Pakistan mulls fencing Iran border amid tensions over suicide attack

Iranian mourners surround the coffins of 27 Revolutionary Guards, who were killed in a suicide attack, during their funeral in southeastern city of Isfahan on Feb. 16, 2019. Iran's Revolutionary Guards accused "Pakistan's security forces" of supporting the perpetrators of a suicide bombing that killed 27 troops on February 13, in remarks state TV aired. (AFP)
Updated 24 February 2019
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Pakistan mulls fencing Iran border amid tensions over suicide attack

  • Iran says suicide bomber who killed 27 Revolutionary Guards near border with Pakistan was Pakistani
  • Pakistan military spokesman says both countries are considering fencing common border

KARACHI: Security analysts say they see no immediate materialization of Pakistan’s plans to fence its border with Iran, days after Tehran accused it of harboring militants from the Sunni terrorist organization that claimed responsibility for the February 13 suicide attack on an Iranian army convoy that left 27 soldiers dead. 

The reactions of security experts came in response to a press conference on Saturday, where Major-General Asif Gafoor, Pakistan Army spokesperson and director general of the Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR), said Pakistan and Iran were considering fencing the common border.

“We both are considering fencing the border so that no third party could sabotage the brotherly and friendly relations through any nefarious act,” he said.

The 959 km Iran-Pakistan border which begins at the Kuh-i-Malik Salih mountain and ends at Gwadar Bay in the Gulf of Oman includes a diverse landscape of mountain ridges, seasonal streams and rivers, and is notorious for human trafficking and smuggling as well as cross-border terrorism.

According to Muhammad Amir Rana, director of the Islamabad-based independent think tank Pakistan Institute for Peace Studies, a border fence would cost far too much time and money, with the enhancement of counter terrorism cooperation a better alternative for trust-building between the two countries.

“Both countries by boasting counter terrorism cooperation can defeat the forces detrimental to their ties,” he said.

Pakistan is currently involved in a heavy unilateral fence installation along 2,600 km of its border with Afghanistan with an estimated cost of over $550 million.

According to Syed Ali Shah, a Quetta based analyst and security expert, a similar project along the Pakistan-Iran border would cost both countries billions of dollars, due to the area’s difficult topography. 

According to Shah, the fence would also drastically impact informal trade between the two countries. 

“Majority of the people in Balochistan, especially those living in the five or six districts bordering Iran are solely reliant on this informal trade,” he said.

There is a human cost to the wall as well, he adds, as people from Rigi, Muhammad Hasni, Shahi Zai and other ethnic Baloch tribes living on either side of the border have assimilated into each other’s cultures, with inter-marriages and strong ties of tradition and religion between them. 

But Pakistan’s security agencies are keen to address the accusations of its western border, particularly at a time when India and Afghanistan are also blaming Islamabad for orchestrating terrorist attacks against them, most notably following the Pulwama suicide attack in Indian held Kashmir earlier this month.

Defence analyst Major General (retired) Ijaz Awan told Arab News that the fencing is doable after the Pak-Afghan border-wall is done, a project slated for completion by the end of the year. 

“Both the countries [Pakistan and Iran] shall share the cost,” he said, adding that there is no hostility between the two brotherly countries and both would agree to the arrangement.


Pakistan appreciates EU for GSP Plus status after passing controversial cybercrime law

Updated 29 January 2025
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Pakistan appreciates EU for GSP Plus status after passing controversial cybercrime law

  • Foreign Minister Ishaq Dar meets EU Special Representative for Human Rights Ambassador Olaf Skoog in Islamabad
  • Pakistani rights activists say government’s new cybercrime law is aimed at cracking on dissent on social media

