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Militant violence in Pakistan jumps 46% in third quarter of 2025 — report

Militant violence in Pakistan jumps 46% in third quarter of 2025 — report
Security officials examine damaged vehicles at the site of a powerful car bombing, in Quetta, Pakistan, on September 30, 2025. (AP)
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Militant violence in Pakistan jumps 46% in third quarter of 2025 — report

Militant violence in Pakistan jumps 46% in third quarter of 2025 — report
  • About 900 deaths were recorded from July to September, mostly in KP and Balochistan
  • CRSS says civilians were targeted most during the period, facing 123 militant attacks

KARACHI: Pakistan witnessed a 46 percent surge in militant violence during the third quarter of 2025, resulting in 901 deaths, an Islamabad-based think tank said on Tuesday, adding that most fatalities were reported in the country’s Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) and Balochistan provinces bordering Afghanistan.

The Pakistani Taliban, known as Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), regularly target security forces and their installations in KP, while separatists like the Baloch Liberation Army (BLA) demand independence for Balochistan, accusing the central government of exploiting the province’s natural resources, a charge Islamabad denies.

The Center for Research and Security Studies (CRSS) said in its latest security report the number of casualties during the third quarter jumped to 901 from 616 in the second quarter.

“With at least 901 fatalities and 599 injuries — among civilians, security personnel and outlaws — resulting from 329 incidents of violence, including terror attacks and counter-terror operations, Pakistan witnessed an over 46 percent surge in overall violence in its security landscape for the third quarter of 2025,” the report said.

It noted this year had already proven as deadly as the whole of 2024, with 2,414 recorded deaths so far, making 2025 the deadliest year in a decade if the current trend continues.

It highlighted that Pakistan intensified its response to militants in the third quarter of 2025, with security forces inflicting heavier losses on them.

“Accounting for over 96 percent of the country’s violence in this quarter, KP and Balochistan stood out as the most volatile provinces,” the report said.

“KP was the worst-hit region, suffering nearly 71 percent of the total violence-linked fatalities and over 67 percent of the incidents of violence, followed by Balochistan, with over 25 percent fatalities and incidents.”

The report said 516 militants were killed in the third quarter of 2025, compared with 385 security personnel and civilians killed altogether.

Civilians were the most targeted this quarter in almost 123 militant attacks while security forces were targeted 106 times, it added.

The think tank warned that escalating violence could further strain Pakistan’s fragile security environment unless Islamabad strengthened counterterrorism measures.

CRSS shared its findings on a day when a powerful suicide blast targeting the Frontier Corps headquarters in Balochistan’s capital Quetta killed at least 10 people and triggered a shootout in which four militants were killed.


Absence of Taliban at Islamabad dialogue sparks debate as Afghan leaders denounce regime

Absence of Taliban at Islamabad dialogue sparks debate as Afghan leaders denounce regime
Updated 7 sec ago

Absence of Taliban at Islamabad dialogue sparks debate as Afghan leaders denounce regime

Absence of Taliban at Islamabad dialogue sparks debate as Afghan leaders denounce regime
  • Pakistani officials say dialogue not intended to isolate Taliban but foster “people-to-people” ties
  • Afghan participants condemn sweeping curbs on women’s education, work and public life

 

ISLAMABAD: The absence of any representatives from the Taliban government at a rare Afghan dialogue in Islamabad this week sparked debate over the intent of the gathering, but Pakistani officials insist the meeting was not designed to sideline Kabul but to build “people-to-people” engagement beyond official channels.

The two-day regional conference, titled “Towards Unity and Trust” and jointly organized by Women for Afghanistan (WFA) and the Islamabad-based South Asian Strategic Stability Institute (SASSI) University, brought together former Afghan lawmakers, civil society figures, academics and women’s rights defenders. 

But the exclusion of the Taliban administration has drawn scrutiny among Pakistani observers and on social media, particularly given SASSI’s reputation as a pro-state institution and the fact that many of the Afghan participants live in exile abroad. 

It was unclear if the Taliban were invited to join the forum but Pakistani officials and conference organizers rejected the suggestion that the dialogue was intended to isolate Kabul, saying Islamabad continued to maintain ties with the Taliban government while engaging with other Afghan factions.

“We are engaging with all Afghan factions while maintaining good relations with the current regime,” Rana Ihsaan Afzal Khan, Coordinator to the Prime Minister on Commerce, told Arab News, pointing to growing trade and Taliban participation in a recent trilateral CPEC meeting.

Organizers described the conference as an initial step toward building trust and understanding between the people of Pakistan and Afghanistan.

“The objectives are very clear, Pakistan believes that true engagement will only be possible if it is based on people-to-people contact,” SASSI University chairperson Maria Sultan told Arab News.

