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Pakistan says no Sharif-Modi meeting planned at upcoming regional summit in China

Pakistan says no Sharif-Modi meeting planned at upcoming regional summit in China
The screengrab taken from the press conference of Pakistan’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs shows the foreign office’s spokesperson, Shafqat Ali Khan, addressing the weekly media briefing in Islamabad on August 22, 2025. (MOFA)
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Updated 22 August 2025

Pakistan says no Sharif-Modi meeting planned at upcoming regional summit in China

Pakistan says no Sharif-Modi meeting planned at upcoming regional summit in China
  • China will host the Shanghai Cooperation Organization summit in Tianjin from Aug. 31 to Sept. 1
  • Pakistan says it remains open to third-party mediation with India despite the strained bilateral ties

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s foreign office said on Friday no meeting between the prime ministers of India and Pakistan was planned on the sidelines of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) Summit later this month, despite both leaders attending the gathering in China.

Bilateral relations between Pakistan and India hit a major low earlier this year when both nuclear-armed states engaged in a brief but intense military standoff, deploying fighter jets, missiles, drones and artillery before a US-brokered ceasefire ended the four-day conflict on May 10.

Pakistan has since said it is willing to hold a composite dialogue with New Delhi to discuss all outstanding issues, but Indian officials have ruled out the possibility of diplomatic engagement.

China will host the SCO summit in the northern city of Tianjin from Aug. 31 to Sept. 1. Prime Minister Shahbaz Sharif and his Indian counterpart, Narendra Modi, are due to attend alongside other regional leaders. It will be the fifth time Beijing has hosted the annual conference.

“There is no meeting in the works between the Prime Minister of Pakistan and the Prime Minister of India,” foreign office spokesperson Shafqat Ali Khan said, responding to a query on whether China might facilitate talks between the two leaders.

China’s foreign minister Wang Yi visited both India and Pakistan this month, meeting top officials in both capitals.

While Beijing maintains close defense, diplomatic and economic ties with Islamabad, it has a recurring border dispute with New Delhi, which Washington and its allies have long viewed as a counterbalance to China.

However, tensions between the United States and India have sharpened, with President Donald Trump’s administration imposing tariffs of up to 50 percent on Indian exports in recent weeks.

Wang’s visit to New Delhi took place in the same context wherein he urged Indian officials to view China as a partner rather than an adversary.

The foreign office spokesperson also told the media at his weekly news briefing that despite the current trajectory of ties with India, Pakistan would welcome third-party mediation to ensure regional security and stability.

Mushahid Hussain, former federal minister and founding chairman of the Pakistan-China Institute, said Beijing still sees Islamabad as its most critical regional partner.

“After the two recent summer conflicts, Indian aggression against Pakistan and Israeli attack on Iran, with both ceasefires brokered by Trump, South Asia is a top priority for Chinese foreign policy,” Hussain told Arab News. “This is exemplified by Wang Yi’s visits to India, Afghanistan and Pakistan, terming Pakistan as ‘the most important’ of the three countries.”


World Bank approves $47.9 million grant to boost education in Pakistan’s Punjab province

World Bank approves $47.9 million grant to boost education in Pakistan’s Punjab province
Updated 19 min 55 sec ago

World Bank approves $47.9 million grant to boost education in Pakistan’s Punjab province

World Bank approves $47.9 million grant to boost education in Pakistan’s Punjab province
  • Project to expand early childhood education, re-enroll out-of-school children
  • Over four million children and 100,000 teachers expected to benefit

ISLAMABAD: The World Bank said on Monday it had approved a $47.9 million grant to support education reforms in Pakistan’s Punjab province, aiming to expand access to schooling, strengthen teacher training, and improve learning outcomes for millions of children.

The funds, provided through the Global Partnership for Education Fund, will finance the Getting Results: Access and Delivery of Quality Education Services and System Transformation in Punjab Project. The initiative will expand early childhood education, re-enroll out-of-school children, provide remedial learning at the elementary level, and strengthen the sector’s ability to respond to climate shocks and emergencies.