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s Deputy Prime Minister Ishaq Dar on Wednesday met a senior European Union official to thank the inter-governmental body for its support for Pakistan’s GSP Plus status, hours after it passed a controversial cybercrime law that rights bodies and journalists allege is aimed at suppressing freedom of expression online. 
The GSP Plus status gives developing countries such as Pakistan a special incentive to pursue sustainable development and good governance. Countries have to implement 27 international conventions on human rights, labor rights, the environment and good governance in return for the EU to cut its import duties to zero on more than two-thirds of the tariff lines of their exports. In October 2023, the EU rolled over the current GSP Plus status for developing countries, including Pakistan, till 2027.
Pakistan’s digital rights experts, however, have raised concern that the government’s action of adopting the controversial Prevention of Electronic Crimes Amendment Bill, 2025, which opposition and journalists say is aimed at taking action against dissent on social media platforms, can put Pakistan’s GSP Plus status in danger. 
Dar, who also serves as Pakistan’s foreign minister, met EU Special Representative for Human Rights Ambassador Olaf Skoog at the foreign ministry’s office on Wednesday. 
“The DPM/FM highlighted Pakistan-EU’s growing cooperation in the political and economic spheres and appreciated EU’s continued support for Pakistan’s GSP plus status,” the ministry said. 
Dar underscored the importance of Pakistan-EU dialogue on human rights, emphasizing that Islamabad was a firm believer in the protection of fundamental rights. He said the Pakistani government continued to enact and strengthen human rights legislation.
The ministry said Skoog “positively” assessed the potential of Pakistan-EU relations and appreciated the continued growth of collaborative partnership across all sectors.
“The EU SR is on a four-day visit to Pakistan,” the ministry said. “The visit is part of Pakistan-EU joint efforts to enhance dialogue on Human Rights.”
Pakistan’s President Asif Ali Zardari on Wednesday signed the bill into law after it was approved by both houses of Pakistan’s parliament following noisy protests by journalists and lawmakers. 
The new amendment bill now proposes the establishment of the Social Media Protection and Regulatory Authority to perform a range of functions related to social media, including awareness, training, regulation, enlistment and blocking. 
SMPRA would be able to order the immediate blocking of unlawful content targeting judges, the armed forces, parliament or provincial assemblies or material which promotes and encourages terrorism and other forms of violence against the state or its institutions. 
The law also makes spreading disinformation a criminal offense punishable by three years in prison and a fine of two million rupees ($7,150).
A copy of the bill seen by Arab News has set imprisonment of up to three years and a fine of Rs2 million or both for “whoever intentionally disseminates, publicly exhibits, or transmits any information through any information system, that he knows or has reason to believe to be false or fake and likely to cause or create a sense of fear, panic or disorder or unrest in general public or society.”
Information Minister Ataullah Tarar told reporters last week that the bill will protect journalists and not harm them.
“This is the first time the government has defined what social media is,” Tarar said. “There is already a system in place for print and electronic media and complaints can be registered against them.”
He said “working journalists” should not feel threatened by the bill, which had to be passed because the Federal Investigation Agency, previously responsible for handling cybercrime, “does not have the capacity to handle child pornography or AI deep fake cases.”


Saudi Fund for Development reviews agriculture, medical projects in northwest Pakistan

Updated 47 min 25 sec ago
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Saudi Fund for Development reviews agriculture, medical projects in northwest Pakistan

  • Projects include agricultural institute, veterinary and thalassemia centers and children’s hospital in Malakand
  • Visiting delegation expresses satisfaction with ongoing progress, directs timely completion of all projects

PESHAWAR: A Saudi Fund for Development (SFD) delegation visited Pakistan’s northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province on Wednesday to review their ongoing agriculture, medical and educational projects in the area, the KP government’s disaster management authority said. 
KP’s Malakand Division is known for its picturesque Swat Valley and popular tourist destinations. It has navigated a turbulent path due to militancy and conflict in recent years, coupled with the devastating effects of natural disasters like floods. 
The SFD has provided financial assistance to Pakistan and funded development projects in various parts of the country. It has already done significant work to rehabilitate infrastructure in Malakand to improve people’s access to socioeconomic services and civic amenities.
“Today a Saudi delegation led by Director of Central Asia Operations Muhammed Almasoud visited Swat and reviewed three key ongoing projects,” the Provincial Disaster Management Authority (PDMA) KP said in a statement.

This handout photo, released by Pakistan’s Provincial Disaster Management Authority of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, shows a delegation of Saudi Fund for Development reviewing agriculture and medical projects in Swat on January 28, 2025. (Handout/PDMA)

“The Saudi delegation expressed deep satisfaction with the construction work and instructed the timely completion of the projects.”
These projects include an Agriculture Research Institute, a Veterinary Research Center, a Category D Hospital, a Thalassemia Center in Battagram, and a Special Children’s School in Swat with a total cost of approximately $4.6 million, the statement said. 

