OIC special envoy visits Line of Control that divides Kashmir region between India and Pakistan

A Pakistani soldier stands guard near the Line of Control, de facto border between India and Pakistan on April 26, 2021. (AFP/File)
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Updated 10 November 2021
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OIC special envoy visits Line of Control that divides Kashmir region between India and Pakistan

  • The envoy arrived in Pakistan on Sunday on a visit that will conclude on November 12
  • He is accompanied by senior diplomats from Saudi Arabia, Morocco, Sudan and Maldives

ISLAMABAD: The Organisation of Islamic Cooperation’s (OIC) special envoy for Jammu and Kashmir, Ambassador Yousef Aldobeay, on Wednesday visited Chirikot Sector on the de facto border known as the Line of Control (LoC) that divides the disputed Kashmir region between India and Pakistan.
The envoy arrived in Pakistan on Sunday on a visit that will conclude on November 12. He is accompanied by other senior diplomats from Muslim countries including Saudi Arabia, Morocco, Sudan and Maldives. 
“The delegation was briefed on latest security situation along LOC ... The delegation was briefed on humanitarian crisis,” the Pakistan foreign office said in a statement. 




Organisation of Islamic Cooperation’s (OIC) special envoy for Jammu and Kashmir, Ambassador Yousef Aldobeay, third left, during his Chirikot Sector on Line of Control (LoC), Kashmir, on November 10, 2021. (Photo courtesy: ISPR)

The delegates also interacted with victims of cross-border firing and met the president of Azad Jammu and Kashmir (AJK). 
“Tomorrow on 11 November, Delegates will visit Refugee's camp and Vocational Training Centre ... the Delegation will meet United Nations Military Observer Group in India and Pakistan - UNMOGIP in Muzaffarabad,” the foreign office said. “Delegation will also meet with PM AJK and representatives of various political parties in AJK Parliament.”
Instituted at the 14th OIC Summit in Makkah in 2019, the special envoy on Jammu and Kashmir has played “an important leadership role in steering the organization’s principled position on this issue,” Pakistan’s Foreign Ministry said in a statement last week, adding that the latest visit will “reinforce the centrality of a just settlement of the Jammu and Kashmir dispute to lasting peace in South Asia.”


Pakistan says it will back Saudi Arabia ‘no matter what’ amid Iran strikes — Bloomberg

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Pakistan says it will back Saudi Arabia ‘no matter what’ amid Iran strikes — Bloomberg

  • Comments follow Iran missile and drone strikes on Gulf states after US-Israeli attacks on Tehran began last month 
  • Pakistan and Saudi Arabia signed mutual defense pact last year, Riyadh is supporting Islamabad’s oil supply during crisis

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan is ready to support Saudi Arabia “no matter what” as tensions escalate across the Middle East following Iranian strikes on Gulf states, Bloomberg reported on Wednesday, citing comments from the spokesperson for Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif.

Mosharraf Zaidi told Bloomberg TV Islamabad would come to Riyadh’s aid whenever required, emphasizing the longstanding security partnership between the two countries, which was further strengthened by a mutual defense pact signed in September last year.

There was “no question we might, we will” come to Saudi Arabia’s aid “no matter what and no matter when,” Zaidi said. 

“Both countries, even before the defense agreement, have always operated on the principle of being there for the other,” he added.

Pakistan and Saudi Arabia have historically maintained close military and strategic ties, and the new agreement elevated their security cooperation at a time of heightened regional instability.

Zaidi said Pakistan was also working diplomatically to prevent the conflict from expanding further across the region.

“The real question is what is Pakistan doing to make sure things don’t come to a point where any of its closest partners are further embroiled in a conflict that could potentially undermine stability and prosperity in the region,” he said.

The comments come as Iran has continued missile and drone strikes against Gulf states following US and Israeli attacks on Iranian targets, a conflict that has sent global energy markets higher and raised fears of broader regional escalation.

Zaidi said Saudi Arabia had made arrangements to support Pakistan’s oil and diesel supplies as the crisis pushes global fuel prices higher, posing a challenge for the import-dependent South Asian economy.