Pakistan PM summons National Security Committee meeting as Middle East tensions surge
Pakistan PM summons National Security Committee meeting as Middle East tensions surge /node/2605480/pakistan
Pakistan PM summons National Security Committee meeting as Middle East tensions surge
Pakistan's Prime Minister, Shehbaz Sharif (left), chairing National Security Committee in Islamabad, Pakistan, on June 23, 2025. (Government of Pakistan)
KARACHI: Pakistan’s premier Shehbaz Sharif has summoned a meeting of the National Security Committee (NSC) today, Monday, an official of the Prime Minister House confirmed amid surging tensions in the Middle East following the United States’ (US) involvement in the Iran-Israel military conflict.
The NSC is the principal decision-making body on Pakistan’s national security matters. Chaired by the prime minister, it comprises the ministers of defense, foreign affairs, finance, interior, information and senior military leadership.
The meeting will take place a day after US targeted key Iranian nuclear facilities, joining Israel in its military conflict against Iran which began on June 13. Israel had launched strikes against Iran’s nuclear sites and targeted its military leadership, saying its attack intended to prevent Tehran from developing nuclear weapons. Iran insists its nuclear program is for peaceful purposes.
“This [NSC meeting] is to happen today,” the official confirmed to Arab News, adding that a statement about the meeting will be released as well.
The development takes place a day after Pakistan’s mission to the United Nations (UN) announced Islamabad, Beijing and Moscow will present a joint resolution at the UN Security Council calling for an immediate and unconditional ceasefire in the Middle East.
As per a copy of the draft seen by Arab News, the resolution calls for an immediate and unconditional ceasefire and a diplomatic solution to the nuclear issue to reach an agreement acceptable to all parties that “guarantees the exclusively peaceful nature of the Islamic Republic of Iran’s nuclear program in exchange for complete lifting of all multilateral and unilateral sanctions.”
Pakistan has condemned the US strikes against Iran, with its UN Ambassador Asim Iftikhar Ahmad calling on the Security Council on Monday to act “urgently and decisively,” warning against the danger posed to the populations of the region as the war intensifies.
Experts warn Pakistan, which shares a 900-kilometer porous border with Iran in its southwestern region prone to separatist militancy and cross-border attacks, will face additional security and economic challenges due to the worsening conflict between Tehran and Tel Aviv.
Financial analysts have warned that surging global oil prices due to the worsening conflict will cause economic setbacks for Pakistan, which relies on expensive fuel imports for its energy demands. Islamabad is grappling with a macroeconomic crisis amid a precarious balance of payment position.
The crisis also raises questions about how Islamabad will navigate its delicate balancing act between Iran, other Gulf partners, and the US, which remains one of Pakistan’s largest trading partners and a critical source of military and economic assistance. How Pakistan manages these competing ties amid an escalating regional conflict could test its diplomacy in the coming weeks.
ISLAMABAD: Heavy monsoon rains battered parts of Punjab and Islamabad over the past 24 hours, prompting rescue operations in the capital and a flood alert in riverine areas across the province, according to official statements on Wednesday.
In its latest monsoon update, the Punjab Provincial Disaster Management Authority (PDMA) warned of continued rainfall in most districts until August 7, marking the sixth spell of the current monsoon season.
The ongoing downpours come as Pakistan deals with seasonal flooding and has already recorded 303 rain-related deaths, including 164 in Punjab alone, since the beginning of the season on June 26.
“In the last 24 hours, 86mm of rainfall was recorded in Gujrat, 37mm in Narowal, 28mm in Multan, 27mm in Dera Ghazi Khan and 22mm in Jhelum,” the PDMA said in a statement, adding that rain was also reported in Sialkot, Attock, Mangla, Murree, Rawalpindi, Layyah, Mianwali and Kot Addu.
“All district administrations have been directed to remain on alert,” the statement quoted PDMA Director General Irfan Ali Kathia as saying. “We urge citizens to take precautions and not let children near rivers, canals or flooded streams.”
Meanwhile, rescue teams in Islamabad evacuated more than 40 residents after floodwaters entered homes in Chattha Bakhtawar, a low-lying area in the capital.
The spillway of Rawal Dam was opened at 11:00 AM after the water level reached 1,750.90 feet, according to a notice issued by Islamabad authorities. Residents were also advised to stay away from surrounding water bodies and take necessary safety measures.
The PDMA said the flow of water remained normal in all major rivers including the Indus, Jhelum, Chenab, Ravi and Sutlej, with only a low-level flood reported at Tarbela on the Indus River. Tarbela Dam is currently 95 percent full, while Mangla stands at 62 percent.
