Pakistan condemns fresh raid on Al-Aqsa Mosque, calls for end to Israeli hostilities

Israeli security forces evacuate a Palestinian man at a checkpoint to reach the city of Jerusalem to attend the last Friday prayers of Ramadan in the al-Aqsa mosque compound, on April 29, 2022 in Bethlehem in the occupied West Bank. (AFP)
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Updated 29 April 2022
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Pakistan condemns fresh raid on Al-Aqsa Mosque, calls for end to Israeli hostilities

  • Israeli police fired rubber-coated bullets while a witness said they also used tear gas 
  • Over 40 Palestinians were injured in the fresh clashes around Islam’s third-holiest site

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan on Friday condemned a fresh raid by Israeli forces on the Al-Aqsa Mosque in Jerusalem, its foreign office said, which wounded over 40 Palestinians on Jumatul Widah. 

Israeli police officers entered the site at dawn on Jumatul Widah, the last Friday of the Islamic fasting month of Ramadan. They later released footage that showed young men on the compound hurling stones in Friday’s early hours. 

The Palestinian Red Crescent, which gave the toll, said no one was seriously hurt but 22 people were taken to hospital. An AFP journalist said Israeli police fired rubber-coated bullets while a witness said they also used tear gas. 

“The indiscriminate use of force by Israeli occupation forces against defenseless Palestinians defies all humanitarian norms and human rights laws. Such attacks, in addition to causing injury to the Palestinians, violate the sanctity of Islamic holy sites,” the Pakistani foreign office said in a statement. 

“Pakistan calls upon the international community to take urgent action to put an end to the Israeli violations, which continue to fuel violence, tension and instability in the region, and remain a matter of grave concern for the entire Muslim world.” 

Over the past two weeks, nearly 300 Palestinians have been hurt in clashes at the Al-Aqsa compound, Islam’s third-holiest site. It is also Judaism’s holiest place, known to Jews as the Temple Mount. 

The site is located in east Jerusalem, which Israel captured in the 1967 Six Day War and later annexed, in a move not recognized by most of the international community. 

Israel’s incursions into the compound during Ramadan met widespread condemnation and raised fears of inflaming persistent Israeli-Palestinian tensions across Jerusalem. 

“We reaffirm our consistent and unstinted support for the Palestinian people and the Palestinian cause, which has always been a defining principle of Pakistan’s foreign policy,” Islamabad said in the statement. 

“We renew our call for a viable, independent and contiguous Palestinian State, with pre-1967 borders, and Al-Quds Al-Sharif as its capital being the only just, comprehensive and lasting solution of the Palestinian question, in accordance with the relevant United Nations and OIC (Organization of Islamic Cooperation) resolutions.” 

In an apparent attempt to ease tensions, Israel’s Foreign Minister Yair Lapid has stressed that the government is committed to the status quo at the compound, meaning an adherence to long-standing convention that only Muslims are allowed to pray there. 

Jews are allowed to visit the Temple Mount. 

Muslim leaders have, however, been angered by a recent uptick in such visits. Some voiced fears that Israel was seeking to divide the compound and create a space where Jews may worship. Lapid told journalists that no such plan exists. 

The fresh unrest comes as the end of Ramadan nears early next week. 

Violence in Israeli-annexed east Jerusalem has raised fears of another armed conflict similar to an 11-day war last year between Israel and Hamas, triggered in part by similar unrest at Al-Aqsa. 


Pakistan, India exchange lists of nuclear facilities, prisoners amid strained ties

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Pakistan, India exchange lists of nuclear facilities, prisoners amid strained ties

  • List of Indian prisoners include 58 civilians and 188 fishermen, foreign office says
  • New Delhi says it has 391 civil prisoners, 33 Pakistani fishermen in custody

ISLAMABAD: The governments of Pakistan and India have exchanged lists of their nuclear installations and prisoners in each other’s custody in line with existing bilateral treaties, the foreign ministries of both countries said on Thursday. 

The development takes place amid strained ties between India and Pakistan following their four-day military conflict in May 2025. High-level engagement between officials of both countries remains mostly suspended as tensions persist. 

India and Pakistan exchange lists of prisoners in each other’s custody on Jan. 1 and July 1 each year under the Consular Access Agreement between them. They also exchange lists of nuclear installations under a 1988 agreement that prohibits attacks on each other’s nuclear facilities and requires annual notification of such sites on Jan. 1.

“The Government of Pakistan today handed over a list of 257 Indian prisoners (58 civil+ 199 fishermen) in Pakistan to the High Commission of India in Islamabad,” Foreign Office spokesperson Tahir Andrabi said during a weekly press briefing.

Andrabi said the Indian government is also sharing the list of Pakistani prisoners in its custody with the Pakistan High Commission in New Delhi. 

India’s Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) said in a press release that it had exchanged a list of 391 civil prisoners and 33 fishermen in its custody who are “Pakistani or believed-to-be-Pakistani.”

Andrabi said Pakistan had also exchanged a list of nuclear installations and facilities in Pakistan with a representative of the Indian High Commission in the foreign office today. 

“I understand that the Indian government is also sharing the list of Indian nuclear installations with our High Commission in New Delhi today,” he added. 

India’s Ministry of External Affairs on its website later confirmed New Delhi had provided Pakistan with the list of its nuclear installations in line with their bilateral treaty. 
 
The development took place a day after Indian External Affairs Minister Subrahmanyam Jaishankar shook hands with Pakistan’s National Assembly Speaker Sardar Ayaz Sadiq in Dhaka, marking the first high-level contact between officials of both countries since May. 

Tensions escalated sharply after New Delhi blamed Islamabad for backing a militant attack in Indian-administered Kashmir on Apr. 22 last year that killed 26 people, most of them tourists. Pakistan denied involvement and called for an international investigation. 

India fired missiles into Pakistan on May 7, saying it had targeted militant camps. The two sides then exchanged artillery fire, missiles, fighter jet strikes and drone attacks for four days before US President Donald Trump brokered a ceasefire on May 10.