The announcement comes as Pakistan continues to grapple with a severe education crisis. According to UNICEF and government estimates, about 26 million children remain out of school nationwide, the majority of them girls. Punjab, the country’s most populous province, has made progress in expanding access but still struggles with gaps in quality, inclusivity, and resilience to climate-related disruptions such as floods.

“This project represents a crucial step toward addressing learning poverty and ensuring equitable access to quality education across Punjab,” said Bolormaa Amgaabazar, World Bank Country Director for Pakistan.

The project aims to directly benefit more than 4 million children, including 80,000 out-of-school children, three million enrolled in provincial schools, about 850,000 in the non-formal sector, and 140,000 differently abled children in special education institutions. More than 100,000 teachers and school leaders will also receive professional development, while parents and communities will be engaged through awareness campaigns.

According to the World Bank, the program is designed to strengthen foundational learning, build system capacity, and promote behavioral change to support long-term human capital development.

“The project is aligned with the Government of Punjab’s broader education reform agenda, which seeks to create a more effective, accountable, and inclusive education system,” said Izza Farrakh, World Bank Task Team Leader for the project. “It will do so by supporting the government’s efforts to improve governance, management, and capacity in the education sector.”

Since joining the World Bank in 1950, Pakistan has received more than $48 billion in assistance. The Bank’s current portfolio in the country includes 54 projects with commitments totaling $15.7 billion. The International Finance Corporation (IFC), the Bank’s private sector arm, has invested about $13 billion in Pakistan since 1956, supporting projects in renewable energy, financial inclusion, infrastructure, health care, and trade.


India warns Pakistan of flood despite suspension of Indus water-sharing treaty

India warns Pakistan of flood despite suspension of Indus water-sharing treaty
Updated 34 min 8 sec ago

India warns Pakistan of flood despite suspension of Indus water-sharing treaty

India warns Pakistan of flood despite suspension of Indus water-sharing treaty
  • Indian High Commission informs Pakistan of high flood level in River Tawi, Jammu
  • Treaty suspension meant Delhi was not obliged to share data on water flows, flooding

ISLAMABAD: India on Sunday warned Pakistan of a high flood level in the River Tawi in Indian-administered Kashmir, despite New Delhi having suspended a decades-old water-sharing treaty that requires it to share hydrological data with its neighbor.

The Indian High Commission in Islamabad issued a flood warning about the River Tawi, which joins Pakistan’s Chenab River and runs through the border districts of Gujrat and Sialkot. The alert came even though India announced in April it was putting the Indus Waters Treaty (IWT) in abeyance after blaming Pakistan for an attack in Kashmir that killed 26 people, mostly tourists. Pakistan denied involvement and demanded an international probe.

The suspension of the treaty meant India could stop sharing critical information on water releases and flooding and was no longer required to maintain minimum flows to Pakistan during the dry season. 

A letter from the Indian High Commission in Pakistan on Sunday, seen by Arab News, said:

“The High Commission of India to Pakistan presents its compliments to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Government of the Islamic Republic of Pakistan, Islamabad and has the honor to convey the following flood data. River and site Name: Tawi, Jammu. Date/Time: 24th August 2025, 10.00 Hrs, flood data: high flood.”

Following the warning, the Provincial Disaster Management Authority (PDMA) in Punjab issued a flood alert, warning that rising waters in the River Tawi were likely to affect levels in Gujrat and Sialkot via the Chenab. District administrations were asked to activate flood monitoring and early warning systems and ensure a coordinated response.

Under the IWT, in force since 1960, Pakistan has rights to the western rivers — Indus, Jhelum, and Chenab — for irrigation, drinking, and non-consumptive uses such as hydropower. India controls the eastern rivers — Ravi, Beas, and Sutlej — but can also use the western rivers for limited power generation and irrigation, provided it does not alter their flow significantly.