Indian dams across the eastern rivers, according to the statement, are reported to be 56 percent full.
Since the start of the monsoon season, 727 people have been injured, 563 houses completely destroyed, and 428 livestock perished in rain-related incidents in Pakistan.
In the past 24 hours, three more people were reported injured due to monsoon-related accidents.
Islamabad’s Capital Development Authority (CDA) said no injuries were reported during Tuesday’s flood rescue in Chattha Bakhtawar, where 12 emergency personnel responded within a short span to the residents’ call, evacuating up to 45 people.
Emergency officers confirmed the operation was completed and the area had been cleared.
PESHAWAR: More than 200 Afghan refugees holding Proof of Registration (PoR) cards have returned to Afghanistan via Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, authorities said on Tuesday, after Pakistan’s federal government renewed its call for Afghans to leave the country and set a September 1 deadline for deporting PoR cardholders.
The ongoing expulsion drive began in 2023, the same year Pakistan witnessed a surge in militant violence, including suicide attacks that officials linked, without offering direct evidence, to Afghan nationals.
Authorities initially targeted undocumented migrants, most of them Afghans, followed by those holding Afghan Citizen Cards (ACC). In June this year, Pakistan declined to renew PoR cards, rendering 1.4 million previously documented refugees illegal under national law.
PoR cards were issued by Pakistan to Afghans who were registered in collaboration with the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) and recognized the holder as a legal refugee in Pakistan. ACC cards, on the other hand, were issued to unregistered Afghans living in Pakistan, acknowledging them as Afghan nationals but without granting refugee status.
“213 PoR card holders have returned to Afghanistan through the Torkham border, along with 273 ACC holders and 1,070 undocumented Afghan nationals,” Khyber Pakhtunkhwa’s Home and Tribal Affairs Department said in a statement.
It added that one additional PoR card holder also crossed into Afghanistan via Angoor Ada, bringing the total to 214.
Pakistan said on Monday it would begin formal deportations of PoR card holders starting September 1, while voluntary returns would begin immediately.
“Afghan nationals holding Proof of Registration (PoR) cards shall be repatriated to Afghanistan as part of the ongoing implementation of the Illegal Foreigners Repatriation Plan (IFRP),” the interior ministry said in a notification.
“It has been decided that the voluntary return of PoR card holders shall commence forthwith, while the formal repatriation and deportation process will take effect from 1st September 2025,” it added.
Islamabad aims to deport around 3 million Afghans, including 1.4 million PoR card holders and some 800,000 ACC holders. More than a million Afghans have already left Pakistan since the crackdown began in 2023, according to the UN refugee agency.
Pakistan has long argued that some Afghan refugees are involved in militancy and crime, though the mass expulsions are widely viewed as an attempt to pressure Afghanistan’s Taliban authorities to curb cross-border insurgents, particularly those targeting Pakistani forces in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Balochistan.
UNHCR has urged Pakistan to halt forced deportations and ensure that any returns are voluntary, gradual and dignified.
ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s ambassador to the United Nations on Tuesday described the humanitarian crisis in Gaza as an extreme case of politically driven starvation, citing media and aid reports that people were not dying from a lack of food but because access to it was deliberately blocked.
In recent weeks, Gaza has faced a worsening humanitarian emergency. Israel’s blockade, imposed since early March, has severely restricted access to food, water and medical supplies. Aid agencies and the United Nations have warned of mass starvation and rising child malnutrition in the enclave, home to around two million people. Only a few humanitarian trucks have been allowed in.
“At least 175 Palestinians, including 93 children, have died of starvation,” Ambassador Asim Iftikhar Ahmad told a UN Security Council briefing. “The Director-General of the FAO has warned ‘Gaza is now on the brink of a full-scale famine. People are not starving because food is unavailable, they are starving because access is denied.’”
He noted that even the delivery of humanitarian aid had become deadly for Palestinians.
“Over 1,200 aid-related killings have been documented since May,” he added. “Palestinians are routinely forced to choose between two deadly options: risking death by starvation, or risking death by gunfire to reach food aid sites.’ That is what The New York Times is saying.”
Citing Haaretz, an Israeli newspaper, Ahmad said Gaza represented “the most extreme example of politically driven starvation in the 21st century,” echoing earlier warnings from UNICEF, the UN Secretary-General, and the World Food Programme that described the situation as a “perfect storm of suffering” and a “disaster unfolding before our eyes.”