“The aim is to enhance trust and unity and most importantly to build bridges. So, this is the first step toward starting the Islamabad process.”

Asked about the use of Afghanistan’s pre-Taliban national flag at the event, which is banned by the current Kabul regime, Sultan said it should not be interpreted as a hostile gesture.

“The day Pakistan recognizes the government in Afghanistan and that flag is recognized at the UN, it will be presented as such,” she explained.

“PAKISTAN SHOULD HOLD OUT HAND”

Pakistan has continued to engage the Taliban administration diplomatically despite rising tensions over cross-border militancy. Since the group’s return to power in August 2021, Islamabad has kept its embassy open in Kabul and hosted multiple high-level delegations, including interim Foreign Minister Amir Khan Muttaqi. 

The two sides have also held a series of trilateral meetings with China focused on expanding the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) into Afghanistan and enhancing regional trade connectivity.

Pakistani officials have repeatedly said they seek a “pragmatic relationship” with the Taliban authorities based on economic cooperation, counterterrorism and border security, even as they press Kabul to act against militants targeting Pakistan from Afghan territory. The Taliban government denies it supports insurgent groups. 

While Pakistani officials framed the conference as inclusive, Afghan participants used the platform to sharply criticize the Taliban government.

“People are waiting for change. The Taliban will not last in Afghanistan,” former Afghan lawmaker Paiman Agha said, adding that the Islamabad dialogue was intended to foster “complete understanding” between Afghans and Pakistanis.

Alia Yulmaz, an Afghan academic based in Türkiye, described the conference as “the most important gathering between people of Afghanistan and Pakistan.”

Other participants used the platform to speak out against the Taliban’s restrictions on women’s rights and public freedoms.

Since seizing power, the Taliban have imposed sweeping curbs on women’s lives, banning girls from secondary and higher education, barring women from most government and NGO jobs and enforcing strict dress codes and movement restrictions without a male guardian. 

Women are also prohibited from visiting parks, gyms, and public spaces in many provinces, and in December 2022, the Taliban banned female students from universities altogether.

The United Nations and international rights groups have described these policies as “gender apartheid,” while the Taliban defend them as being in line with their interpretation of Islamic law.

“It is forbidden for Afghan women to go to university, to school, even to a pharmacy,” women’s rights defender Rahil Talash told Arab News.

“For this, what we have to do is Pakistan should hold our hands and call this disease in Afghanistan a disease because it is spreading everywhere. So, this bad disease should be eradicated from Afghanistan. So that Pakistan and Afghanistan can live in peace.”

Talash said the Taliban had shut down Internet services earlier this week, making life particularly difficult for women relying on online work. The United Nations mission in Afghanistan also urged the Taliban on Tuesday to restore Internet and telecom access.

The Islamabad dialogue comes at a sensitive moment in bilateral relations, with ties between Pakistan and the Taliban government strained over a surge in deadly cross-border attacks that Islamabad blames mostly on the Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), which operates from Afghan soil. 

Earlier this month, Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif bluntly urged Kabul to “choose between Pakistan and TTP.”

Analysts downplayed concerns that the talks would harm Islamabad’s relations with the Taliban government.

“I doubt that this will have any adverse implications on our relationship with Afghanistan,” said defense analyst Maj. Gen. (R) Inam Ul Haque.

“Because Pakistan as a sovereign country has the right to pursue relationship with any party. And when they [Taliban were in the opposition and these guys were in the government Pakistan was talking to both sides.”

Prominent Afghan figures attending the conference included Fawzia Koofi, former deputy speaker of parliament, Dr. Nasir Andisha, Afghanistan’s UN representative, Khan Aga Rezai, chair of the Afghan parliament’s National Security Committee, Mustafa Mastoor, former economy minister, and Feridun Iham of the National Islamic Movement of Afghanistan.


Trump says was ‘honored’ by Pakistan army chief’s praise for averting India war

Trump says was ‘honored’ by Pakistan army chief’s praise for averting India war
Updated 30 September 2025

Trump says was ‘honored’ by Pakistan army chief’s praise for averting India war

Trump says was ‘honored’ by Pakistan army chief’s praise for averting India war
  • President recalls Asim Munir’s remarks crediting him with saving “millions of lives” during May conflict
  • Comments follow Pakistani visit focused on trade, security and regional stability

ISLAMABAD: US President Donald Trump said on Tuesday he was “honored” that Pakistan’s powerful army chief, Field Marshal Asim Munir, credited him with “saving millions and millions of lives” by preventing a war between Pakistan and India from escalating during a military standoff in May 2025.

Trump’s remarks referred to the most serious confrontation between the two nuclear-armed neighbors in years, which erupted earlier this year and brought them close to full-scale conflict before US-led diplomacy helped defuse tensions.

