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Pakistani nurse addresses press conference, says was ‘misguided by terrorists’ to become suicide bomber 

Pakistani nurse addresses press conference, says was ‘misguided by terrorists’ to become suicide bomber 
The still image taken from the video of a press conference shows Adeela Baloch addressing a government-organized press conference on September 25, 2024 in Quetta, Pakistan. (Photo courtesy: PTV News/ YouTube)
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Updated 25 September 2024

Pakistani nurse addresses press conference, says was ‘misguided by terrorists’ to become suicide bomber 

Pakistani nurse addresses press conference, says was ‘misguided by terrorists’ to become suicide bomber 
  • Adeela Baloch was recently arrested in connection to alleged suicide bombing attempt
  • It was unclear if she addressed the press conference freely or under pressure from authorities 

ISLAMABAD: A Baloch woman recently arrested over an alleged bombing attempt addressed a government-organized press conference on Wednesday and said that she had been “misguided by terrorists” and recruited to carry out a suicide attack.

It was unclear under what circumstances Adeela Baloch addressed the press conference and whether she spoke freely or under pressure from state authorities in Balochistan, a resource-rich but impoverished province where separatist militants have been fighting a decades-long insurgency to win secession of the region. The Pakistani government and military deny they are exploiting Balochistan and have long maintained that neighbors such as India, Afghanistan and Iran foment trouble in the remote province and support and fund the insurgency there. 

Army and government officials have also referred to a Baloch ethnic rights movement that has held protests across the province in recent months as a “terrorist proxy” and rejected their allegations of a pattern of enforced disappearances and other human rights abuses by security forces. The movement is being led by young people, many of them educated women. Independent experts have criticized the state for ignoring what they say are the genuine grievances of the youth of Balochistan, and warned that a heavy-handed approach toward the protests could drive more educated people toward militancy. 

“The perception nowadays that Baloch women willingly carry out suicide attacks is wrong. I am an eyewitness to this, I have seen it myself, these people use blackmail,” Baloch told reporters at a press conference in Quetta where she was sat alongside Balochistan government spokesperson Shahid Rind.

Baloch, who had worked at a government hospital in the district of Turbat , was reported missing by relatives on Sept. 19. 

She said her job had involved helping people and saving lives but she was “misguided and led astray” by militants who convinced her to become a suicide bomber. 

“I didn’t even consider that while I would lose my life in the attack, many others could also lose their lives because of me,” she added. “I realized my mistake when I went to the mountains [where militants have taken sanctuary]. There, I saw other people who had been misled, with guns in their hands.”

Adeela thanked the provincial Balochistan government for “rescuing” and saving her from militants. She did not name the group that had allegedly enlisted her or describe the target of the planned attack.

Arab News could not independently confirm her identity or verify her claims.

Last month, the outlawed separatist Balochistan Liberation Army, said a woman was among a group of its fighters who had killed more than 50 people in a series of coordinated attacks in the restive province.

In April 2022, a highly educated female suicide bomber who was a mother from a well-to-do family killed three Chinese teachers in Karachi along with their local driver. Shari Hayat Baloch, 30, was a science teacher who had a masters degree in Zoology and was planning to enroll in a second masters degree at the time she detonated explosives in her rucksack as a minivan carrying three Chinese teachers drove by, police said at the time. While studying at university in the Balochistan capital Quetta, she had been a member of the Baloch Students Organization (BSO).

In 2019, a female suicide bomber in northwestern Pakistan killed at least eight people and wounded 26 more in an attack outside a local civilian hospital. In 2017, Noreen Leghari, a would-be woman suicide bomber, was taken into custody by the Pakistan army over accusations she was planning an attack on a church in the eastern city of Lahore. She was a second-year medical student. 

In 2012, a woman suicide bomber targeted Pakistani religious-political leader Qazi Hussain Ahmad but he escaped unhurt in the attack. 


Pakistan PM to attend Arab-Islamic summit in Doha after Israeli airstrikes on Qatar

Pakistan PM to attend Arab-Islamic summit in Doha after Israeli airstrikes on Qatar
Updated 13 September 2025

Pakistan PM to attend Arab-Islamic summit in Doha after Israeli airstrikes on Qatar

Pakistan PM to attend Arab-Islamic summit in Doha after Israeli airstrikes on Qatar
  • Israel attempted to kill Hamas negotiators discussing a US-backed Gaza ceasefire proposal
  • Summit preparatory meeting to be attended by Deputy Prime Minister Ishaq Dar on Sunday

ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif will participate in an emergency Arab-Islamic summit in Doha on Monday in the wake of Israeli airstrikes in Qatar that killed at least six people earlier this week, the foreign office announced on Saturday.