The Pakistani envoy called for an “immediate, unconditional, and permanent ceasefire,” alongside full Israeli withdrawal, the release of hostages from the Hamas captivity and unrestricted humanitarian access to the Palestinian enclave.
“This war on civilians must end,” he said.
“Human rights are universal and indivisible,” he added. “Human rights cannot be partitioned, and justice must never be selective. The imperative, legal, political and moral, is crystal clear: we must act now to end Israel’s brutal and illegal war and the unconscionable suffering of the Palestinian people. Humanity and dignity of people, civilians on both sides, demand nothing less.”
Ahmad also warned that lasting peace would remain elusive without addressing the root cause of the crisis, which he identified as Israel’s prolonged occupation of Palestinian territories, and called for the implementation of a two-state solution based on pre-1967 borders with East Jerusalem as the Palestinian capital.
Pakistani musicians use folk songs and rap to raise climate change awareness
Sham Bhai has toured a dozen villages in Sindh teaching people about climate adaptation and resilience through song
Music is a useful medium for sharing information in places like rural Sindh where literacy is low and Internet access is scarce
Updated 06 August 2025
AP
UMERKOT, Pakistan: Villagers hush when Pakistani folk musician Sham Bhai starts singing about climate change, her clear voice rising above the simple squat dwellings.
“We are the people of the south. The winds seem to be blowing from the north. The winds seem cold and warm. My heart is burned from seeing the collapsed houses in the rain. Oh, beloved, come home soon.”
Sham is from Sindh, the Pakistani province worst-hit three years ago by climate-worsened deluges that affected tens of millions of people nationwide and washed away homes, farmland and infrastructure.
She has toured a dozen villages in Sindh during the past two years, teaching people about climate adaptation and resilience through song, a useful medium for sharing information in places where literacy is low and Internet is scarce.
“When we give a message through song, it is easy to communicate to people because they understand it,” the 18-year-old singer told The Associated Press. She was performing in Umerkot district, singing in her native tongue and official provincial language, Sindhi, which is more likely to be spoken and understood in places like Umerkot than the official and national language of Pakistan, Urdu.
Women dance during a performance of a Pakistani folk musician Sham Bhai at a village in Umerkot, a district of Pakistan's southeastern Sindh province on July 17, 2025. (AP/File)
Sindh recorded more than 1,000 rain-related deaths in a few months in 2022. The damage remains visible. Broken roads and flattened houses that residents never rebuilt. Floods submerged swathes of Sham’s district, Tando Allahyar. News footage showed people wading through waist-deep water.
“The meaning of the song is that poor people’s homes built on mud are not strong,” Sham explains. “Women and children face hardship during the rains because they are vulnerable in the absence of men who go away to work. The women of the house call on their men to return because the weather is so bad.”
Poverty and illiteracy deepen people’s vulnerability.
Alternating patches of parched and lush farmland flank the road to Umerkot. Dry and wet spells buffet the province, and local farmers have to adapt. They now focus on winter crops rather than summer ones because the rain is more predictable in the colder months.
Villagers watch a performance of a Pakistani folk musician Sham Bhai at a village in Umerkot, a district of Pakistan's southeastern Sindh province on July 17, 2025. (AP/File)
“The monsoon season used to come on time, but now it starts late,” farmer Ghulam Mustafa Mahar said. “Sometimes there is no rain. All patterns are off-course due to climate change for the last five years.”
He and others have switched from crops to livestock to survive.
There is little infrastructure away from the center of the district. Children get excited seeing sedans crunch through the dust.
The area is mostly poor and very hot.
Sindh’s literacy rate falls to 38 percent in rural areas. Sham said singing informs those who can’t learn about climate change because they can’t read.
Mindful of their audience, the three singers warm people up with popular tunes to catch their attention before launching into mournful tunes about the wind and rain, their lyrics inspired by writers and poets from Sindh.
“People are acting on our advice; they are planting trees and making their houses strong to face climate change,” said Sham.
“Women and children suffer a lot during bad conditions, which damage their homes.”
Women and girls of all ages can be seen working outdoors in Sindh, tending to crops or livestock. They gather food and water, along with wood for fuel. They are predominantly restricted to this type of work and other domestic chores because of gender norms and inequalities. When extreme weather strikes, they are often the first to suffer. One villager said when heavy rain battered homes in 2022, it crushed and killed whoever was inside, including children.
Pakistani folk musician Sham Bhai, center, arrives with her team members for her performance at a village in Umerkot, a district of Pakistan's southeastern Sindh province on July 17, 2025. (AP/File)
One woman is rapping for climate justice
People in rural areas have no idea what climate change is, said Urooj Fatima, an activist from the city of Jhuddo. Her stage name is Sindhi Chhokri, and she is known locally for campaigning on issues such as women’s rights.
