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UN experts urge President Biden to pardon Guantanamo prisoner arrested in Pakistan

UN experts urge President Biden to pardon Guantanamo prisoner arrested in Pakistan
US President Joe Biden delivers remarks at a reception for new Democratic members of Congress at the White House in Washington, DC on January 5, 2025. (AFP/File)
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Updated 09 January 2025

UN experts urge President Biden to pardon Guantanamo prisoner arrested in Pakistan

UN experts urge President Biden to pardon Guantanamo prisoner arrested in Pakistan
  • Abu Zubaydah was never an Al Qaeda member, as per US report, though he was waterboarded 83 times
  • He was among the early Guantanamo detainees, held at the facility for nearly 20 years without a charge

GENEVA: United Nations experts called Wednesday on outgoing US President Joe Biden to issue a pardon for Abu Zubaydah, who has been held at Guantanamo for nearly 20 years without charge.

“We are exceptionally requesting a Presidential pardon for Mr. Abu Zubaydah, owing to his treatment while in detention and the lack of due process since he was first detained,” a dozen independent UN experts said in a statement.

“His immediate release and relocation to a third safe country are long overdue.”

Abu Zubaydah was the first of a number of prisoners to be subjected to CIA “enhanced interrogation” techniques following the September 11, 2001, attacks on the United States.

The Saudi-born Palestinian, whose full name is Zayn Al-Abidin Muhammad Husayn, was captured in Pakistan in 2002 and has been held without trial at the US Guantanamo camp in Cuba since 2006.

He was waterboarded 83 times and suffered other physical abuse, according to a US Senate report, which said that the CIA conceded he was never a member of Al-Qaeda and not involved in planning the 9/11 attacks.

The UN experts, including the special rapporteurs on torture and on promoting human rights while countering terrorism, warned in Wednesday’s statement that Zubaydah “suffers serious health conditions.”

Those included “injuries sustained during torture that are allegedly exacerbated by the denial of medical attention,” they said.

The experts, who were appointed by the UN Human Rights Council but who do not speak on behalf of the United Nations, also lamented that his “lawyer-client communication has been seriously impeded.”

They highlighted findings by a range of international and regional rights mechanisms that Zubaydah suffered multiple violations linked to the US rendition and secret detention program.

Zubaydah had endured “profound psychological and physical trauma of torture and other cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment and enforced disappearance,” they charged, demanding he be granted compensations and reparations.

He is among 15 people still being held at the controversial American base, after the US Defense Department on Monday said it had resettled 11 Yemeni detainees from Guantanamo to Oman.

Biden pledged before his election in 2020 to try to shut down Guantanamo, but it remains open with just weeks left in his term.

The facility was opened in the wake of 9/11 and has been used to indefinitely hold detainees seized during the wars and other operations that followed. Some 780 prisoners have spent time there.

The conditions there and the denial of basic legal principles have prompted consistent outcry from rights groups, and UN experts have condemned it as a site of “unparalleled notoriety.”


Iranian president arrives in Pakistan on two-day visit to strengthen bilateral ties

Iranian president arrives in Pakistan on two-day visit to strengthen bilateral ties
Updated 26 sec ago

Iranian president arrives in Pakistan on two-day visit to strengthen bilateral ties

Iranian president arrives in Pakistan on two-day visit to strengthen bilateral ties
  • Masoud Pezeshkian landed in Lahore, where he visited the mausoleum of Pakistan’s national poet
  • The Iranian president is accompanied by a high-level delegation and will meet top Pakistani leaders

ISLAMABAD: Iranian President Dr. Masoud Pezeshkian arrived in Lahore, Pakistan’s cultural capital in the eastern Punjab province, on Saturday for a two-day state visit aimed at strengthening bilateral relations, according to the state media.

The two countries enjoy close ties and have signed several pacts in trade, energy and security in recent years. However, they have also remained at odds over instability along their shared porous border which led to a missile exchange between them last year, though they were quick to move to ease tensions.

