PM Khan to express solidarity with Saudi Arabia as OIC summit opens tonight

Prime Minister Imran Khan exchanging views with Governor Makkah Region Prince Khalid bin Faisal bin Abdulaziz Al Saud upon arrival at the Royal Terminal of King Abdulaziz International Airport in Jeddah KSA. (APP)
Updated 01 June 2019
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PM Khan to express solidarity with Saudi Arabia as OIC summit opens tonight

  • Khan reached the Kingdom with a delegation of close aides on Thursday and performed Umrah
  • King Salman will chair the two-day summit

ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Imran Khan is scheduled to deliver a keynote address tonight at the 14th Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) summit in Makkah, where he is expected to express solidarity with Saudi Arabia in the face of the rising tensions in the Arabian Gulf region.
Khan reached the Kingdom along with a delegation of close aides on Thursday and performed Umrah, an Islamic pilgrimage to Makkah’s grand mosque, ahead of the OIC conclave.
Saudi Arabia’s King Salman bin Abdulaziz, who will chair the summit, invited 57 OIC member states to attend the event that seeks to provide “a valuable platform to exchange views and deliberate on a range of political, economic and security issues of interest to Islamic countries.”
Pakistan’s Foreign Minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi has already attended the Council of Foreign Ministers meeting in Saudi Arabia finalized the OIC summit agenda ahead of its two-day session in Makkah.
“As one of its [OIC] founding members, Pakistan has played a key role in advancing a range of Muslim causes in efforts to revitalize the organization,” the foreign office said in a statement on Wednesday.
Pakistan has always condemned attacks on Saudi oil facilities and cities by Yemeni rebels and expressed its resolve to protect the Kingdom’s sovereignty and integrity in the face of any external aggression.


Pakistan saw up to 17% drop in cross-border attacks after Afghan border closure — think tank

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Pakistan saw up to 17% drop in cross-border attacks after Afghan border closure — think tank

  • CRSS calls 2025 the deadliest year in a decade with 3,417 violence-linked fatalities nationwide
  • Violence remained concentrated in the western provinces as security forces killed 2,060 militants

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan recorded a sharp decline in cross-border militant attacks and violence-linked fatalities in the final months of 2025 after it closed its border with Afghanistan in October, even as the country endured its deadliest year in a decade overall, according to an annual security report released by a local think tank on Wednesday.

Pakistan has frequently accused Afghanistan of sheltering proscribed armed factions, such as the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) and the Balochistan Liberation Army (BLA), in the past, while also pointing a finger at the Taliban administration in Kabul for “facilitating” their attacks against Pakistani civilians and security forces.

The Center for Research and Security Studies (CRSS) said in its report that terrorist attacks fell by nearly 17% in December, following a 9% decline in November, after Pakistan shut the border on Oct. 11. It noted that violence-linked fatalities among civilians and security personnel also declined in the final quarter of the year, falling by nearly 4% and 19% respectively in November and December.

“Pakistan recorded a significant drop in cross-border terrorist attacks and violence-linked fatalities after it closed down the border to Afghanistan,” CRSS said.

Despite the late-year decline, the think tank said 2025 “went by as the most violent year for Pakistan in a decade,” with overall violence surging nearly 34% year-on-year.

Fatalities rose from 2,555 in 2024 to 3,417 in 2025 — an increase of 862 deaths — extending a five-year upward trend in violence that coincides with the Taliban’s return to power in Afghanistan in 2021, the report said.

“2025 marked another grim year for Pakistan’s security landscape,” it added, noting that violence has increased every year since 2021, with annual surges of nearly 38% in 2021, over 15% in 2022, 56% in 2023, nearly 67% in 2024 and 34% in 2025. 

REGIONAL CONCENTRATION

Violence remained heavily concentrated in Pakistan’s northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) and southwestern Balochistan provinces, which together accounted for more than 96% of all fatalities and nearly 93% of violent incidents nationwide.

KP was the worst-hit region, recording 2,331 fatalities in 2025 — a 44% increase from 1,620 deaths in 2024 — accounting for more than 82% of the net national rise in violence.

Balochistan saw fatalities rise from 787 to 956, an increase of nearly 22%.

In contrast, Punjab and Sindh recorded relatively low levels of violence, together accounting for less than 3% of total casualties, which CRSS said pointed to “relative containment of violence despite the provinces’ large populations.”

The report also flagged the spread of violence into previously calmer regions, with Azad Jammu and Kashmir recording 15 fatalities in 2025 after reporting no violence a year earlier.

MILITANT DEATH TOLL

CRSS said 2025 was also the deadliest year in a decade for militant groups, with outlaws accounting for more than 60% of all fatalities.

“2025 turned out to be the deadliest year for outlaws in a decade,” the report said, with 2,060 militants killed during at least 392 security operations, surpassing the combined fatalities of civilians and security personnel.

Security forces, however, remained the primary targets of militant groups.

The army and Frontier Corps recorded 374 fatalities, including 22 officers, while police suffered 216 casualties.

The TTP claimed responsibility for the largest share of attacks on security personnel, followed by the BLA, the Baloch Liberation Front (BLF) and Daesh’s regional chapter.