Authorities impose partial curfew in district bordering Afghanistan amid surge in militancy
Authorities impose partial curfew in district bordering Afghanistan amid surge in militancy/node/2617744/pakistan
Authorities impose partial curfew in district bordering Afghanistan amid surge in militancy
Pakistani army soldiers gather near a vehicle at a border terminal in North Waziristan, on the border between Pakistan and Afghanistan, on January 27, 2019. (AFP/File)
ISLAMABAD: Authorities have imposed a partial curfew in the northwestern South Waziristan district near the Afghanistan border in Pakistan’s restive northwest, amid a surge in militant attacks against security forces.
The partial curfew in the South Waziristan district comes weeks after a military convoy was ambushed in the district, when “armed men opened fire from both sides with heavy weapons,” killing 12 security personnel and wounding four, a local government official said. The Pakistani Taliban, or the Tehreek-e-Taliban (TTP), claimed responsibility for the attack in a message on social media.
Pakistan has witnessed a sharp increase in militant attacks in its northwestern districts bordering Afghanistan, where the Pakistani Taliban and other militant groups have mounted their attacks in recent months, frequently targeting security forces convoys and check-posts, besides targeted killings and kidnappings of law enforcers and government officials.
The curfew was imposed in Serwekai tehsil of South Waziristan on Kandahari to Siplatoi and Baron to Molay Khan routes from 6am till 7pm on Saturday in view of a threats to the movement of security contingents and logistics that may result in loss of civilian life and property, according to KP Additional Chief Secretary for Home and Tribal Affairs, Muhammad Abid Majeed.
“People are requested to abide by the restriction and cooperate with concerned authorities,” Majeed said in a notification.
The Pakistani Taliban have stepped up their attacks against the security forces since a fragile truce with the government broke down in Nov. 2022. The group is separate from but has been emboldened by the return of the Taliban to Afghanistan in Aug. 2021.
Last year was Pakistan’s deadliest in nearly a decade, with more than 1,600 deaths, nearly half of them soldiers and police officers, according to the Islamabad-based Center for Research and Security Studies.
Islamabad has frequently accused Afghanistan of allowing the use of its soil and India of backing militant groups for attacks against Pakistan. Kabul and New Delhi both deny the allegation.
ISLAMABAD: Pakistan Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif said on Saturday that the acceptance of President Donald Trump’s Gaza peace plan by Hamas has created a window for a ceasefire, promising Islamabad’s continuous support to everlasting peace in Palestine.
The statement came a day after Trump ordered Israel to stop bombing the Gaza Strip after Hamas said it had accepted some elements of his plan to end the nearly two-year war and return all the remaining hostages taken in the Oct. 7, 2023 attack on Israel.
Hamas said it was willing to hand over power to other Palestinians, but that other aspects of the plan require further consultations among Palestinians. Senior Hamas officials suggested there were still major disagreements that required further negotiations.
In a post on X, the Pakistan prime minister said they were closer to a ceasefire in Gaza than they have been since Israel launched the war on Gaza that has killed more than 65,000 Palestinian.
“The statement issued by Hamas creates a window for a ceasefire and ensuring peace that we must not allow to close again,” he said. “Pakistan will continue to work with all its partners and brotherly nations to everlasting peace in Palestine.”
Under the plan, which Trump unveiled earlier this week alongside Netanyahu, Hamas would release the remaining 48 hostages — around 20 of them believed to be alive — within three days. It would also give up power and disarm.
In return, Israel would halt its offensive and withdraw from much of the territory, release hundreds of Palestinian prisoners and allow an influx of humanitarian aid and eventual reconstruction. Plans to relocate much of Gaza’s population to other countries would be shelved.
Trump earlier presented the roadmap in a meeting with leaders of Pakistan, Ƶ, the UAE, Indonesia, Turkiye, Qatar, Egypt and Jordan last month on the sidelines of the United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) session.
The US president appears keen to deliver on pledges to end the war and return dozens of hostages ahead of the second anniversary of the war on Tuesday. He welcomed the Hamas statement, saying: “I believe they are ready for a lasting PEACE.”