This handout photo, released by Pakistan’s Provincial Disaster Management Authority of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, shows a delegation of Saudi Fund for Development reviewing agriculture and medical projects in Swat on January 28, 2025. (Handout/PDMA)

“Additionally, the construction of the 82-kilometer road from Chakdara to Fatehpur has been completed at a cost of Rs3.4 billion [$12.2 million] which is a significant development milestone for the area,” the KP PDMA said. 
Pakistan has sought closer economic cooperation with Saudi Arabia in recent months, with Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif publicly stating his desire to collaborate with the Kingdom in trade, defense, economy, agriculture, tourism, energy, mining and minerals. 

This handout photo, released by Pakistan’s Provincial Disaster Management Authority of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, shows a delegation of Saudi Fund for Development reviewing agriculture and medical projects in Swat on January 28, 2025. (Handout/PDMA)

In October last year, businesses in Pakistan and Saudi Arabia signed several agreements to the tune of $2.8 billion to promote bilateral trade and investment with each other. 
Last year in April, the Kingdom also pledged to expedite a $5 billion investment portfolio for Islamabad, further boosting foreign investment prospects in the country.


Police in Pakistan’s Quetta book man for killing daughter over alleged blasphemy, posting TikTok videos

Updated 29 January 2025
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Police in Pakistan’s Quetta book man for killing daughter over alleged blasphemy, posting TikTok videos

  • Anwaar-ul-Haq, a resident of New York, brought his family to Quetta this month to meet relatives, say police
  • Merely accusations of blasphemy and opposition to its laws can incite violent mob attacks and reprisals

QUETTA: Police in Pakistan’s southwestern Balochistan province said on Wednesday they had booked a man for killing his 14-year-old daughter, an American citizen, on allegations she had committed blasphemy and posted objectionable videos of herself on TikTok.
Anwaar-ul-Haq, who was living in New York for the past 28 years, returned with his family to the southwestern Quetta city on Jan. 22 to meet relatives in the city, Station House Officer (SHO) Babar Shahwani of the Gawalmandi Police Station said.
Shahwani said Haq filed a complaint with police on Jan. 27 that unidentified men shot his daughter dead outside their home in Quetta at around 11:00 pm.
“The police commenced initial investigations from the family and we booked her father and uncle who during interrogations confessed to killing Hira,” Shahwani told Arab News.
Zohaib Mohsin, senior Superintendent of Police (SSP) for Serious Crimes Investigation Wing Balochistan, told Arab News that Haq brought his daughter outside their home when his brother-in-law, Muhammad Tayyab, shot her multiple times.
“We have confiscated Hira’s mobile phone and sent for forensic which would unfold more aspects of the murder,” Mohsin said.
Shahwani said Haq confessed during interrogation that he killed his daughter and alleged that she stopped believing in Islam and used to make blasphemous remarks, and posted objectionable videos of herself on TikTok. 
Under Pakistan’s blasphemy laws, anyone found guilty of insulting Islam or its religious figures can be sentenced to death. Authorities have yet to carry out such a penalty, although the accusation of blasphemy and opposition to the law can incite mob violence or reprisals.
Mohsin said the investigation so far has revealed that the family objected to Hira’s dressing, lifestyle, social gatherings and relations. 
Arab News attempted to contact Hira’s family but they refused to speak to the media.
Every year, hundreds of women in conservative Pakistan are victims of “honor killings,” carried out by relatives professing to be acting in defense of a family’s honor, rights group say, most often in deeply conservative rural areas.
According to an annual report on women’s honor killings in Balochistan issued by the Aurat Foundation (AF), a private group advocating for women’s rights and voicing against the honor killings of women in the impoverished province, 33 women were killed in Balochistan on the name of honor from January to December 2024. 
The report also said 212 women were killed in Balochistan in the name of honor during the last five years.


