Islamabad’s largest park gets a mosque, courtesy the UAE

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Representatives of the UAE embassy are reciting a prayer on June 13, 2019 after laying the foundation stone of the first mosque inside Islamabad’s largest public park. (Photo Courtesy: UAE Embassy Islamabad)
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UAE Ambassador Hamad Alzaabi lays the foundation stone of a mosque on June 13, 2019 in the largest park of Islamabad. (Photo Courtesy: UAE Embassy Islamabad)
Updated 15 June 2019
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Islamabad’s largest park gets a mosque, courtesy the UAE

  • Khalid Al Kaabi Mosque will be the first inside the 750-acre public park that was inaugurated in 1992
  • UAE mission hopes “first prayer congregation can be held there in the next two months”

ISLAMABAD: The ambassador of the United Arab Emirates, Hamad Obaid Ibrahim Salem Al-Zaabi, has laid the foundation stone of a mosque in Islamabad’s Fatima Jinnah Park, the UAE embassy said on Friday.

“The initiative to [fund and] construct the mosque is taken by our security officer, Nasir Khalid Al Kaabi,” the embassy’s media and political officer, Abid Al Ghafoor, said, adding that his colleague wanted the mosque named after his late father.

The Khalid Al Kaabi Mosque will be the first inside the 750-acre public park that was inaugurated in 1992.

The UAE mission in Islamabad did not give details of the design, dimensions and the covered area of the mosque, but said it planned to accelerate the construction process “so the first prayer congregation can be held there in the next two months.”

Pakistan and the UAE have always enjoyed fraternal relations. The UAE gave Pakistan $3 billion to help stave off a balance-of-payments crisis last year. The embassy in Islamabad also launched a major humanitarian campaign during the Muslim fasting month of Ramadan. Assisted by various Emirati charity foundations, the UAE embassy has provided shelters and homes to many Pakistanis and established schools across the country.


Pakistan, Muslim countries reject Israel’s plan to expel Palestinians from Gaza

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Pakistan, Muslim countries reject Israel’s plan to expel Palestinians from Gaza

  • Israel has announced plans to open the Rafah crossing with Egypt for Gaza residents fleeing the enclave
  • Muslim nations seek implementation of Trump’s peace plan, establishment of independent Palestinian state

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan, together with seven other Arab and Muslim countries, on Friday rejected Israel’s attempt to expel Palestinians by opening the Rafah border crossing with Egypt solely for fleeing Gaza residents, and called for adherence to the peace plan proposed by US President Donald Trump’s administration.

Trump’s Gaza plan calls on Israel to allow humanitarian aid into the territory and keep the Rafah crossing open from both sides.

However, Israel has continued to restrict aid flows, and its military said on Wednesday the crossing would open in the coming days “exclusively for the exit of residents from the Gaza Strip to Egypt.”

“The Foreign Ministers of the Islamic Republic of Pakistan, the Arab Republic of Egypt, the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan, the United Arab Emirates, the Republic of Indonesia, the Republic of Türkiye, the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, and the State of Qatar express their deep concern regarding the Israeli statements concerning the opening of the Rafah Crossing in one direction, with the aim of transferring residents of the Gaza Strip into the Arab Republic of Egypt,” said the joint statement circulated in Pakistan by the foreign office.

“The Ministers underscore their absolute rejection of any attempts to expel the Palestinian people from their land and stress the necessity of the full adherence to the plan proposed by US President Donald Trump, including its provisions on keeping the Rafah Crossing open in both directions, ensuring the freedom of movement for the population, and refraining from compelling any resident of the Gaza Strip to leave,” it continued.

The statement appreciated the US president’s commitment to establishing peace in the region and emphasized the importance of implementing his plan “without delay or obstruction” to help consolidate regional stability.

“The Ministers underscore the need to fully sustain the ceasefire, alleviate civilian suffering, ensure the unrestricted entry of humanitarian assistance into the Gaza Strip, initiate early recovery and reconstruction efforts, and create the conditions necessary for the Palestinian Authority to resume its responsibilities in the Gaza Strip,” the statement added.

They reaffirmed their countries’ readiness to work with the United States and all concerned regional and international actors to achieve “a just, comprehensive, and sustainable peace in accordance with international legitimacy and the two-state solution,” including the establishment of an independent Palestinian state on the pre-1967 lines with East Jerusalem as its capital.

Pakistan’s foreign office circulated the statement after Deputy Prime Minister Ishaq Dar held a telephone conversation with Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Faisal bin Farhan to discuss regional developments, particularly Gaza.

Dar condemned Israel’s plan to partially reopen the Rafah crossing only for fleeing Gaza residents, calling it a “clear violation” of the region’s peace plan.