“Israel must immediately stop the bombing of Gaza, so that we can get the Hostages out safely and quickly! Right now, it’s far too dangerous to do that. We are already in discussions on details to be worked out,” Trump wrote on social media.
Sharif, who has gained favor with Trump since publicly endorsing him for a Nobel Peace Prize for brokering a ceasefire in a four-day Pakistan-India military standoff in May, the US president and Muslim leaders who last month came together to resolve the crisis.
“Gratitude is due to President Trump, as well as to leaderships of Qatar, Saudia Arabia, UAE, Turkiye, Jordan, Egypt, and Indonesia who, met with President Trump on the sidelines of #UNGA80 for the resolution of the Palestinian issue,” he added.
Pakistan’s solar-powered farming deepens fears of long-term water crisis
Farmers are increasingly ditching diesel and grid power as Pakistan undergoes a solar revolution fueled by cheap Chinese-made panels
The solar boom has coincided with the rapid depletion of water tables in Pakistan’s most populous Punjab province, documents show
Updated 04 October 2025
Reuters
MURIDKE: Out in the fields near Pakistan’s city of Muridke in Punjab province, rice farmer Karamat Ali’s cows and buffalos once provided his family with milk until earlier this year, when he sold about a dozen of them to buy a set of solar panels.
Ali now uses his panels to power a tube well, which is composed of a water well and a motorized groundwater pump. The solar device allows Ali to irrigate his crops with greater ease and frees him from depending on the erratic electricity grid and pricey diesel to extract groundwater.
“It keeps my costs low because it runs without diesel and keeps my water supply running smoothly,” Ali said.
A worker installs a folding solar panel unit, to run a tube well, the motorised pump that taps groundwater, in a rice field in Muridke, Sheikhupura District in Punjab province, Pakistan, on August 12, 2025. (REUTERS)
As Pakistan undergoes a solar revolution fueled by cheap Chinese-made panels, farmers like Ali are increasingly ditching diesel and grid power for sun-powered tube wells, according to interviews with growers, as well as government officials and analysts.
The solar boom has coincided with the rapid depletion of water tables in Pakistan’s most populous province, according to previously unreported Punjab water authority documents viewed by Reuters. The documents did not pinpoint any cause.
Farmers who spoke to Reuters said they had started irrigating their rice paddies several times a day, which would not have been possible without solarised pumps. They are also choosing to grow more thirsty rice crops than in previous years, with the size of rice fields increasing 30% between 2023 and 2025, US Department of Agriculture data shows.
Women farmers plant rice saplings in a field in Muridke, Sheikhupura District in Punjab province, Pakistan, on August 11, 2025. (REUTERS)
There are no recent official estimates on the number of tube wells in Pakistan, which doesn’t require their registration. But so widespread is their use that farmers choosing to power the devices with solar are set to drive a 45 percent collapse in the amount of grid electricity consumed by the agriculture sector in the three years through 2025, said energy economist Ammar Habib, who serves as an adviser to Pakistan’s power minister. His estimate was based on consumption data published by the national energy authority.
Reuters’ calculations based on Habib’s data, which were reviewed by Habib and Lahore-based renewables analyst Syed Faizan Ali Shah, indicate that some 400,000 tube wells that once relied on electricity have switched to solar. Farmers dependent on such panels have likely purchased an additional 250,000 tube wells since 2023, Habib estimated, signalling that the sun now powers roughly 650,000 such devices across Pakistan.
The explosion in availability of cheap solar panels is posing a particular threat to water levels in the South Asian bread basket of Punjab.
The water table has shrunk below 60 feet — a level designated as critical by the provincial irrigation department — across 6.6% of Punjab as of 2024, according to maps published for internal use by water authorities and seen by Reuters.
Adnan Hassan, Senior Research Officer, checks the dipmeter to examine the ground-water level from a borehole, at the Irrigation Research Institute in Punjab Irrigation Department, in Lahore, Pakistan, on August 13, 2025. (REUTERS)
That marks an increase of some 25% between 2020 and 2024, while the deepest pockets — with water levels beyond 80 feet — more than doubled in size during the same period.
Punjab Irrigation Minister Muhammad Kazim Pirzada said there are around 10 cities in the province where water has been seriously depleted.