Pakistan reacted strongly to India’s suspension of the treaty in April, warning that any move by New Delhi to stop or divert its share of waters guaranteed under the IWT would be considered “an act of war.” 

The latest Indian warning came as Pakistan reels from deadly monsoon rains, with nearly 800 people killed since June 26 due to heavy showers, flash floods and landslides. 


In Karachi’s monsoon floods, a father’s loss mirrors a city’s failures

In Karachi’s monsoon floods, a father’s loss mirrors a city’s failures
Updated 46 min 4 sec ago

In Karachi’s monsoon floods, a father’s loss mirrors a city’s failures

In Karachi’s monsoon floods, a father’s loss mirrors a city’s failures
  • Sultan Muhammad’s two sons were electrocuted as deadly rains killed 17 in Karachi last week
  • Experts say climate change and fractured governance leave the city defenseless against monsoons

KARACHI: Sultan Muhammad, a resident of the southern Pakistani city of Karachi, shuddered as he received a phone call that upended his life last week. 

On the other end was his daughter, her voice trembling as she pleaded:

“Papa, come home as soon as you can, both brothers have been electrocuted.”

Muhammad’s tragedy was among 17 deaths in electrocution, wall collapse and drowning incidents that were reported in Pakistan’s commercial capital last week, as the city’s crumbling infrastructure once again buckled under heavy monsoon rains. The disaster laid bare both the human toll and the governance failures that accompany Pakistan’s intensifying climate shocks.

For Muhammad, a father of four who works at Karachi airport, only three miles stood between him and his sons, yet choked traffic, flooded streets and paralyzed rescue services turned it into an agonizing eternity.

Soon after being informed about the accident, Muhammad left the airport for Al-Mustafa Hospital in Shah Faisal Colony where he lives, and then to Jinnah Hospital in Saddar in search of his sons, 20-year-old Murad Khan and 11-year-old Siraj Khan, walking for hours as blocked roads bogged him down.

“I was on duty when my daughter called me,” Muhammad, who is in his 50s, recalled. “The traffic was so jammed, and there was so much water, so I walked on foot and reached Jinnah Hospital.”

Siraj was electrocuted near his family’s house. Murad rushed to save his younger brother, but he too received a massive shock. Neighbors took them first to Al-Mustafa Hospital, which referred them to Jinnah Hospital due to their serious condition.

Muhammad’s sister-in-law later told him she too was stuck in traffic near Baloch Colony with the boys’ bodies. 

“There, some kind men of Allah saw them crying and mourning, so they did everything, washing, shrouding, burial preparation, and they booked a car and brought them here [home] via Qur’angi,” he said. 

By the time Muhammad returned home, his sons’ bodies had already arrived. 

A CITY DROWNING EVERY MONSOON

Muhammad’s grief unfolding against a backdrop all too familiar in Karachi, where each monsoon season exposes both human fragility and systemic neglect.

The city of over 20 million with its dilapidated infrastructure has long seen even moderate rains paralyze life. In August 2020, record-breaking rains killed more than 40 people and left neighborhoods without power for days. Last week’s downpour — more than 300 millimeters recorded between Aug. 19 and Aug. 21 — once again exposed Karachi’s vulnerabilities.

Pakistan, one of the world’s most climate-vulnerable countries, has reported 785 deaths in rain-related incidents since the monsoon season began in late June.

Meteorologists link the rising frequency of extreme weather to climate change. 

“Because of climate change, the frequency of these extreme events is increasing, and their severity is also increasing compared to before,” said Sardar Sarfaraz, a former director at the Met Office. 

“For every one-degree increase in temperature, 7 percent more moisture evaporates into the atmosphere, which then cools, forms clouds and leads to extreme rainfall events.”

Karachi Mayor Murtaza Wahab said the city’s drainage system was designed for only 40 millimeters of rain. 