“Iranian President Dr. Masoud Pezeshkian arrived in Lahore on Saturday for a two-day official visit to Pakistan, marking his first visit to the country since assuming office,” Pakistan’s state-owned television, PTV, reported while showing the visuals of the Iranian leader’s plane.

“On his arrival at the Allama Iqbal International Airport, President Pezeshkian was warmly received by ... former Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif, along with Punjab Chief Minister Maryam Nawaz,” it added.

This is Pezeshkian’s first official visit to Pakistan as the Iranian president, according to the Pakistani foreign office. He is also accompanied by a high-level delegation, including Foreign Minister Seyyed Abbas Araghchi, senior ministers and other high-ranking officials.

“During his stay, President Pezeshkian will meet with the President of Pakistan, H.E. Asif Ali Zardari, and hold delegation-level talks with Prime Minister of Pakistan, H.E. Shehbaz Sharif,” the foreign office said on Friday.

Shortly after landing, Pezeshkian visited the mausoleum of Muhammad Iqbal, Pakistan’s national poet, who wrote in both Urdu and Persian and is widely revered in Iran and Persian-speaking communities across the world.

The Iranian leader is also expected to travel to Islamabad to hold delegation-level talks with Prime Minister Sharif.

Last year, Iran’s late president, Ebrahim Raisi, traveled to Pakistan on a three-day visit during which both sides signed memorandums of understanding in the fields of trade, technology, agriculture, health, culture and judicial matters.

This year the ties between the two countries warmed up after Islamabad voiced its support for Tehran during the 12-day Israel-Iran war in June, which began after Israeli strikes on Iranian nuclear sites.

Pakistan remained engaged in talks with regional partners like Ƶ, Iran, China and Qatar to de-escalate tensions in the Middle East after Iran conducted retaliatory strikes on Israel and a US base in Qatar, raising fears the conflict could draw in other regional states.

“The visit [by the Iranian president] is expected to further strengthen the brotherly relations between Pakistan and Iran,” the Pakistani foreign office said on Friday in a statement announcing his two-day visit.


How Pakistan shot down India’s cutting-edge fighter using Chinese gear

How Pakistan shot down India’s cutting-edge fighter using Chinese gear
Updated 45 min 32 sec ago

How Pakistan shot down India’s cutting-edge fighter using Chinese gear

How Pakistan shot down India’s cutting-edge fighter using Chinese gear
  • Intelligence failure on range of China-made PL-15 missile central to downing of India’s Rafale jet, officials say
  • The shootdown of Rafale had raised questions about effectiveness of Western hardware against Chinese alternatives

ISLAMABAD/NEW DELHI: Just after midnight on May 7, the screen in the Pakistan Air Force’s operations room lit up in red with the positions of dozens of active enemy planes across the border in India.

Air Chief Mshl. Zaheer Sidhu had been sleeping on a mattress just off that room for days in anticipation of an Indian assault.

New Delhi had blamed Islamabad for backing militants who carried out an attack the previous month in Indian-administered Kashmir, which killed 26 civilians. Despite Islamabad denying any involvement, India had vowed a response, which came in the early hours of May 7 with air strikes on Pakistan.

Sidhu ordered Pakistan’s prized Chinese-made J-10C jets to scramble. A senior Pakistani Air Force (PAF) official, who was present in the operations room, said Sidhu instructed his staff to target Rafales, a French-made fighter that is the jewel of India’s fleet and had never been downed in battle.

“He wanted Rafales,” said the official.

The hour-long fight, which took place in darkness, involved some 110 aircraft, experts estimate, making it the world’s largest air battle in decades. The J-10s shot down at least one Rafale, Reuters reported in May, citing US officials. Its downing surprised many in the military community and raised questions about the effectiveness of Western military hardware against untested Chinese alternatives. Shares of Dassault, which makes the Rafale, dipped after reports the fighter had been shot down. Indonesia, which has outstanding Rafale orders, has said it is now considering purchasing J-10s – a major boost to China’s efforts to sell the aircraft overseas.

