Iran Air launches weekly flight to Quetta in southwest Pakistan

Iran Air launches weekly flight to Quetta in southwest Pakistan
A picture taken on September 14, 2017, shows an Iran Air plane, taxing at Dubai’s International Airport in Dubai, UAE. (AFP/File)
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Iran Air launches weekly flight to Quetta in southwest Pakistan

Iran Air launches weekly flight to Quetta in southwest Pakistan
  • New service is expected to boost trade, tourism and pilgrimage travel
  • Iran Air flight 826 completed its inaugural journey on Wednesday night

KARACHI: Iran Air, the national flag carrier of Iran, completed its inaugural flight to Pakistan’s southwestern city of Quetta on Oct. 29, the Pakistan Airports Authority (PAA) said, marking the airline’s first direct connection between Mashhad and the Balochistan capital.

The airline will now operate one flight every Wednesday on the Mashhad–Zahedan–Quetta route, with the service expected to strengthen air connectivity and boost trade and tourism between the two neighboring countries.

“Iran Air flight 826 will now operate once weekly every Wednesday, arriving in Quetta at 9:30pm,” the PAA said in a statement on Thursday.

Balochistan Governor Jaffar Khan Mandokhel was the chief guest at the inaugural ceremony, which was also attended by Iran’s Consul General Ali Reza Rajaei and other dignitaries. The national anthems of both countries were played on the occasion.

The launch of Iran Air’s Quetta flight is expected to greatly facilitate travel for Shia pilgrims from Balochistan, who frequently visit Iranian cities of Mashhad and Qom.

The new air service will offer a safer, faster and more convenient alternative to the long and often challenging road journey through border crossings on buses, which have at times been targeted by separatist militants.


Teenage Australian cricketer dies after being hit by ball

Teenage Australian cricketer dies after being hit by ball
Updated 30 October 2025

Teenage Australian cricketer dies after being hit by ball

Teenage Australian cricketer dies after being hit by ball
  • Ben Austin was in nets with helmet on when he was hit on neck by ball-throwing device
  • Teenager was not wearing a stem guard, which protects the neck, says media report

MELBOURNE, Australia: A promising 17-year-old Australian cricketer died on Thursday after being struck by a ball, with his family saying they were “utterly devastated.”

Ben Austin was in the nets with a helmet on before a Twenty20 game in Melbourne on Tuesday when he was hit in the neck while facing a ball-throwing device.

He was rushed to hospital in critical condition.

“We are utterly devastated by the passing of our beautiful Ben, who died earlier on Thursday morning,” his father Jace Austin said in a statement.

“This tragedy has taken Ben from us, but we find some comfort that he was doing something he did for so many summers — going down to the nets with mates to play cricket.

The teenager was not wearing a stem guard, which protects the neck, ABC News said, citing cricket authorities.

Austin was an emerging bowler and batter, considered by his Ferntree Gully Cricket Club as a “star cricketer, great leader and an awesome young man.”

Players from both teams wore black arm bands for the Women’s World Cup semifinal on Thursday between Australia and hosts India.

Deaths in cricket are rare.

The most recent high-profile one in Australia came in 2014, when Test star Phillip Hughes was killed when hit in the neck by a rising ball during a domestic Sheffield Shield game.

His death stunned Australia and the world cricket community, sparking an outpouring of grief and ushering in stronger protocols around concussion and better safety equipment.

Cricket Victoria chief Nick Cummins told ABC there were similarities between the two tragedies.

“The ball hit him in the neck in a similar accident that Phil Hughes suffered 10 years ago,” Cummins said.

Cricket Australia chair Mike Baird said his heart “was broken” and lessons needed to be learned.

“Clearly there are things we have to learn from this,” Baird told reporters. “But right now we are concerned about the family and trying to support them in every way.”


Pakistan to resume peace talks with Kabul as 22 militants killed in border operations

Pakistan to resume peace talks with Kabul as 22 militants killed in border operations
Updated 30 October 2025

Pakistan to resume peace talks with Kabul as 22 militants killed in border operations

Pakistan to resume peace talks with Kabul as 22 militants killed in border operations
  • Islamabad says Afghan soil being used by Pakistani Taliban for attacks, which Kabul denies
  • Defense minister warns of strikes “deep into Afghanistan” if cross-border violence continues

ISLAMABAD: The Pakistan army said on Thursday 22 militants had been killed in counter-terror operations along the Afghan border since Oct. 28, as Islamabad agreed to extend peace talks with Kabul at the request of mediators from Turkiye and Qatar amid surging cross-border violence.

The Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR), the military’s media wing, said 18 militants were killed on Oct. 28 and 29 in two encounters in the southwestern Balochistan province and four more were gunned down in northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa while trying to infiltrate from Afghanistan on Wednesday night. Both provinces share a frontier with Afghanistan. 

The ISPR said a “high-value terrorist commander,” identified as Amjad alias ‘Mazahim’, deputy to Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) chief Noor Wali Mehsud, was among those killed. 

“It is pertinent to highlight that the leadership of Fitna al Khawarij, while residing in Afghanistan, is orchestrating infiltration attempts into Pakistan,” the military said, using its term for the TTP. 

“It is once again reiterated that the Interim Afghan government must take concrete measures to ensure that Afghan soil is not used by kharji proxies to perpetrate terrorism against Pakistan.”

The ISPR described the militants slain in Balochistan as “Indian-sponsored terrorists,” saying 14 were killed in Quetta district’s Chiltan Mountains and four more in Kech district after troops discovered a “terrorist hideout.” 

Pakistan has long blamed India for backing militant networks, including the TTP, a charge New Delhi denies.

Talks between Pakistan and the Taliban-led Afghan government, mediated by Turkiye and Qatar, began on Oct. 25 but ended without agreement earlier this week, with Islamabad accusing Kabul of failing to curb the TTP. 

After the collapse of the initial round earlier this week, a security official said on Thursday Pakistan would remain in Istanbul “to resume the negotiations,” emphasizing the demand that Afghanistan take “clear, verifiable and effective action against terrorists.”

The ongoing dialogue follows deadly border clashes earlier in October that left dozens dead and triggered the worst fighting between the two neighbors since the Taliban’s return to power in 2021. Both nations agreed to a ceasefire brokered in Doha on Oct. 19 but has not been able to find common ground in the ongoing second round of talks.

Pakistan has long accused the TTP of using sanctuaries inside Afghanistan to launch attacks, while Kabul denies harboring the group and says Pakistan’s security challenges are an internal problem. 

Speaking to a local TV channel on Thursday, Pakistan’s Defense Minister Khawaja Asif confirmed that a delegation from Islamabad had agreed to remain in Istanbul to continue negotiations with Afghan officials. 

“As of now, there has been no breakthrough,” he told Geo News. “But our mediators in Turkiye and Qatar, our friends, the defense ministers and the intelligence chiefs in Turkiye, are trying their best to resolve this issue through negotiations.”

Asif said Pakistan’s delegation had been preparing to return home when mediators asked them to stay and give diplomacy another chance. 

“Negotiations have not yet begun,” he said. “But our delegation is in Istanbul. Our friends in both countries are playing a constructive part in this. When they come up with a solution, then negotiations can resume.”

He reiterated that any progress would depend on Kabul’s willingness to prevent attacks from its territory. 

“This is a prerequisite,” Asif said. “Until this prerequisite is established, investment and trade are very good … But if they are adamant or insist on becoming an Indian proxy and are pushing for the peace of Pakistan, then they are welcome.”


‘Violations’ against Pakistani journalists surged 60% in past year - watchdog 

‘Violations’ against Pakistani journalists surged 60% in past year - watchdog 
Updated 30 October 2025

‘Violations’ against Pakistani journalists surged 60% in past year - watchdog 

‘Violations’ against Pakistani journalists surged 60% in past year - watchdog 
  • Freedom Network report finds 142 cases of media violations, highest in years
  • Watchdog's findings say amended cybercrime law being used to silence critical voices

ISLAMABAD: Violations against journalists in Pakistan jumped nearly 60 percent over the past year, a media watchdog said on Thursday, warning of a "worsening environment" for press freedom under Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif’s government.