“So, if 235 millimeters of rain falls in twelve hours, how can a system meant for 40 millimeters handle that,” he asked, adding that authorities had cleared major roads within hours after the rain.

He pointed to structural and political constraints, noting that key drainage channels run past commercial centers like the HBL Plaza, Pakistan Stock Exchange and Shaheen Complex, leaving no room for expansion. 

“It is easier to talk, but there are technical problems,” Wahab said.

Karachi is divided among nearly a dozen civic agencies, including cantonment boards and 28 towns, at least 12 of which are controlled by opposition parties Jamaat-e-Islami and Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf. 

“There has to be one father of the city,” Wahab said, adding that the mayor controls only about 36 percent of Karachi.

CITIZENS AND THE CITY

Amber Alibhai, general secretary of Shehri-Citizens for a Better Environment (CBE), said the problem was not only governance but also residents’ behavior. 

“The government and citizens are a team,” she said. “The biggest problem in our drains, streets, and places is that the garbage that goes there, it is not thrown by any political party… We ourselves throw it.”

She criticized unplanned urbanization, with pavements laid over natural catchment areas. 

“You haven’t even left your parks open,” she lamented. “The city’s infrastructure has been pushed to a breaking point.”

For Tanveer Hussain, a bike-hailing service rider who lives near Baloch Colony, the rains turned a short commute into an ordeal. 

“The bike completely stopped,” he said. “People’s cars were submerged, swept away.”

Nearly a week later, as the city struggles to recover, Muhammad is left to mourn. His elder son had recently secured a job with a Rs45,000 ($158) salary. 

“Papa, don’t worry now, I will lessen your burden,” Murad had told him just days earlier, Muhammad said, quoting his deceased son. 

“My children are gone, right? But look, someone’s father, someone’s mother, sister, brother, children, if it rains again, an accident can happen again ... My dear ones are gone, both of them, but at least someone else’s should be saved.”
 


Pakistan joins Muslim nations in Jeddah for OIC talks on Gaza

Pakistan joins Muslim nations in Jeddah for OIC talks on Gaza
Updated 25 August 2025

Pakistan joins Muslim nations in Jeddah for OIC talks on Gaza

Pakistan joins Muslim nations in Jeddah for OIC talks on Gaza
  • Pakistan Deputy PM Ishaq Dar to reject Israel’s plan to occupy Gaza with military force during Aug. 25-26 OIC meeting
  • Dar expected to hold meetings with representatives of key OIC member states at sidelines of summit, says foreign office

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s Deputy Prime Minister Ishaq Dar arrived in Ƶ on Monday to take part in a meeting of the Organization of Islamic Cooperation’s (OIC) Council of Foreign Ministers being held to discuss the situation in Palestine amid Israel’s looming takeover of Gaza, the foreign office said. 

The OIC CFM from Aug. 25-26 takes place in Jeddah as Israel forces ramp up operations in Gaza, after its security cabinet this month approved a plan by Benjamin Netanyahu for Gaza’s military occupation. The move drew sharp condemnation and protests from several countries around the world, who urged the international community to rein in Israel from occupying Gaza by force. 

Dar, who is also Pakistan’s foreign minister, was received at the King Abdulaziz International Airport Jeddah by Pakistan’s Permanent Representative to OIC Ambassador Fawad Sher, Pakistan’s Ambassador to Ƶ Ahmad Farooq and Pakistan’s Consul General in Jeddah Khalid Majid. 

“The Extraordinary Session will bring together foreign ministers and senior officials from the OIC member states to deliberate on coordinated responses to the escalating developments in Palestine, arising from the ongoing Israeli military aggression, proposed plans for full military control over Gaza, and the continuing egregious violations of Palestinian rights,” the foreign office said. 

In an earlier statement on Sunday, the foreign office said Dar would advocate for Israel’s total withdrawal from all Palestinian territories; reject the “outrageous” Israeli plan for extending full military control over Gaza and further displacement of Palestinians at the OIC meeting. 