His department told Reuters it was continuing to study the relationship between tube wells and groundwater depletion, but that it had undertaken measures to protect the water table.
But for many farmers in Punjab, the threat to the water table is a problem for tomorrow.
“Solar panels should be installed at all cost,” said 38-year-old subsistence farmer Rai Abdul Ghafoor, who has been saving for a purchase.
Mian Muhammad Kazim Ali Pirzada, Minister of Irrigation, Punjab, speaks on mobile phone next to a portrait of the Chief Minister of Punjab Maryam Nawaz Sharif during an interview with Reuters in Lahore, Pakistan, on August 12, 2025. (REUTERS)
The switch to solar has allowed 61-year-old Mohammad Naseem to save some 50,000 rupees ($175.21) monthly on electricity and diesel since he bought his panels four years ago. That is 25 percent more than the minimum monthly wage in Punjab.
“I sleep near it. I arrange to guard it at night; we remain vigilant so that it doesn’t get damaged,” said Naseem, who prizes his panels so much that he dismantles them every evening and brings them home from the fields.
While poor farmers are still reliant on diesel and grid power, many agriculture-dependent villages have pooled sums to purchase the panels as communal property.
Hajji Allah Rakha, an 80-year-old farmer who has 16 panels, shares them with two other families. Electricity bills have gone down significantly, benefiting everyone who invested in the technology, Rakha said.
Zaheer, 29, an employee of Punjab Irrigation Department, uses a dipmeter to check the ground water level at a borehole, in Babakwal, Sheikhupura District in Punjab province, Pakistan, on August 13, 2025. (REUTERS)
Shahab Qureshi, a businessman selling solar panels in the provincial capital Lahore, said the solar boom has many farmers using all means to get their hands on the device.
“They would sell land, jewelry, or take loans just to get the solar panels,” Qureshi said.
Meanwhile, federal and provincial officials have started to pay more attention to the slow-boiling crisis, especially after India suspended its participation in an accord governing the sharing of water from the critical Indus River system earlier this year.
Punjab began aquifer-recharge pilots, which aim to slow depletion and ensure stable groundwater supply, at more than 40 sites before India’s April move, though officials said such projects have grown in importance since.
The province is also reviving old infrastructure such as the Ravi Siphon, a colonial-era tunnel that helps stabilize flows from the Ravi River. Officials hope that improving conventional irrigation methods will reduce the need for farmers to extract groundwater.
“What we are injecting in the aquifer, that quality must be equal to the drinking water quality. If you inject polluted water from the roads to the aquifers, then the next generation will suffer the consequences,” said Adnan Hassan, a researcher for Punjab’s irrigation department.
ISLAMABAD: The government in Azad Kashmir has reached an agreement with a civil rights alliance to end days of unrest in the northern Pakistani region, a Pakistani federal minister announced on Saturday, following the killing of at least nine people in deadly clashes.
The clashes erupted after calls for an indefinite ‘lockdown’ by the Jammu Kashmir Joint Awami Action Committee (JKJAAC) from Sept. 29, seeking removal of perks for government officials, ending 12 seats in the regional assembly reserved for Kashmiri migrants who came from the Indian-side of the territory, and royalty for hydel power projects.
The protests have turned violent as protesters and police came face to face and clashed at various locations, with authorities confirming killing of six civilians and three policemen this week. The crisis prompted Pakistan Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif to send a negotiations team to the territory to join the regional government in talks with the protesters.
“It was the wisdom of local and national leadership and the spirit of dialogue that enabled us to resolve this stand-off peacefully, without violence, without division, and with mutual respect,” Pakistani Planning Minister Ahsan Iqbal, who was part of the negotiations, said on X.
— Dr. Tariq Fazal Ch. (@DrTariqFazal)
Pakistani Parliamentary Affairs Minister Dr. Tariq Fazal Chaudhry shared a copy of the agreement on X, which included the formation of a judicial commission to probe violent incidents, reduction in the number of regional government ministers and secretaries, and setting up a committee on reserved seats for migrants.
“Persons killed in the incidents of 1st and 2nd October 2025 shall be compensated with monetary benefits equivalent to LEAs (law enforcement agencies),” it read. “Gunshot injuries will be compensated at the rate of Rs10 lac ($3,554) per injured person. A government job shall be granted to one of the family members of each dead person within 20 days.”