The president made the comments following a visit to Washington earlier this month by Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif and Field Marshal Munir — Pakistan’s first civilian-military delegation to the White House in six years — for high-level talks on trade, counterterrorism cooperation and regional security.

“The prime minister of Pakistan [Shehbaz Sharif] was here [US] along with the Field Marshal [General Asim Munir], who’s a very important guy in Pakistan, and he was here three days ago,” Trump said as he addressed a gathering of American military leaders. 

He said Munir, speaking to a group that included two generals, credited him with preventing a potentially catastrophic conflict with India from escalating, telling those present that Trump had “saved millions of lives because he saved the war from going on.”

“That was a bad war, and I was very honored,” Trump added. “I loved the way he said it.”

The visit by Sharif and Munir followed months of behind-the-scenes diplomatic engagement as Islamabad and Washington seek to recalibrate ties that have been strained in recent years over Afghanistan, counterterrorism policy and Pakistan’s deepening partnership with China.

The May crisis, triggered by escalating violence in disputed Kashmir and border skirmishes, underscored the volatility of South Asia’s security environment. 

Analysts say Trump’s remarks highlight how central Pakistan’s military remains to Washington’s regional strategy, and how his administration is framing its role in preventing renewed conflict between the two nuclear-armed neighbors.


Landslide kills two, injures three in northern Pakistan’s Abbottabad district

Landslide kills two, injures three in northern Pakistan’s Abbottabad district
Updated 30 September 2025

Landslide kills two, injures three in northern Pakistan’s Abbottabad district

Landslide kills two, injures three in northern Pakistan’s Abbottabad district
  • Slope collapse hit Havelian town amid ongoing monsoon season, rescue service says
  • Landslides frequently strike Pakistan’s hilly regions during heavy seasonal rains

PESHAWAR: A landslide killed at least two people and injured three others in Pakistan’s northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province on Tuesday, rescue officials said, as authorities warned of continued slope collapses during the monsoon season.

The incident took place in Havelian town in Abbottabad district, according to Rescue 1122, which said emergency teams had transported the victims to a nearby hospital.

“Two people died on the spot and three were injured in the landslide,” the agency said in a statement. “The bodies of the deceased and the injured are being shifted to Civil Hospital Havelian.”

Rescue services said the cause of the landslide had not yet been determined.

Landslides are a recurring hazard in Pakistan’s mountainous regions, particularly in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Gilgit-Baltistan and Azad Kashmir, where heavy monsoon rains, deforestation and fragile soil conditions often trigger slope failures.

In July, more than eight vehicles were swept away when heavy rains caused a landslide on a highway in Gilgit-Baltistan’s Diamer district, damaging bridges, a hotel and a school and knocking out communications. Tourist buses were stranded on roadsides as families waited for food and evacuation.

This year’s monsoon season has killed at least 1,006 people and injured 1,063 since June 26, according to the National Disaster Management Authority. 

Pakistan, which produces less than 1 percent of global greenhouse gas emissions, has suffered disproportionately from extreme weather in recent years. In 2022, torrential monsoon rains killed more than 1,700 people and caused over $30 billion in damage.
 


Pakistan’s ABHI joins Mastercard global program as MENAP expansion gathers pace

Pakistan’s ABHI joins Mastercard global program as MENAP expansion gathers pace
Updated 30 September 2025

Pakistan’s ABHI joins Mastercard global program as MENAP expansion gathers pace

Pakistan’s ABHI joins Mastercard global program as MENAP expansion gathers pace
  • Karachi-based fintech chosen for Mastercard’s Start Path initiative to scale small business solutions
  • Selection marks latest milestone in ABHI’s MENAP expansion as it grows credit and payroll services

KARACHI: Pakistani fintech ABHI has been selected as one of only eight companies worldwide to join Mastercard’s Start Path Small Business program, a global initiative aimed at scaling innovative digital solutions for small and medium enterprises (SMEs), the company said on Tuesday. 

The selection marks a significant milestone in ABHI’s expansion strategy across the Middle East, North Africa and Pakistan (MENAP) region, where financial inclusion remains a pressing challenge. 

Founded in 2021, ABHI provides credit-bridging tools such as Earned Wage Access (EWA), invoice factoring, payroll solutions and SME financing, and now operates across Pakistan, the UAE, Ƶ and Oman. Since its launch, the company says it has served more than 1 million users in sectors ranging from textiles and manufacturing to health care and technology, onboarded over 5,000 businesses and processed around 5 million transactions worth more than $500 million.

“As part of the program, ABHI will have the opportunity to collaborate with Mastercard’s product and innovation teams, receive mentorship, and gain access to Mastercard’s extensive network of partners to accelerate the impact of its solutions for businesses and employees across emerging markets,” the company said in a statement. 