It added that Dar would also emphasize on the urgent need of” unhindered humanitarian assistance” for the people of Palestine, and push for the establishment of an independent, contiguous, and sovereign Palestinian state based on pre-June 1967 borders, with Al-Quds Al-Sharif as its capital.

The foreign office said Dar was expected to hold bilateral meetings with his counterparts from OIC member states at the sidelines of the summit. 

Headquartered in Jeddah, the OIC is the second-largest inter-governmental organization after the United Nations, with a membership of 57 states across four continents. It serves as a collective voice of the Muslim world to ensure and safeguard their interests in economic, social, and political spheres.

Pakistan, which does not have diplomatic ties with Israel, has consistently condemned Israel’s war on Gaza that has killed at least 62,000 Palestinians since Oct. 7, 2023, left much of the territory in ruins and internally displaced nearly its entire population.


Amid tensions with Pakistan, China’s new mega dam triggers fears of water war in India

Amid tensions with Pakistan, China’s new mega dam triggers fears of water war in India
Updated 4 sec ago

Amid tensions with Pakistan, China’s new mega dam triggers fears of water war in India

Amid tensions with Pakistan, China’s new mega dam triggers fears of water war in India
  • India fears Chinese dam will reduce flow on major river by up to 85 percent in dry season
  • Delhi says mega dam of its own will mitigate risks, but faces heavy local resistance

PARONG, India: India fears a planned Chinese mega dam in Tibet will reduce water flows on a major river by up to 85 percent during the dry season, according to four sources familiar with the matter and a government analysis seen by Reuters, prompting Delhi to fast-track plans for its own dam to mitigate the effects.

The Indian government has been considering projects since the early 2000s to control the flow of water from Tibet’s Angsi Glacier, which sustains more than 100 million people downstream in China, India and Bangladesh. But the plans have been hindered by fierce and occasionally violent resistance from residents of the border state of Arunachal Pradesh, who fear their villages will be submerged and way of life destroyed by any dam.

Then in December, China announced that it would build the world’s largest hydropower dam in a border county just before the Yarlung Zangbo river crosses into India. That triggered fears in New Delhi that its longtime strategic rival — which has some territorial claims in Arunachal Pradesh — could weaponize its control of the river, which originates in the Angsi Glacier and is known as the Siang and Brahmaputra in India.

India’s largest hydropower company in May moved survey materials under armed police protection near a prospective site of the Upper Siang Multipurpose Storage Dam, which would be the country’s biggest dam, if completed. Senior Indian officials have also been holding meetings about accelerating construction this year, including one organized in July by Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s office, according to two of the sources, who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive government matters.

Delhi’s concerns were described in the undated Indian government analysis of the Chinese dam’s impact, the specifics of which Reuters corroborated with four sources and is reporting for the first time.

Beijing hasn’t released detailed plans about the dam’s construction, but the analysis drew on past work conducted by Indian government-affiliated institutions like the Central Water Commission and accounted for the expected size of the Chinese project, which broke ground in July and will cost nearly $170 billion.

Delhi estimates the Chinese dam will allow Beijing to divert as much as 40 billion cubic meters of water, or just over a third of what is received annually at a key border point, according to the sources and the document. The impact would be especially acute in the non-monsoon months, when temperatures rise and lands become barren across swathes of India. The Upper Siang project would alleviate that with its projected 14 BCM of storage capacity, allowing India to release water during the dry season. 

That could mean the major regional city of Guwahati, which is dependent on water-intensive industry and farming, would see a reduction in supply of 11 percent, according to the sources and the document, as opposed to 25 percent if the Indian dam isn’t built.

The project could also mitigate any move by Beijing to release devastating torrents of water downstream, the sources said. If the dam is at its minimum drawdown level — where water is stored at less than 50 percent of its height — it would be able to fully absorb any excess water released from a breach in Chinese infrastructure, according to the document and the sources. India is considering a proposal to keep 30 percent of its dam empty at any time in order to account for unexpected surges, two of the sources said.

