Pakistan condemns Israeli bid to annex West Bank as ‘deplorable,’ demands world action

Pakistan condemns Israeli bid to annex West Bank as ‘deplorable,’ demands world action
Israeli troops deploy during a raid in Nablus city in the occupied West Bank on July 23, 2025. (AFP)
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Updated 25 July 2025

Pakistan condemns Israeli bid to annex West Bank as ‘deplorable,’ demands world action

Pakistan condemns Israeli bid to annex West Bank as ‘deplorable,’ demands world action
  • Israel’s parliament this month passed a resolution urging the government to extend sovereignty over West Bank, including Jordan Valley
  • Islamabad says such measures represent dangerous escalation, jeopardize regional stability and prospects for Palestine dispute settlement

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan condemns Israel’s attempt to annex parts of the West Bank as a “deplorable act” and a grave violation of international law, the Pakistani foreign office said on Friday, adding the move underscores Israel’s disregard for Palestinian rights.

Israel’s parliament this month passed a non-binding resolution that urged Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu-led government to extend sovereignty over the West Bank, including the Jordan Valley.

The motion, though symbolic and without legal force, reflects mounting political pressure from Israeli right-wing lawmakers to formalize annexation, a move that has drawn sharp international criticism.

“Pakistan unequivocally condemns the Israeli parliament’s unlawful attempt to assert ‘sovereignty’ over the occupied West Bank,” the Pakistani foreign office said in a statement.

“Such deliberate and provocative actions highlight the occupying power’s systematic attempts to undermine efforts for peace and entrench its illegal occupation.”

The development comes amid Israel’s ongoing war on Gaza that has killed more than 59,000 Palestinians since Oct. 2023, according to the Palestinian health ministry.

Pakistan maintains that the only viable remedy to the Palestine dispute is the realization of the two-state solution, which includes the establishment of Palestine as a viable, secure and contiguous state on the basis of pre-1967 borders.

The South Asian country is also using its presidency of the UN Security Council this month to help refocus global attention on the crisis in Gaza and the wider Israeli Palestinian conflict.

“These unilateral measures represent a dangerous escalation that jeopardizes regional stability and prospects for a just and lasting settlement,” the Pakistani foreign office said.

“Pakistan calls upon the international community to take swift and decisive action to hold Israel accountable for its violations of United Nations Security Council resolutions and international humanitarian law. These measures will neither be recognized nor alter the internationally acknowledged status of the Occupied Palestinian Territory.”


FIFA vice president pledges support for rebuilding football in Pakistan after years-long suspension

FIFA vice president pledges support for rebuilding football in Pakistan after years-long suspension
Updated 13 sec ago

FIFA vice president pledges support for rebuilding football in Pakistan after years-long suspension

FIFA vice president pledges support for rebuilding football in Pakistan after years-long suspension
  • Al Khalifa says Pakistan has huge potential, vows to help develop football infrastructure and training programs
  • Government says it is targeting 23 sports, including gymnastics, to nurture stronger athletes across disciplines

ISLAMABAD: FIFA Vice President Sheikh Salman bin Ibrahim Al Khalifa on Thursday pledged the world football body’s full support to revive the sport in Pakistan, promising to work with the national federation to develop infrastructure and create new opportunities after years of administrative turmoil.

A member of Bahrain’s royal family, Al Khalifa’s visit comes at a time when Pakistan has stepped up participation in international football tournaments across the Middle East and beyond.

However, the sport’s development has been held back by repeated crises within the Pakistan Football Federation (PFF), which has been suspended multiple times by FIFA in recent years for “third-party interference,” a term used when external actors influence or take control of a federation’s internal affairs, breaching FIFA’s independence rules.

The PFF’s most recent suspension, imposed in February 2025 for failing to adopt a FIFA-approved constitution ensuring fair elections, was lifted a month later after it endorsed the document and elected Syed Mohsen Gilani as its 17th president in May.

“I think the last [high-profile FIFA] visit was back in 2017, but I think I’ve come at the right time,” Al Khalifa said while addressing a news conference. “It’s the right time when we have an elected body at the PFF, led by President Syed Gilani, and of course ... the support of the government for sports in general, and in football in particular.”

He said he did not want to talk about the past.

“I think what matters is the present and what we can do,” he continued. “We have a clear roadmap of what needs to be done in football, because we all feel that Pakistan has a huge potential in this game. Since it’s been at standstill for so many years, I think it’s time that we start to kick off this program.”

He said FIFA and the Asian Football Confederation (AFC) would help Pakistan rebuild facilities and programs neglected during the suspension.

“We are here to help,” he said. “We are here to find the right solutions in most of the problems that we face.”

Al Khalifa said bringing in experts to guide the local federation was among FIFA’s top priorities.

Rana Mashhood Ahmad Khan, Chairman of the Prime Minister’s Youth Program, thanked him for visiting and said Pakistan’s new sports initiatives aimed to identify and train young talent nationwide.

“Football has enormous potential in Pakistan,” he said. “Together with the Pakistan Football Federation, we will identify that talent, bring it forward and groom it.”

He said the government was targeting 23 games, hoping to produce better athletes in each one of them.

“Apart from cricket, hockey and football, the games that are very popular in the world right now, we are also bringing in gymnastics and athletics, and we are working on that,” he added.