The picture shared on Oct. 4, 2025, shows government officials and representative o Joint Action Committee in Islamabad, Pakistan. (Ahsan Iqbal/X)
Kashmir is divided between India and Pakistan since their independence from British rule in 1947. Both claim the territory in its entirety, but rule in part.
Azad Kashmir is the part administered by Pakistan. The negotiations between the government and AKJAAC followed shutter-down and wheel-jam strikes that disrupted public life in the territory.
In May 2024, a similar wave of protests paralyzed the region. After six days of strikes and violent clashes that left at least four dead, PM Sharif approved a grant of Rs 23 billion ($86 million) for subsidies on flour and electricity, and a judicial commission to review elite privileges.
Protest leaders suspended their campaign at that time but warned that failure to implement the package would fuel fresh unrest.
KARACHI: The Pakistan International Airlines (PIA) will resume two weekly flights to the United Kingdom (UK) from Oct. 25, Defense Minister Khawaja Asif said on Saturday.
The statement came hours after the UK Civil Aviation Authority issued a Foreign Aircraft Operating Permit to PIA and cleared the final administrative hurdle for the carrier to resume flights to Britain, according to the Pakistani high commission in London.
Britain lifted restrictions on Pakistani carriers in July, nearly half a decade after grounding them following a 2020 PIA Airbus A320 crash in Karachi that killed 97 people. The disaster was followed by claims of irregularities in pilot licensing, which led to bans in the US, UK and the European Union.
“We have finally planned for the first flight to UK (Islamabad to Manchester & back) on 25 Oct 25, God willing with a weekly frequency of 02 flights,” Defense Minister Asif wrote on X.
The airline has already received the Third Country Operator (TCO) approval for flight operations in the UK, according to the Pakistani high commission.
After resuming flight operations to Manchester, the airline will begin flights to Birmingham and London in the second phase.
“PIA’s resumption to the UK will facilitate the more than 1.7 million Pakistani diaspora to travel conveniently to Pakistan,” the high commission added.
Britain is Pakistan’s third-largest trading partner, with bilateral commerce worth about £4.7 billion ($5.7 billion) annually.
The Pakistan government, which has repeatedly bailed out the loss-making carrier, is pushing ahead with its privatization as part of a broader plan to reduce losses at state-owned firms under a $7 billion International Monetary Fund (IMF) loan program.
PIA has accumulated more than $2.5 billion in losses over roughly a decade, draining public finances.
The European Union Aviation Safety Agency lifted its suspension in November 2024, allowing the airline to resume flights from Islamabad to Paris in January and later expand to Lahore–Paris in June. However, PIA suspended those services in recent months to prioritize resources for the UK relaunch. The airline remains barred from flying to the US.
Pakistan courts US with pitch for new Arabian sea port
The plan envisages American investors building and operating a terminal to access Pakistan’s critical minerals in the town of Pasni
The move comes after Munir, along with PM Shehbaz Sharif, held a meeting with US President Donald Trump at the White House in Sept.
Updated 04 October 2025
Reuters
Advisers to Pakistani army chief Field Marshal Asim Munir have approached US officials with an offer to build and run a port on the Arabian Sea, the Financial Times reported on Friday, citing a plan seen by the newspaper.
The plan envisages American investors building and operating a terminal to access Pakistan’s critical minerals in the town of Pasni, according to the FT. Pasni is a port town in Gwadar District in the province of Balochistan, which borders Afghanistan and Iran.
The move comes after Munir, along with Pakistan’s Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif, held a meeting with US President Donald Trump at the White House in September. In that meeting, Sharif sought investment from US companies in the agriculture, technology, mining and energy sectors for investment.
According to the FT, the offer was floated with some US officials, and was shared with Munir ahead of a meeting with Trump in the White House late last month.
The blueprint excludes the use of the port for US military bases, and instead aims to attract development finance for a rail network linking the port to mineral-rich western provinces, the FT report added.
Reuters could not immediately verify the report. The US State Department, White House, and Pakistan’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs did not immediately respond to a request for comment. The Pakistani Army could not immediately be reached.