The findings are part of the Annual State of Impunity Report 2025 by Freedom Network, a Pakistan-based media rights and civil liberties organization that monitors and advocates for press freedom, journalist safety, and digital rights across the country. The report has been produced with support from International Media Support (IMS) and was released ahead of the UN-designated International Day to End Impunity for Crimes against Journalists on November 2. 

Freedom Network documented at least 142 cases of violations against journalists and media professionals between November 2024 and September 2025, a nearly 60 percent rise from the previous year. In the watchdog's framework, “violations” include physical assaults, legal cases, harassment and censorship against journalists and media workers, covering both physical and non-physical threats to press freedom.

The report noted that 36 legal cases were filed against 30 journalists under Pakistan’s Prevention of Electronic Crimes Act (PECA) and Pakistan Penal Code, many in Punjab province, the country's most populous and richest region. The government amended PECA in early 2025 to make its punitive provisions harsher, prompting concern from rights groups that it is being used to target dissenting voices online. The government denies this. 

“The use of legal framework to crack down on free expression is a tool the federal government is now using excessively, targeting critical voices,” Freedom Network Executive Director Iqbal Khattak was quoted as saying in the report.

“Pakistan cannot afford to silence critical media, which is equally important in a democratic dispensation.”

The watchdog said the post-election climate after the February 2024 general polls had “made almost every region in Pakistan unsafe for journalism,” with attacks reported across all provinces and territories.

Punjab and Islamabad emerged as the most dangerous places for journalists, accounting for 28 percent each of all recorded violations, followed by Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Sindh, Balochistan, and Azad Jammu and Kashmir. No incidents were reported from the northern Gilgit-Baltistan region. 

Television journalists were the most frequently targeted, followed by those working in print and digital outlets.

Freedom Network said the surge in threats and cases has created “a hostile environment for media,” urging authorities to strengthen protections and end impunity for attacks on journalists. 

The findings of the watchdog, it said, “indicate a worsening environment of freedom of expression and safety of journalists in the country under Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif government.”

 


Pakistan issues over 2,100 visas to Indian Sikh pilgrims for religion founder’s birth celebrations

Pakistan issues over 2,100 visas to Indian Sikh pilgrims for religion founder’s birth celebrations
Updated 30 October 2025

Pakistan issues over 2,100 visas to Indian Sikh pilgrims for religion founder’s birth celebrations

Pakistan issues over 2,100 visas to Indian Sikh pilgrims for religion founder’s birth celebrations
  • Indian pilgrims will visit Gurdwaras at Pakistan’s Nankana Sahib, Hassan Abdal and Narowal cities through Kartarpur Corridor
  • Visa-free corridor is a sign of rare cooperation between bitter rivals who engaged in four-day military confrontation this year

ISLAMABAD: The Pakistan High Commission has issued more than 2,100 visas to Indian Sikh pilgrims to participate in the birth anniversary celebrations of Sikhism founder Baba Guru Nanak Dev Ji from Nov. 4 to 13 in Pakistan, state media reported this week.

Every year Sikh pilgrims travel from India to Pakistan through the visa-free Kartarpur Corridor, which links Gurdwara Darbar Sahib near Narowal in Pakistan’s Punjab with Gurdwara Dera Baba Nanak in India’s Gurdaspur district.

The corridor is a rare sign of cooperation between the bitter nuclear-armed neighbors, who recently engaged in a four-day military confrontation that saw them bombard each other with fighter jets, drones and trade artillery fire before they agreed to a ceasefire on May 10. 

“During the visit, the pilgrims would, inter alia, visit Gurdwara Nankana Sahib, Gurdwara Panja Sahib and Gurdwara Kartarpur Sahib,” the state-run Associated Press of Pakistan (APP) said in a report on Wednesday.

“The issuance of visas is covered under the framework of the Bilateral Protocol on Visits to Religious Shrines, 1974.”

Pakistan’s Charge d’Affaires in India, Saad Ahmad Warraich, wished the Sikh pilgrims a “fulfilling and spiritually rewarding” journey.

He said Pakistan would continue to facilitate visits to sacred pilgrimage sites in line with its “abiding commitment to promoting inter-religious and inter-cultural harmony and understanding.”

Much of Sikh heritage is located in Pakistan. When Pakistan was carved out of India at the end of British rule in 1947, Kartarpur ended up on the Pakistani side of the border, while most of the region’s Sikhs remained on the other side.