Imran Khan’s party seeks permission for Feb. 8 rally at Lahore’s Minar-e-Pakistan

Updated 29 January 2025
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Imran Khan’s party seeks permission for Feb. 8 rally at Lahore’s Minar-e-Pakistan

  • Party says will mark Feb. 8 Pakistan election anniversary as “Black Day” with nationwide protests
  • Says supporters are “peaceful” citizens ready to help Punjab ensure hassle-free political gathering

ISLAMABAD: Jailed former prime minister Imran Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party on Wednesday sought permission to hold a political rally at the city’s Minar-e-Pakistan monument on Feb. 8, as it gears up for protests on the day to mark the anniversary of Pakistan’s controversial 2024 general election. 
Khan last week called on his party’s leadership and supporters from all walks of life to mark Feb. 8 as a “Black Day” and hold protests across the country to protest alleged rigging in Pakistan’s general election last year.
The national polls on Feb. 8, 2024 were marred by a countrywide shutdown of cellphone networks and delayed results, leading to widespread allegations of election manipulation by the PTI and other opposition parties. 
The caretaker government and the Election Commission of Pakistan (ECP) deny the charges, saying mobile networks were shut down to maintain law and order across the country. The US House of Representatives, as well as European countries, have called on Islamabad to open a probe into the allegations — a move that Pakistan has thus far rejected.
“The PTI has decided to hold a political gathering on Feb. 8, 2025, in Lahore at Minar-e-Pakistan ground,” the party stated in its application to the Lahore deputy commissioner. 
“For the purpose of same, the undersigned seeks a grant of no objection certificate/approval from your worthy office.”
The party said in its application that its supporters were “peaceful, law-abiding citizens” ready to cooperate with the Punjab government to ensure a “smooth and hassle-free” political gathering.
It further said the PTI had the right to assemble under Pakistan’s constitution, asserting that denying this right would violate a fundamental constitutional principle.
The party has held multiple rallies at the huge park surrounding the 70-meter tall monument in Pakistan’s eastern city of Lahore since 2011. 
Political parties, including Khan’s PTI, have used the Minar-e-Pakistan ground to flex their political muscles by holding power shows at the venue. 
The latest call for protests comes amid renewed tensions between Khan’s party and the government. following the PTI’s boycott of the latest round of reconciliatory talks with the government on Jan. 28. Khan’s party blames the government for talks breaking down, saying it did not release political prisoners and establish judicial commissions to investigate violent protests of May 9, 2023, and Nov. 26, 2024. 
The government blames Khan’s party for walking away from the talks “unilaterally” before they had a chance to respond to the PTI’s demands.


Pakistan fires 13 federal agency officials for involvement in 2024 Greek boat tragedy

Updated 29 January 2025
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Pakistan fires 13 federal agency officials for involvement in 2024 Greek boat tragedy

  • Five Pakistanis were killed when migrant boat sank near Greek island Gavdos in December
  • Investigation agency says fired 37 members earlier for involvement in migrant boat tragedies

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s Federal Investigation Agency (FIA) announced on Wednesday it has sacked 13 members for being involved in the 2024 Greek boat tragedy that resulted in the deaths of five citizens, saying that its crackdown against human traffickers in the country was continuing. 
Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif has ordered strict action against human trafficking rings that lure Pakistani migrants with the fake promise of a better life in return for money, and help them undertake perilous illegal journeys via sea to Europe. 
Five Pakistanis were killed when a migrant boat sank near the Greek island of Gavdos in December 2024. Another migrant boat sank capsized near the coast of Morocco on Jan. 15 carrying 86 migrants on board. Sixty-six Pakistanis were on the ship, according to migrant rights group Walking Borders.
“An inspector, two sub-inspectors, two head constables and eight constables were dismissed from service for their involvement in the 2024 Greek boat accident,” an FIA spokesperson said in a statement.
The FIA said promotions of three constables had been halted, adding that all dismissed officials were stationed at the airport in Pakistan’s eastern city of Faisalabad. 
It said 37 FIA officials had been removed from service earlier for their involvement in various boat accidents. 
“Actions continue against officials involved in a boat accident on the prime minister’s instructions,” the agency said. 
In 2023, hundreds of migrants, including 262 Pakistanis, drowned when an overcrowded vessel capsized and sank in international waters off the southwestern Greek coastal town of Pylos. It was one of the deadliest boat disasters ever recorded in the Mediterranean Sea.