But Reuters interviews with two Indian officials and three of their Pakistani counterparts found that the performance of the Rafale wasn’t the key problem: Central to its downing was an Indian intelligence failure concerning the range of the

China-made PL-15 missile fired by the J-10 fighter. China and Pakistan are the only countries to operate both J-10s, known as Vigorous Dragons, and PL-15s.

The faulty intelligence gave the Rafale pilots a false sense of confidence they were out of Pakistani firing distance, which they believed was only around 150 km, the Indian officials said, referring to the widely cited range of PL-15’s export variant.

“We ambushed them,” the PAF official said, adding that Islamabad conducted an electronic warfare assault on Delhi’s systems in an attempt to confuse Indian pilots. Indian officials dispute the effectiveness of those efforts.

“The Indians were not expecting to be shot at,” said Justin Bronk, air warfare expert at London’s Royal United Services Institute (RUSI) think-tank. “And the PL-15 is clearly very capable at long range.”

The PL-15 that hit the Rafale was fired from around 200km (124.27 mi) away, according to Pakistani officials, and even farther according to Indian officials. That would make it among the longest-range air-to-air strikes recorded.

India’s defense and foreign ministries did not return requests for comment about the intelligence mistakes. Delhi hasn’t acknowledged a Rafale being shot down, but France’s air chief told reporters in June that he had seen evidence of the loss of that fighter and two other aircraft flown by India, including a Russian-made Sukhoi. A top Dassault executive also told French lawmakers that month that India had lost a Rafale in operations, though he didn’t have specific details.

Pakistan’s military referred to past comments by a spokesperson who said that its professional preparedness and resolve was more important than the weaponry it had deployed. China’s defense ministry did not respond to Reuters’ questions. Dassault and UAC, the manufacturer of the Sukhoi, also did not return requests for comment.

“SITUATIONAL AWARENESS”

Reuters spoke to eight Pakistani and two Indian officials to piece together an account of the aerial battle, which marked the start of four days of fighting between the two nuclear-armed neighbors that caused alarm in Washington. The officials all spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss national security matters.

Not only did Islamabad have the element of surprise with its missiles’ range, the Pakistani and Indian officials said, but it managed to more efficiently connect its military hardware to surveillance on the ground and in the air, providing it with a clearer picture of the battlefield. Such networks, known as “kill chains,” have become a crucial element of modern warfare.

Four Pakistani officials said they created a “kill chain,” or a multi-domain operation, by linking air, land and space sensors. The network included a Pakistani-developed system, Data Link 17, which connected Chinese military hardware with other equipment, including a Swedish-made surveillance plane, two Pakistani officials said.

The system allowed the J-10s flying closer to India to obtain radar feeds from the surveillance plane cruising further away, meaning the Chinese-made fighters could turn their radars off and fly undetected, according to experts. Pakistan’s military did not respond to requests for comment on this point.

Delhi is trying to set up a similar network, the Indian officials said, adding that their process was more complicated because the country sourced aircraft from a wide range of exporters.

Retired UK Air Mshl. Greg Bagwell, now a fellow at RUSI, said the episode didn’t conclusively prove the superiority of either Chinese or Western air assets but it showed the importance of having the right information and using it.

“The winner in this was the side that had the best situational awareness,” said Bagwell.

CHANGE IN TACTICS

After India in the early hours of May 7 struck targets in Pakistan that it called “terrorist infrastructure,” Sidhu ordered his squadrons to switch from defense to attack.

Five PAF officials said India had deployed some 70 planes, which was more than they had expected and provided Islamabad’s PL-15s with a target-rich environment. India has not said how many planes were used.

The May 7 battle marked the first big air contest of the modern era in which weaponry is used to strike targets beyond visual range, said Bagwell, noting both India and Pakistan’s planes remained well within their airspaces across the duration of the fight.

Five Pakistani officials said an electronic assault on Indian sensors and communications systems reduced the situational awareness of the Rafale’s pilots.