Israel attempted to target a group of Hamas leaders discussing a Gaza ceasefire proposal floated by the United States by hitting a residential neighborhood in Doha on Tuesday. Qatar has been a key mediator in ceasefire and hostage negotiations between Israel and Hamas, hosting the Palestinian group’s political bureau as part of the process.

Pakistan reacted sharply to the strike, calling it a violation of Qatar’s sovereignty and territorial integrity. Sharif traveled to Doha on Sept. 11 to express solidarity with Qatar’s leadership, while Pakistan’s UN mission requested an emergency Security Council meeting and urged the international community to hold Israel accountable.

“Prime Minister Muhammad Shehbaz Sharif will visit State of Qatar to participate in the Emergency Arab-Islamic Summit being held in Doha on 15 September 2025,” the foreign office said.

“The Summit, co-sponsored by Pakistan, has been convened in the wake of Israel’s airstrikes on Doha and the escalating developments in Palestine — following Israeli attempts to occupy Gaza, expand settlement activities in the occupied West Bank and forcibly displace the Palestinians,” it added.

The summit will be preceded by a preparatory meeting of foreign ministers on Sunday, which Pakistan’s Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Ishaq Dar will attend.

According to the statement, leaders and senior officials from Organization of Islamic Cooperation member states are also expected at the gathering.

Pakistan’s foreign office said the country “accords high importance to its relations with State of Qatar” and has “strongly condemned Israeli aggression against Qatar and other regional states.”

It added that Sharif’s visit underlines Pakistan’s “unwavering support for the security and sovereignty of Qatar and its commitment to peace and stability in the Middle East.”

Pakistan has also repeatedly condemned Israel’s offensive in Gaza, which has killed nearly 65,000 people, mostly women and children, since October 2023, and called for an immediate ceasefire and war-crimes accountability.


IMF says assessing Pakistan flood damages, next review mission to discuss policy response

IMF says assessing Pakistan flood damages, next review mission to discuss policy response
Updated 13 September 2025

IMF says assessing Pakistan flood damages, next review mission to discuss policy response

IMF says assessing Pakistan flood damages, next review mission to discuss policy response
  • IMF resident rep says lender will check if Pakistan's budget, emergency plans can meet flood needs
  • Prime Minister Sharif halts August power bills in flood-hit areas, promises more relief after IMF talks

KARACHI: The top International Monetary Fund (IMF) official in Pakistan said on Saturday his organization is assessing flood damage and will use its next review mission to evaluate appropriate policy responses to support affected people and strengthen national resilience.

The flooding during the monsoon season that began in late June has killed 972 people across Pakistan, according to the National Disaster Management Authority. The northwestern province of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa has been the hardest hit, with 504 fatalities, many from severe cloudbursts in mid-August.

Meanwhile, in eastern Punjab, swollen rivers including the Ravi, Chenab and Sutlej overflowed after unprecedented rains upstream in India, submerging settlements, destroying crops and leading to more than 100 deaths.

Over 2.5 million people have been rescued, and about 4,700 settlements inundated. The government has signaled relief initiatives for victims but must discuss them with the IMF due to its $7 billion Extended Fund Facility (EFF) agreement secured last year.

“We extend our heartfelt condolences to the people of Pakistan as they endure the devastating floods," said Mahir Binici, Resident Representative of the IMF in Pakistan. "We are deeply saddened by the tragic loss of life.”

“An assessment of the flood damage caused by torrential monsoon rains is still ongoing, as the situation continues to evolve,” he continued. “The upcoming EFF review mission provides an opportunity to discuss the appropriate policy response to support flood-affected populations and protect the most vulnerable."

Binici also noted that both the EFF and the IMF’s Resilience and Sustainability Facility (RSF) provide frameworks crucial for external and financial stability amid these natural calamities.

The RSF, approved in May, offers Pakistan around $1.4 billion to help build economic resilience against climate vulnerabilities and disasters, though its disbursement depends on successful reviews under the EFF.

The IMF official noted that the mission will assess whether the budget approved by Pakistan in June, along with its spending allocations and emergency provisions, remain sufficiently agile to address the spending needs necessitated by the floods.

RELIEF FOR FLOOD-HIT FAMILIES

Separately, Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif announced immediate relief for households in flood-hit districts, ordering power distribution companies to suspend collection of August electricity bills and adjust any payments already received in the next billing cycle.

Chairing a special meeting in Islamabad earlier in the day, Sharif said the measure was aimed at giving families breathing space as they recover from weeks of torrential rains and flash floods.

“We are making every possible effort in this difficult time to ease people’s suffering,” he said, according to a statement circulated by his office.

The prime minister added a comprehensive electricity-bill relief package for the affected areas would be finalized after consultations with the IMF, underscoring the need to align emergency spending with Pakistan’s ongoing bailout program.