A spokesperson for China’s foreign ministry said in response to Reuters’ questions that the hydropower projects “have undergone rigorous scientific research on safety and environmental protection, and will not adversely impact the water resources, ecology, or geology of downstream countries.”

“China has always maintained a responsible attitude toward the development and utilization of transboundary rivers, and has maintained long-term communication and cooperation with downstream countries such as India and Bangladesh,” the spokesperson added.

Modi’s office and the Indian ministries responsible for water and external affairs did not respond to Reuters’ questions. State-owned hydropower major NHPC also did not return a request for comment.

India’s foreign ministry has said that top diplomat S. Jaishankar raised concerns about the dam during a meeting with his Chinese counterpart on Aug. 18. A Jaishankar deputy also told lawmakers in August that the government was implementing measures to safeguard the lives and livelihoods of citizens in downstream areas, including building the dam.

India has itself been accused by Pakistan, a Chinese ally that it briefly clashed with in May, of weaponizing water. Delhi this year suspended its participation in a 1960 water-sharing treaty with Islamabad and is considering diverting flows from another crucial river away from its downstream neighbor.

An international tribunal has ruled that India must adhere to the agreement but Delhi says the panel lacks jurisdiction.

DEVELOPMENT OR DESTRUCTION?

When NHPC workers moved surveying materials near the village of Parong in May, angry locals damaged their machinery, destroyed a nearby bridge and looted the tents of police sent to guard the operation.

Many of them are members of Arunachal’s Adi community, who live off paddy, orange and sweet lime farms in the mist-shrouded hills and valleys nourished by the Siang.

The villagers have set up makeshift watch posts on regional roads to deny access to NHPC workers. That has forced security personnel to trek miles, often under cover of night, to reach a prospective site of the dam.

At least 16 Adi villages are likely to be lost to the storage area of the dam, directly affecting an estimated 10,000 people, according to two of the sources. Community leaders say more than 100,000 people will be impacted overall.

“The cardamom, paddy, jackfruit and pear we grow on this land help educate our children and support our family,” said Odoni Palo Pabin, an Adi grocer and mother of two. “We will fight the dam to death.”

The dam has the support of Arunachal’s chief minister, who is a member of Modi’s party and has called the Chinese project an existential threat. The project will “ensure water security and provide flood moderation to counter any potential water surges,” the state government said in a statement, adding that it decided in June to engage in detailed compensation discussions with families that could be affected by the dam.

Lawmaker Alo Libang, an Adi who represents an area that would be submerged by the Indian project, said he believed locals could be convinced to move if they received generous compensation.

NHPC has plans to spend more than $3 million on education and emergency infrastructure to incentivize the villagers to move elsewhere, three of the sources said, citing instructions from Modi’s office.

In one sign of progress, three villages in the area recently agreed to let NHPC officials carry out dam-related work, according to the Arunachal government and dozens of locals.

India has a history of activist movements against large dams, which have sometimes slowed these projects by years or forced them to scale down.

Even if the Upper Siang dam gets the go-ahead, it could take a decade to build after breaking ground, according to four of the sources. That means the project would likely be completed after China’s project, which Beijing expects to start generating power by the early-to-mid 2030s.

The delay means an Indian project would be vulnerable during construction if Beijing suddenly releases water during the monsoon season, triggering a surge that could wash away temporary dams, two of the sources said.

International experts and Adi activists have also warned that building large dams in seismically active Tibet and Arunachal could heighten risks for downstream communities.

The Chinese “dam is being built in a zone of high seismicity and in a zone that experiences extreme weather events,” said Sayanangshu Modak, an expert on the India-China water relationship at the University of Arizona.

“These kinds of extreme weather events trigger landslides, mudslides, glacial lake outburst flooding,” he said. “So that raises concerns about dam safety... it’s a very legitimate concern and India should engage with China.”