The two Indian officials said the Rafales were not blinded during the skirmishes and that Indian satellites were not jammed. But they acknowledged that Pakistan appeared to have disrupted the Sukhoi, whose systems Delhi is now upgrading.

Other Indian security officials have deflected questions away from the Rafale, a centerpiece of India’s military modernization, to the orders given to the air force.

India’s defense attaché in Jakarta told a university seminar that Delhi had lost some aircraft “only because of the constraint given by the political leadership to not attack (Pakistan’s) military establishments and their air defenses.”

India’s chief of defense staff Gen. Anil Chauhan previously told Reuters that Delhi quickly “rectified tactics” after the initial losses.

After the May 7 air battle, India began targeting Pakistani military infrastructure and asserting its strength in the skies. Its Indian-made BrahMos supersonic cruise missile repeatedly sliced through Pakistan’s air defenses, according to officials on both sides.

On May 10, India said it struck at least nine air bases and radar sites in Pakistan. It also hit a surveillance plane parked in a hangar in southern Pakistan, according to Indian and Pakistani officials. A ceasefire was agreed later that day, after

US officials held talks with both sides.

‘LIVE INPUTS’

In the aftermath of the episode, India’s deputy army chief Lt. Gen. Rahul Singh accused Pakistan of receiving “live inputs” from China during the battles, implying radar and satellite feeds. He did not provide evidence and Islamabad denies the allegation.

When asked at a July briefing about Beijing’s military partnership with Pakistan, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Mao Ning told reporters the work was “part of the normal cooperation between the two countries and does not target any third party.”

Beijing’s air chief Lt. Gen. Wang Gang visited Pakistan in July to discuss how Islamabad had used Chinese equipment to put together the “kill chain” for the Rafale, two PAF officials said.

China did not respond when asked about that interaction. The Pakistani military said in a statement in July that Wang had expressed “keen interest in learning from PAF’s battle-proven experience in Multi Domain Operations.”


Two killed, one injured while defusing IED in Pakistan’s volatile southwest

Two killed, one injured while defusing IED in Pakistan’s volatile southwest
Updated 02 August 2025

Two killed, one injured while defusing IED in Pakistan’s volatile southwest

Two killed, one injured while defusing IED in Pakistan’s volatile southwest
  • No group has claimed responsibility for planting the improvised explosive device
  • Balochistan has been the site of an insurgency that has intensified in recent months

QUETTA: At least two people were killed and one other was injured while trying to defuse an improvised explosive device (IED) in Pakistan’s southwestern Balochistan province, a paramilitary official said on Saturday.

The blast occurred in the Ali Chakarani area of Balochistan’s Dera Bugti district, when local tribesmen attempted to defuse the IED planted by unknown militants, according to Nadir Ali, in-charge of the paramilitary Levies station in the area.

The deceased were identified as Washu Khan and Muhammad Zahid, while the injured person was being treated at a hospital.

“A local shepherd informed the tribesmen on Saturday morning that a suspicious device had been planted in the area,” Ali told Arab News. “The slain tribesmen were attempting to defuse the device without informing the local Levies force and other law enforcement agencies.”

No group has claimed responsibility for planting the IED.

Balochistan, Pakistan’s largest but most impoverished province, has been the site of a long-running insurgency that has intensified in recent months, with separatist militants attacking security forces, government officials and installations and people from other provinces who they see as “outsiders.”

The Pakistani government says it has launched several development schemes relating to infrastructure, health and education for some 15 million people of Balochistan, which is also home to deep seaport being built by China, gold, copper and coal mines, and has a long coast on the Arabian Sea.

Last month, an army officer was killed and three civilians, including a child, were injured in an IED blast in the restive region, police officials said. The explosion targeted a private vehicle in the western bypass area of Quetta, the capital of Balochistan province.

The provincial government has banned weapons display, pillion riding and an assembly of more than five people for 15 days, amid threats of militant attacks in the volatile region during Pakistan’s 79th Independence Day celebrations.