Sharif also said that federal and provincial agencies are working on rescue, relief and rehabilitation.

“We will not rest until every flood victim returns home,” he added.


PM Sharif tells Afghanistan to choose Islamabad or Taliban militants as 19 soldiers killed in northwest

PM Sharif tells Afghanistan to choose Islamabad or Taliban militants as 19 soldiers killed in northwest
Updated 59 min 3 sec ago

PM Sharif tells Afghanistan to choose Islamabad or Taliban militants as 19 soldiers killed in northwest

PM Sharif tells Afghanistan to choose Islamabad or Taliban militants as 19 soldiers killed in northwest
  • Shehbaz Sharif says Pakistan will eradicate militant violence with or without Afghanistan’s cooperation
  • He says a federal cabinet meeting will soon be convened to discuss the problem of militant violence

ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif on Saturday asked Afghanistan’s administration to choose between his country and the outlawed Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) during a visit to the northwestern Bannu city as 19 soldiers and 45 militants were killed in separate clashes in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) this week.

Relations between the two neighboring countries began to fray after a wave of deadly suicide bombings in Pakistan two years ago that Islamabad blamed on TTP fighters it said were based across the border.

Pakistani officials accused the administration in Kabul of facilitating cross-border attacks, a charge Afghan authorities rejected, saying Pakistan’s security troubles were domestic.

As violence mounted, Pakistan started expelling undocumented foreigners, mostly Afghans, deepening the bilateral rift.

“Terrorists come from Afghanistan and, together with the TTP, these khawarij join forces to martyr our soldiers, our brothers and sisters and ordinary citizens,” Sharif said after visiting wounded troops at Bannu’s Combined Military Hospital.

The term “khwarij” is rooted in early Islamic history and refers to an extremist sect that declared other Muslims apostates.

“Today I want to send a clear message to Afghanistan,” he added. “Choose one of two paths. If they wish to establish relations with Pakistan with genuine goodwill, sincerity and honesty, we are ready for that. But if they choose to side with terrorists and support them, then we will have nothing to do with the Afghan interim government.”

Sharif said Pakistan would eliminate militant violence with the help of its security forces even without Afghan cooperation.

He earlier attended the funeral prayers of the soldiers, calling them “true heroes of the nation” and vowing their sacrifices would not go in vain.

The prime minister, accompanied by Chief of Army Staff Field Marshal Syed Asim Munir and Peshawar Corps Commander, received a detailed security briefing on militant violence in the area, according to the state-run Associated Press of Pakistan (APP).

He told reporters that Pakistan desired peaceful relations with all its neighbors but would not allow hostile groups to sabotage peace.

Sharif also announced he would soon convene a federal cabinet meeting to discuss measures against militancy, reiterating that “the enemies of Pakistan cannot impose their destructive ideology on our nation.”

19 SOLDIERS, 45 MILITANTS KILLED

Sharif’s visit to Bannu came as the Pakistan military announced earlier in the day that 19 soldiers and 45 militants had been killed in separate clashes this week near the country’s border with Afghanistan in KP.

In one of the incidents, Pakistani security forces raided a TTP hideout in KP’s Bajaur district where 22 militants were killed in an exchange of fire, according to the Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR), the Pakistani military’s media wing.

Another 13 militants were killed in an encounter in the South Waziristan district, with the military saying the deceased militants belonged to the Pakistani Taliban.

“However, during the intense fire exchange, twelve brave sons of the soil, having fought gallantly, paid the ultimate sacrifice and embraced Shahadat (martyrdom),” the ISPR said in a statement.

In another statement released later in the day, the military mentioned yet another incident in Lower Dir District where an intelligence-based operation on Sept. 11 led to the killing of 10 more militants.

The shootout also led to the death of seven more soldiers, bringing the overall number of security forces casualties to 19.

The death toll underscores the struggles Pakistan faces as it tries to contain surging militancy in KP, which borders Afghanistan, since a fragile truce between the Pakistani Taliban and the state broke down in November 2022.

The Pakistani Taliban and other militant groups have frequently targeted security forces convoys and checkpoints, as well as carried out targeted killings and kidnappings of law enforcers and government officials in recent months.

“Intelligence reports have unequivocally confirmed the physical involvement of Afghan nationals in these heinous acts,” the ISPR said, adding that Islamabad “expects the Interim Afghan Government to uphold its responsibilities and deny use of its soil for terrorist activities against Pakistan.”

There has been no immediate comment from Kabul in response to these statements emerging from Pakistan.


