Pakistani PM among Time’s '100 Most Influential People'

Updated 18 April 2019
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Pakistani PM among Time’s '100 Most Influential People'

  • Shares the list with Abu Dhabi Crown Prince Mohamed bin Zayed and US President, Donald Trump
  • Has been cited as a ‘rock star’ for Pakistan

ISLAMABAD: Time Magazine has unveiled a number of covers and their 2019 ‘100 Most Influential People’ list, which includes a familiar face to Pakistan: Prime Minister Imran Khan.

Pakistan’s reigning premiere, who was voted into office in summer of 2018, is listed among other global leaders including Abu Dhabi Crown Prince Mohamed bin Zayed, Malaysian Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad, New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern and US President Donald Trump.

Khan joins other Pakistanis who have made the list including Malala Yousafzai, actors Riz Ahmed and Kumail Nanjiani and London Mayor Sadiq Khan. 

The Times list comprises people from diverse backgrounds, fields, nations, tongues, and ambitions with Khan being cited as a ‘rock star’ for Pakistan and a ‘critical’ component in the possibility of a peaceful South Asia.

"Driven by fierce ambition, he can be cold and calculating. But he still generates the broadest hope among young and old that he can turn Pakistan around," wrote journalist Ahmed Rashid in Times.

Covers of the issue included people like football star Mohammad Saleh, Nancy Pelosi, journalist Gayle King, actor Dwayne ‘The Rock’ Johnson, singer Taylor Swift, and actor Sandra Oh.


Pakistan says 641 Afghan Taliban members killed, over 855 injured in ongoing conflict

Updated 11 March 2026
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Pakistan says 641 Afghan Taliban members killed, over 855 injured in ongoing conflict

  • Both neighbors have been engaged in fierce fighting since Feb. 26 after Afghan forces launched retaliatory attacks against Pakistan
  • Pakistan information minister says 243 Afghanistan checkposts destroyed, 65 “terrorists and terror support locations” targeted by air 

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan has killed at least 641 Afghan Taliban operatives and injured more than 855 in the ongoing conflict between the two sides since last month, Information Minister Attaullah Tarar said on Wednesday.

Fresh clashes between the two neighbors began on Feb. 26 after Afghanistan’s border forces launched attacks against Pakistani military installations. Kabul said the attack was in retaliation for Islamabad’s airstrikes earlier in February. Both forces have since then engaged in the worst fighting between them in decades. 

Islamabad has said its airstrikes, which have at times directly ​targeted the Afghan Taliban government, are aimed at ending Kabul’s support for militants carrying out attacks on Pakistan. The Taliban has ​denied aiding militant groups.

“Summary of Fitna Al Khawarij/Afghan Taliban losses: 641 killed, 855+ injured, 243 check posts destroyed,” Tarar wrote on social media platform X.

https://x.com/tararattaullah/status/2031687512868159638?s=46

The minister said Pakistani security forces have destroyed 219 tanks, armored vehicles and artillery guns in the operation so far, and also decimated 65 “terrorists and terror support locations” across Afghanistan by targeting them with airstrikes. 

Relations between Pakistan and Afghanistan have remained strained since the Afghan Taliban seized power in August 2021. Pakistan has witnessed a surge in militant attacks across the country in recent months that it blames on militants it alleges are based in Afghanistan. 

Kabul denies the allegations and insists that its soil is not used by militant groups for attacks against other countries. 

While Afghanistan has voiced the desire for dialogue, Pakistan has repeatedly ruled out talks, saying it will continue targeting militant hideouts in Afghanistan through “Operation Ghazab lil Haq” till Kabul desists from supporting militants. 

The ongoing conflict between both sides has put the region on heightened alert, as it already suffers from the ongoing US-Israel war against Iran.