Iranian president due in Pakistan today on state visit to strengthen ties

Iranian president due in Pakistan today on state visit to strengthen ties
Updated 02 August 2025

Iranian president due in Pakistan today on state visit to strengthen ties

Iranian president due in Pakistan today on state visit to strengthen ties
  • Pakistan and Iran enjoy close ties and have signed several pacts, but the two neighbors have also been at odds over instability along their shared border
  • Their ties warmed up after Islamabad voiced support for Tehran during the 12-day Israel-Iran war that began after Israeli strikes on Iranian nuclear sites

ISLAMABAD: Iranian President Dr. Masoud Pezeshkian will arrive in Pakistan today, Saturday, on a two-day state visit aimed at strengthening bilateral relations, the Pakistani foreign office said.

Pakistan and Iran enjoy close ties and have signed several pacts in trade, energy and security in recent years. However, the two countries have also been at odds over instability along their shared porous border but have always been quick in moving to ease tensions each time.

In May, Iranian Foreign Minister Seyyed Abbas Araghchi visited Pakistan at a time of heightened tensions between Pakistan and India over an attack in the disputed Kashmir region. His visit was followed by another by Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif to Iran, where he had met Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian and Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

This is Pezeshkian’s first official visit to Pakistan as the Iranian president, according to the Pakistani foreign office. He will be accompanied by a high-level delegation, including FM Araghchi, senior ministers and other high-ranking officials.

“During his stay, President Pezeshkian will meet with the President of Pakistan, H.E. Asif Ali Zardari, and hold delegation-level talks with Prime Minister of Pakistan, H.E. Shehbaz Sharif,” the foreign office said on Friday.

Tensions surged between Pakistan and Iran in January last year when both countries exchanged rare, tit-for-tat airstrikes on what they said were militant hideouts on each other’s soil.

Late Iranian president Ebrahim Raisi had later traveled to Pakistan on a three-day visit in April to de-escalate tensions and strengthen bilateral relations. The two sides had also signed memorandums of understanding in the fields of trade, science technology, agriculture, health, culture, and judicial matters.

The bilateral ties initially witnessed a thaw during FM Araghchi’s visit to Pakistan this year and further warmed up after Islamabad voiced its support of Tehran during the 12-day Israel-Iran war in June, which began after Israeli strikes on Iranian nuclear sites.

Pakistan remained engaged in talks with regional partners like Ƶ, Iran, China and Qatar to de-escalate tensions in the Middle East after Iran conducted retaliatory strikes on Israel and a US base in Qatar, raising fears the conflict could draw in other regional states.

“The visit [by Iranian president] is expected to further strengthen the brotherly relations between Pakistan and Iran,” the Pakistani foreign office said.


Pakistan to face South Africa in World Championship of Legends final today

Pakistan to face South Africa in World Championship of Legends final today
Updated 02 August 2025

Pakistan to face South Africa in World Championship of Legends final today

Pakistan to face South Africa in World Championship of Legends final today
  • Unbeaten Pakistan Champions arrive at the final after India withdrew from the semifinal over political tensions
  • The tournament features retired, non-contracted players from cricketing giants England, Australia and West Indies

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan will face off South Africa in the World Championship of Legends (WCL) final in Birmingham today.

Unbeaten Pakistan Champions arrive at the final after India withdrew from the semifinal amid political tensions between the neighbors.

The final match will start at 8:30pm Pakistan time.

“Final stop: The Final,” read a post on the Pakistan Champions Instagram handle, ahead of the match against South Africa.

South Africa reached the final after defeating Australia in a nail-biting thriller.

The WCL is a T20 tournament approved by the England & Wales Cricket Board (ECB) held in England every year.

The tournament features retired and non-contracted players from cricketing giants, including England, India, Pakistan, Australia, West Indies and South Africa.

Launched in 2024, the tournament returned this year with high-profile former international stars like Shahid Afridi, Yuvraj Singh, Kevin Pietersen, Brett Lee, Eoin Morgan and Chris Gayle drawing crowds.