But she has turned her attention to raising awareness about climate change since flooding devastated her village in 2022 and again in 2024.
“We can engage a lot of audiences through rap. If we go to a village and gather a community, there are a maximum of 50. But everyone listens to songs. Through rap, we can reach out to hundreds of thousands of people through our voice and our message.”
She said hip-hop isn’t common in Pakistan, but the genre resonates because of its tradition as an expression of life, hardship and struggle.
She has yet to finish her latest climate change rap, but wrote one in response to the 2022 flooding in neighboring Balochistan, the country’s poorest and least developed province, because she felt it wasn’t getting enough attention. She performed it at festivals in Pakistan and promoted it across her social media accounts. Officials at the time said more help was needed from the central government for people to rebuild their lives.
“There are potholes on the road; the roads are ruined,” raps Urooj. “I am telling the truth. Will your anger rain down on me? Where was the Balochistan government when the floods came? My pen thirsts for justice. Now they’ve succeeded, these thieving rulers. This isn’t a rap song, this is a revolution.”
She and her sister Khanzadi campaign on the ground and social media, protesting, visiting villages, and planting thousands of trees. She wants the Sindh government to take climate change awareness seriously by providing information and education to those who need it the most, people living in rural areas.
“This happens every year,” said Urooj, referring to the floods. “Climate change affects a person’s whole life. Their whole life becomes a disaster.”
She cites the disproportionate and specific impact of climate change on women and girls, the problems they experience with displacement, education, hygiene, and nutrition, attributing these to entrenched gender discrimination.
“For women, there are no opportunities or facilities. And then, if a flood comes from above, they face more difficulties.”
She elicits controversy in rural areas. Half the feedback she receives is negative. She is undeterred from speaking out on social taboos and injustice.
“Rap is a powerful platform. If our rap reaches just a few people, then this is a very good achievement. We will not let our voices be suppressed. We will always raise our voices high.”
ISLAMABAD: Pakistani exporters and manufacturers are set to expand their global footprint through “Pakistan Mart” in Dubai, Pakistani state media reported, with the initiative aimed at granting Pakistani products direct access to “high-demand” markets.
The “Pakistan Mart” is a joint venture between the Pakistan’s National Logistics Corporation (NLC) and the UAE’s DP World logistics management company to establish a dedicated trade hub in Dubai.
The development followed the visit of a high-level delegation representing the NLC and DP World to the Islamabad Chamber of Commerce and Industry (ICCI), the Associated Press of Pakistan (APP) news agency reported.
The delegation was led by Brig. Mohammad Yousaf, Director Plans at NLC, along with Abdullah Yaqoob Al-Sayed Ahmad Al-Hashmi, Head of Traders Markets at DP World, Fakhre Alam, Vice Chairman of DP World, and Junaid Tariq, Director Business at NLC.
“The facility in Dubai will provide state-of-the-art logistics, warehousing, and retail infrastructure to facilitate direct access for Pakistani manufacturers and exporters to high-demand markets across the Middle East, Africa, and South America,” Brig. Yousaf was quoted as saying at a session outlining the scope of Pakistan Mart.
Pakistani exporters often participate in major trade exhibitions in Dubai to showcase products ranging from textiles to food and pharmaceuticals. These events offer direct access to global buyers, enhance brand visibility and support Pakistan’s efforts to expand its export footprint in the Gulf and beyond.
On the occasion, DP World Head of Traders Markets Al-Hashmi described Pakistan Mart as a “gateway to global trade,” designed to facilitate business through integrated warehousing, logistics and exhibition spaces.
The UAE is Pakistan’s third-largest trading partner after China and the United States, and a major source of remittances and foreign investment. Policymakers in Pakistan consider the Emirates an optimal export destination due to their geographical proximity, which minimizes transportation and freight costs while facilitating commercial transactions.
Pakistan’s exports reached approximately $26.9 billion between July 2024 and April 2025, reflecting a 6.4 percent increase compared to the same period in the previous year, according to the Pakistan Business Council (PBC). Leading export sectors included textiles, food products, chemicals and pharmaceuticals, and leather goods.
ICCI Senior Vice President Abdul Rehman Siddiqui termed the project a “milestone” on Pakistan’s logistics and export landscape, according to the APP report.
“The synergy between NLC’s regional capabilities and DP World’s global network would provide immense opportunities for Pakistani businesses,” he said.