Police deployed as leopards enter Islamabad’s Saidpur Village, attack goat

The image shared by IWMB on August 30, 2020 shows a leopard on a hiking trail in Islamabad, Pakistan. (@WildlifeBoard/File)
Short Url
Updated 18 November 2022
Follow

Police deployed as leopards enter Islamabad’s Saidpur Village, attack goat

  • Saidpur is a Mughal era village located next to a protected national park area
  • Wildlife officials say leopards attacked goat in home illegally built on natural habitat

ISLAMABAD: At least four common Asian Leopards entered Saidpur Village in the Pakistani capital on Thursday evening and attacked a goat, state-run APP reported on Friday, as wildlife officials said the big cats had appeared at a home that encroached on their natural habitat.

Saidpur, a popular tourist spot, is a village and union council located in a ravine in the Margalla Hills near the Daman-e-Koh overlook in Islamabad. It is a Mughal era village and home to a wide range of religious and cultural heritage sites. The village is located next to a protected national park area. 

Officials of the Islamabad Wildlife Management Board (IWMB) said they rushed to Saidpur after receiving reports that leopards had been spotted there at 1930 hours. A short clip of the leopards also made the rounds on social media.

“Locals had gathered on the spot like ‘spectators at a fun fair,’ which was risky as the wild animal, which was human shy in nature, could have been provoked and instigated by human sounds of hooting and rumpus and might have attacked them,” APP quoted an IWMB official as saying. 

The official said the leopards attacked a goat but abandoned it and fled after the locals created noise.

“The leopards have not intruded in the human settlement, rather humans have encroached into their habitat as the leopard attacked the goats in a newly built dwelling by locals, which is illegal and within the national park,” the IWMB official said. 

Officers at the Kohsar Police Station told APP police troops had been deployed in Daman-i-Koh and the vicinity of Saidpur Village to protect locals.


Pakistan joins 22 Muslim states, OIC to condemn Israeli FM’s visit to Somaliland

Updated 08 January 2026
Follow

Pakistan joins 22 Muslim states, OIC to condemn Israeli FM’s visit to Somaliland

  • Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Saar visited breakaway African region of Somaliland on January 6
  • Muslim states urge Israel to withdraw Somaliland recognition, respect Somalia’s sovereignty

ISLAMABAD: A joint statement by Pakistan, 22 other Muslim states and the Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) on Thursday condemned Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Saar’s recent visit to Somaliland as a violation of the African nation’s territorial integrity and sovereignty.

Saar’s visit to Somaliland capital Hargeisa on Jan. 6 followed Israel’s move last month to recognize Somaliland, a breakaway region from Somalia, as an independent country. The move drew a sharp reaction from Muslim states, including Pakistan, who said it was in contravention of the UN Charter and international norms. 

Several international news outlets months earlier reported that Israel had contacted Somaliland over the potential resettlement of Palestinians forcibly removed from Gaza. Muslim countries fear Israel’s recognition of the breakaway region could be part of its plan to forcibly relocate Palestinians from Gaza to the region. 

“The said visit constitutes a clear violation of the sovereignty and territorial integrity of the Federal Republic of Somalia, and undermines established international norms and the United Nations Charter,” the joint statement shared by Pakistan’s foreign office, read. 

The joint statement was issued on behalf of 23 Muslim states, including Saudi Arabia, Bangladesh, Pakistan, Egypt, Iraq, Iran, Palestine, Jordan, Kuwait, Türkiye, Oman and others. 

It reaffirmed support for Somalia’s territorial integrity and sovereignty, pointing out that respect for international law and non-interference in the internal affairs of sovereign states was necessary for regional stability. 

“Encouraging secessionist agendas are unacceptable and risk exacerbating tensions in an already fragile region,” the statement said. 

The joint statement urged Israel to revoke its recognition of the breakaway region. 

“Israel should fully respect Somalia’s sovereignty, national unity and territorial integrity and honor its obligations in compliance with international law, and demand immediate revocation of the recognition issued by Israel,” the statement read.

Somaliland broke away from Somalia unilaterally in 1991 as a civil war raged in the country. Somaliland has its own constitution, parliament and currency, a move that has infuriated Somalia over the years as it insists the region is part of its territory.