For more than seven decades, the Sikh community had lobbied for easier access to its holiest temple and Pakistan’s decision to open the corridor in 2019 earned widespread international appreciation.


Pakistan to resume peace talks in Istanbul as tensions rise with Kabul over militant attacks

Pakistan to resume peace talks in Istanbul as tensions rise with Kabul over militant attacks
Updated 30 October 2025

Pakistan to resume peace talks in Istanbul as tensions rise with Kabul over militant attacks

Pakistan to resume peace talks in Istanbul as tensions rise with Kabul over militant attacks
  • Talks mediated by Turkiye, Qatar ended without agreement as Pakistan accused Kabul of refusing to curb TTP militants 
  • Afghanistan denies the charge, saying it has no control over the militant group blamed for recent attacks on Pakistani troops

ISLAMABAD: Islamabad has agreed to extend peace talks with the Afghan Taliban in Istanbul at the request of its hosts, a security official said on Thursday, adding that negotiations would continue on Islamabad’s key demand that Kabul take “clear, verifiable and effective action” against militants using Afghan soil for attacks inside Pakistan.

Talks between representatives from Pakistan and Afghanistan, which were mediated by Turkiye and Qatar, began on Oct. 25 but ended without agreement earlier this week, with Islamabad accusing the Taliban administration of unwillingness to commit to rein in the Pakistani Taliban (TTP), a separate militant group hostile to Pakistan that Islamabad says operates with impunity inside Afghanistan. Kabul denies this and insists it has no control over the TTP, which has launched increasing attacks against Pakistani troops in recent weeks.

Negotiations opened after dozens were killed this month along the border between Afghanistan and Pakistan in the worst such violence since the Taliban took power in Kabul in 2021. Both nations agreed to a ceasefire brokered in Doha on October 19, but could not find common ground in a second round of talks.

“On the request of our hosts / friends, Pakistan has agreed to extend the dialogue process. Accordingly, the Pakistani delegation, which was prepared to depart, will now remain in Istanbul to resume the negotiations,” a Pakistani security official said, declining to be named. 

“The talks will be based on Pakistan’s central demand that Afghanistan take clear, verifiable and effective action against terrorists. Pakistan has once again stressed that Afghan soil should not be used for terrorism against Pakistan. We appreciate the constructive role of our hosts and remain committed to seeking a peaceful resolution in good faith.”

State-run Pakistan TV Digital, citing “well-placed sources,” also confirmed that the Pakistani delegation had decided to stay in Istanbul to resume talks on the request of Türkiye.

The decision to extend talks comes as Pakistani leaders delivered a series of strongly worded statements after the breakdown of talks. 

“We will carry out strikes,” Pakistan’s Defense Minister Khawaja Asif told reporters at Parliament House in Islamabad on Wednesday, when asked what options Pakistan would avail if cross-border attacks continued.

“We will certainly do it if their territory is used and if our territory is violated, if we have to go deep into Afghanistan to retaliate, we certainly will.”

The defense minister’s statement followed an earlier one on X on Wednesday, in which he warned that Pakistan would “obliterate” the Taliban if it did not curb militant activity. 

“Let me assure them [Afghan authorities] that Pakistan does not require to employ even a fraction of its full arsenal to completely obliterate the Taliban regime and push them back to the caves for hiding,” Asif wrote.

“If they wish so, the repeat of the scenes of their rout at Tora Bora with their tails between the legs would surely be a spectacle to watch for the people of the region.”

Asif’s reference to Tora Bora alluded to the US bombardment of Taliban and Al-Qaeda fighters in Afghanistan’s White Mountains in late 2001, when many militants fled into Pakistan following the fall of the Taliban regime after the September 11 attacks.

Asif also accused the Taliban of “blindly pushing Afghanistan into yet another conflict” to sustain a war economy, and alleged that archrival and neighboring India was exploiting divisions within the regime.

“The government in Kabul has been penetrated by India, and India has started a proxy war against Pakistan through Kabul,” he told a local TV channel on Tuesday.

Pakistan has long blamed India for backing militant networks, including the TTP, a charge New Delhi denies.