Pakistani journalist on trial rejects ‘baseless’ charges over tax authority corruption report

Pakistani journalist on trial rejects ‘baseless’ charges over tax authority corruption report
Updated 13 September 2025

Pakistani journalist on trial rejects ‘baseless’ charges over tax authority corruption report

Pakistani journalist on trial rejects ‘baseless’ charges over tax authority corruption report
  • Shahbaz Rana’s report on removal of 25 senior tax officials triggered complaint now before the court
  • Press unions decry the trial, saying the report was based on authentic official records and documents

KARACHI: A senior Pakistani journalist on Saturday dismissed as “baseless” charges filed against him in connection with a story on corruption in the Federal Board of Revenue (FBR), after being put on trial in an Islamabad court that has alarmed the media community.

Shahbaz Rana, who works with the English-language broadsheet The Express Tribune, faces a complaint filed by an FBR official who claimed his story was defamatory and scandalous. The article in question said Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif had sacked 25 FBR officers, all in higher pay grades, based on reports by three intelligence agencies questioning their financial integrity and professional competence.

The complainant also nominated Sharif and other officials.

Speaking to Arab News, Rana said he was reporting on the issue on the basis of authentic official documents.

“This case against me is baseless,” he said over the phone. “First, my report regarding the 25 officers of the Federal Board of Revenue (FBR) was based not only on authentic documents and was true, but was also publicly acknowledged by Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif himself, who referred to it twice in his speeches.”

“Furthermore, I did not name any of the 25 officials, including the complainant, in my report,” he added. “Moreover, although the complainant has made the prime minister a party to this case, the charge has been filed solely against me. This baseless case should not stand.”

Journalist bodies including the Pakistan Federal Union of Journalists (PFUJ), the Rawalpindi-Islamabad Union of Journalists, and the National Press Club have sharply criticized the legal proceedings.

In an emergency meeting held on Friday, they said they had reviewed the official records underlying the news report.

Participants said not only did these documentations exist, but there were also videos of the prime minister that confirmed the report’s accuracy.

The meeting expressed astonishment that in a petition which names the prime minister of Pakistan, the finance Secretary, the interior secretary, the establishment secretary, and the Islamabad inspector general of police as parties, no notice has been issued to any of these co-respondents, while an indictment has been filed solely against Rana.

They noted that Rana’s office was raided for his arrest and that a one-sided trial was now proceeding at great speed.

PFUJ President Afzal Butt termed the trial court’s actions a violation of fair-trial principles and called on the Islamabad High Court to take immediate notice so that justice could be ensured.

The participants of the meeting also noted that denying a well-known investigative journalist in Islamabad the right to a fair trial in this way casts doubt on the entire justice system, adding it has also caused deep concern throughout the journalistic community.


Police surgeon confirms sexual violence against three minors in Karachi child-abuse case

Police surgeon confirms sexual violence against three minors in Karachi child-abuse case
Updated 13 September 2025

Police surgeon confirms sexual violence against three minors in Karachi child-abuse case

Police surgeon confirms sexual violence against three minors in Karachi child-abuse case
  • Arrested suspect accused of abusing 100 children, charged under law carrying death penalty
  • Police officials say abuse went undetected for nine years until a shopkeeper raised the alarm

KARACHI: Authorities in Karachi said on Saturday they had confirmed sexual violence against at least three of four minor girls examined after the arrest of a man accused of abusing nearly 100 children over nine years.

The case surfaced earlier this week when one of the alleged victims stole a USB drive from the suspect and took it to a shop to copy a movie. The shopkeeper found hundreds of videos of child abuse on the device and alerted police.

Shabbir Ahmed, a juice vendor originally from Abbottabad, was arrested on Thursday, and investigators said they had recovered more than 400 clips showing assaults on over 100 girls aged between five and 12, some targeted repeatedly over several years.

“Today, four victim girls, one aged seven, two aged ten and one aged 12, were brought in for examination,” Karachi police surgeon Dr. Summaiya Syed told Arab News. “Findings in three of them are suggestive of sexual violence, and medicolegal documentation has been completed.”

Police said on Friday Ahmed began abusing children in 2016, luring them with small amounts of money and assaulting them inside his shuttered shop in the city’s Qayyumabad neighborhood.

A diary recovered from the suspect contained names and records of more than 85 victims, noting their ethnicity. The most recent assault is believed to have taken place on Sept. 4.

The suspect has now been charged under Section 376(3) of the Pakistan Penal Code, which carries the death penalty or life imprisonment for raping a minor. A judicial magistrate has granted police five-day remand for interrogation.

At least five families have lodged formal complaints so far, and more are expected as medical examinations continue, police said.

Child sexual abuse remains widespread in Pakistan. Sahil, a local NGO, recorded 3,364 incidents in 2024, while the Sustainable Social Development Organization (SSDO) documented 5,398 cases between 2019 and 2023.

One of the country’s most notorious cases emerged in Kasur, Punjab province, where between 2006 and 2015 hundreds of videos of mostly male children being abused were circulated illegally, sparking nationwide outrage.