakistan. Kabul and New Delhi deny those allegations.

Pakistan and Afghanistan exchanged cross-border fire over the weekend that killed 23 Pakistani soldiers and more than 200 Afghan Taliban fighters, according to the Pakistani military. Foreign governments, including , China and

Russia, expressed concern over the skirmishes, the worst between the neighbors since the Taliban returned to power in 2021.

On Monday, the speakers of Pakistan, Turkiye and Azerbaijan parliaments issued a joint declaration after talks in Islamabad, which addressed militancy, climate change, women participation in decision-making among a host of issues.

“The declaration also recognized terrorism as a global menace, including the use of terrorist groups as proxies, and stressed the need for collective and comprehensive strategies to address such challenges,” Pakistan’s National Assembly Secretariat said in a statement.

“The three sides reaffirmed adherence to international law and multilateral cooperation, especially within frameworks such as the United Nations (UN), Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC), Economic Cooperation Organization (ECO), and D-8.”

The speakers reaffirmed the shared bonds of history, culture, and values among the three brotherly nations and expressed a strong desire to deepen cooperation in diverse areas, including political, strategic, trade, economic, defense, peace and security, science and technology, climate change, environment, and cultural exchange.

“On climate change, the declaration urged joint efforts to address its adverse impacts, welcomed the upcoming COP29 in Baku as a milestone for strengthened global climate action, and highlighted the need for adequate climate finance for developing countries,” the statement said.

“It called for enhanced cooperation in the implementation of Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and the promotion of green energy and environmental sustainability.”

Reiterating their unwavering support for the Palestinian people, the three speakers stressed that any sustainable solution to the crisis must ensure an end to Israeli aggression, delivery of humanitarian aid, and the establishment of an independent Palestinian state, with Al-Quds Al-Sharif as its capital, according to the Pakistani National Assembly statement.

The participants of the summit also expressed solidarity with Azerbaijan over challenges posed by land mines and remnants of its war with Armenia in liberated territories, and reaffirmed support for its efforts to rehabilitate and rebuild those areas and ensure the safe return of internally displaced persons (IDPs).

Armenia and Azerbaijan committed to a lasting peace as US President Donald Trump hosted the leaders of the South Caucasus rivals at a White House signing event in August, ending decades of conflict.

“The speakers agreed to strengthen trilateral cooperation in defense and connectivity projects,” the statement read. “The conference concluded with the decision to convene the next Trilateral Speakers’ Meeting in Azerbaijan in 2026 on mutually agreed dates.”


China is very concerned about Pakistan-Afghanistan clashes, foreign ministry says

China is very concerned about Pakistan-Afghanistan clashes, foreign ministry says
Updated 13 October 2025

China is very concerned about Pakistan-Afghanistan clashes, foreign ministry says

China is very concerned about Pakistan-Afghanistan clashes, foreign ministry says
  • Dozens of fighters were killed in overnight clashes in the most serious fighting between Pakistan, Afghanistan since the Taliban came to power
  • China shares a border with Afghanistan and Pakistan in its western region and has sought to play a mediating role in calming hostilities

BEIJING: China is concerned about recent clashes between Pakistan and Afghanistan and has asked the two countries to protect its nationals and investments in the region, Beijing’s foreign ministry said on Monday.

Dozens of fighters were killed in overnight border clashes between Pakistan and Afghanistan, both sides said on Sunday, in the most serious fighting between the neighbors since the Taliban came to power in Kabul.

China shares a border with Afghanistan and Pakistan in its western region and has sought to play a mediating role in calming hostilities between the two sides, who were allies until recently.

“China is willing to continue to play a constructive role in improving and developing Pakistan-Afghanistan relations,” foreign ministry spokesperson Lin Jian said during a regular press briefing.

Beijing hopes that Kabul and Islamabad will “remain calm and restrained, and persist in properly resolving each other’s concerns through dialogue and consultation to avoid escalation of conflicts,” Lin said.

In August, China’s Foreign Minister Wang Yi attended a meeting with Pakistani and Afghan counterparts in Kabul, calling for strengthening exchanges at all levels.

In an informal trilateral meeting weeks earlier, hosted by Beijing, China said Kabul and Islamabad had agreed to upgrade their diplomatic ties.


Pakistan says 16,000 seats vacant under private Hajj scheme as Oct. 17 deadline looms

Pakistan says 16,000 seats vacant under private Hajj scheme as Oct. 17 deadline looms
Updated 13 October 2025

Pakistan says 16,000 seats vacant under private Hajj scheme as Oct. 17 deadline looms

Pakistan says 16,000 seats vacant under private Hajj scheme as Oct. 17 deadline looms
  • Pakistan has been allocated a quota of 179,210 pilgrims for Hajj 2026
  • Around 60,000 seats have been given to private tour operators this year

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s religious affairs ministry said on Monday that around 16,000 seats remain vacant under this year’s private Hajj scheme, urging intending pilgrims to book their births before an Oct. 17 deadline.

Pakistan has been allocated a quota of 179,210 pilgrims for Hajj 2026. Of these, around 118,000 seats have been allocated to the government scheme and the rest to private tour operators.

“Under the Private Hajj Scheme 2026, bookings for 44,000 pilgrims have so far been completed out of a total quota of 60,000,” the Ministry of Religious Affairs and Interfaith Harmony said in a statement.

“Those wishing to perform Hajj under the private scheme are advised to complete their bookings with ministry-approved Hajj companies before the deadline.”

Around 63,000 Pakistani pilgrims were unable to perform Hajj last year under the private scheme due to payment delays and mismanagement by private tour operators, forcing Islamabad to surrender the unused quota to .

Last month, Pakistan announced that Hajj applicants who are unable to proceed due to emergencies can either request a refund or nominate a blood relative to perform the pilgrimage on their behalf the following year — a major relief for intending pilgrims.

Under the government’s Hajj scheme, applicants paid an initial installment of Rs500,000 ($1,764) or Rs550,000 ($1,941), depending on the selected package, in August, while the remaining amount will be collected in November.