Alongside ABHI, the latest Mastercard program cohort includes INI, SiFi, TogoAgro, TurnKey Lender, Conduiit, Tracflo, and Morado.

Omair Ansari, ABHI’s co-founder and CEO, said outdated financial infrastructure and poor access to credit had long constrained individuals and businesses in emerging markets, adding that his goal was to develop financial technology that gives people instant access to the resources they need to grow and succeed.

Pakistan, with a population of 240 million, is home to one of the world’s largest unbanked populations. Around 64 percent of adults have a bank account, according to the State Bank of Pakistan, which has set a target to raise that figure to 75 percent and cut the gender gap to 25 percent by 2028.

Recently, the fintech has also deepened its presence in Gulf markets.

Earlier this month, ABHI announced a partnership with Ƶ’s TRAY platform to integrate EWA services into restaurants, cafés and cloud kitchens across the Kingdom, a move aligned with Vision 2030 goals on workforce empowerment and SME growth. 

It also secured a $15 million credit facility in 2024 from UAE-based investors Shorooq Partners and Amplify Growth Partnership to expand its services in the Emirates.


Pakistan weighs troop deployment for Gaza peace force under Trump plan

Pakistan weighs troop deployment for Gaza peace force under Trump plan
Updated 30 September 2025

Pakistan weighs troop deployment for Gaza peace force under Trump plan

Pakistan weighs troop deployment for Gaza peace force under Trump plan
  • Deputy PM Ishaq Dar says decision will follow Indonesia’s pledge to send 20,000 troops for Gaza mission
  • Says five Muslim nations believe Hamas will support 20-point agreement backed by eight countries

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s Deputy Prime Minister Ishaq Dar said on Tuesday the country’s leadership would decide whether to contribute troops to a special peacekeeping force in Gaza proposed under US President Donald Trump’s peace plan, adding that Palestinian law enforcement agencies would operate on the ground alongside the multinational contingent.

Foreign ministers of eight Muslim countries — Pakistan, Ƶ, the UAE, Indonesia, Turkiye, Qatar, Egypt and Jordan — have backed Trump’s 20-point Gaza peace plan, pledging constructive engagement with Washington and all parties to finalize and implement the agreement. 

The plan calls for a ceasefire, an exchange of hostages and prisoners, a staged Israeli withdrawal, Hamas disarmament and Gaza’s reconstruction with international support.

Trump discussed the proposal with Muslim leaders during a meeting in New York on the sidelines of the United Nations General Assembly’s 80th session last week. 

“Gaza peace plan envisaged deploying a peace force in Palestine,” Dar said during a media briefing. 

“Pakistani leadership will decide on sending troops for the special peacekeeping force in Gaza, as Indonesia has announced the deployment of 20,000 troops for the purpose.”

Dar said Pakistan had urged that any such arrangement be documented at the United Nations, clarifying that it would be distinct from a UN peacekeeping mission and would constitute a special force dedicated solely to Gaza.

“The force would ensure external security, while internal law and order would be managed by Palestinian police and agencies,” he added.

The deputy prime minister said Muslim countries, along with the Palestinian Authority, had welcomed the Gaza peace plan, saying it envisioned an independent Palestinian government of technocrats in Gaza.

“It will be overseen by an international body, largely comprising Palestinians,” he added.

Responding to a question about whether Hamas would accept the deal, Dar said five countries believed the group would support the plan, particularly the one hosting its talks.

“We should trust their assurances,” he said.

Dar also emphasized that Pakistan had made no direct deal with Israel.

“We dealt with the United States and the United States dealt with Israel,” he said.

Reading from the joint statement issued by the eight Muslim countries, Dar said they had affirmed their readiness to engage “positively and constructively” with the United States and other parties to finalize the agreement and ensure its implementation in a way that guarantees peace, security and stability for the region’s peoples.

He said that alongside attending the UN General Assembly, Pakistan’s delegation had worked with like-minded nations to end the conflict in Gaza. The meeting with Trump and other Muslim leaders, Dar said, aimed to secure a ceasefire, ensure unhindered humanitarian aid, halt the forced displacement of Palestinians, facilitate the return of displaced persons, plan Gaza’s reconstruction and stop Israel’s attempts to annex the West Bank.

“The US president then proposed his team would work with the foreign ministers of the eight participating Muslim countries to devise a workable solution,” Dar said, adding that after receiving the 20-point plan document from Washington, the foreign ministers held several consultative meetings to provide their input, which was later submitted to the US side.

Dar said the joint statement by the eight countries welcoming the peace plan had been prepared in close consultation, led by the Saudi foreign minister, with Pakistan’s proposed changes incorporated into the final draft.