Pashtun rights activist, Pakistani lawmaker Ali Wazir freed from jail after 26 months — lawyer 

Pashtun rights activist and lawmaker Ali Wazir (C) is standing outside the Cantral Jail building after being released from captivity in Karachi, Pakistan on February 14, 2023. (Photo courtesy: @ShahzebJillani /Twitter)
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Updated 14 February 2023
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Pashtun rights activist, Pakistani lawmaker Ali Wazir freed from jail after 26 months — lawyer 

  • Ali Wazir was arrested in December 2020 after he was booked along with 12 others in a terrorism case 
  • Wazir, who was acquitted in 2022, has long campaigned for Pashtuns based in Pakistan’s restive northwest 

ISLAMABAD: Ali Wazir, a Pakistani lawmaker and prominent Pashtun rights activist, was released from prison on Tuesday after spending more than two years in custody in a slew of cases, his lawyer told Arab News. 

Wazir was arrested in December 2020 after he was booked along with 12 others in a terrorism case for addressing a rally, wherein he spoke against the Pakistani armed forces. 

Following his arrest in Peshawar, the lawmaker was brought to Karachi where the authorities registered multiple other cases against him. Although a Pakistani court acquitted him in the terrorism case in October last year, Wazir had been in custody of the law enforcement. 

“Ali Wazir has been released from the Central Jail Karachi,” Wazir’s lawyer Qadir Khan told Arab News on Tuesday. 

“He spent 26 months in jail after his arrest in December 2020 and faced one after another FIRs (first information reports), most of which came to the fore during his incarceration.” 

Makhdoom Karim, the Karachi Central Jail superintendent, also confirmed Wazir’s release in a tweet. 

Wazir, a prominent member of a socio-ethnic movement, the Pashtun Tahaffuz Movement (PTM), that campaigns for the rights of the Pashtun people, who it says have suffered from years of conflict between the security forces and militants in the country’s troubled northwest. 

PTM activists previously accused the authorities of unjustifiably detaining Wazir, who had secured bail in most of the cases against him, but still had to stay in prison because of a lawsuit filed against him in the northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province. 

Following his release, Wazir moved to the Sohrab Goth area, a Pashtun-dominated neighborhood in the southern port city of Karachi, along with scores of PTM activists, according to his lawyer. 

The lawmaker is expected to address a rally in the vicinity later today, Khan added. 


Pakistan to begin first phase of Hajj 2026 trainings from today

Updated 31 December 2025
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Pakistan to begin first phase of Hajj 2026 trainings from today

  • Training programs to be held in phases across Pakistan till February, says religion ministry
  • Saudi Arabia allocated Pakistan a total quota of 179,210 pilgrims for Hajj 2026

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s religious affairs ministry has said that it will begin the first phase of mandatory Hajj 2026 training for pilgrims intending to perform the pilgrimage from today, Thursday.

The one-day Hajj training programs will be held in phases across the country at the tehsil level until February. The ministry directed intending pilgrims to bring their original identity cards and the computerized receipt of their Hajj application to attend the training sessions.

“Pilgrims should attend the one-day training program according to their scheduled date,” Pakistan’s Ministry of Religious Affairs (MoRA) said in a statement.

The ministry said training schedules are being shared through the government’s Pak Hajj 2026 mobile application as well as via SMS. It added that details of the schedule are also available on its website.

According to the ministry, training programs will be held in Abbottabad on Jan. 2; Ghotki, Thatta and Kotli on Jan. 3; and Tando Muhammad Khan and Khairpur on Jan. 4.

Hajj training sessions will be held in Rawalakot, Badin and Naushahro Feroze on Jan. 5, while pilgrims in Fateh Jang, Dadu and Tharparkar will receive the training on Jan. 6.

The ministry said training programs will be conducted in Umerkot and Larkana on Jan. 7, followed by sessions in Mirpurkhas, Shahdadkot and Mansehra on Jan. 8.

Pakistan’s religious affairs ministry has previously said these trainings will be conducted by experienced trainers and scholars using multimedia.

It said the training has been made mandatory to ensure that intending pilgrims are fully aware of Hajj rituals and administrative procedures.

Saudi Arabia has allocated Pakistan a quota of 179,210 pilgrims for Hajj 2026, of which around 118,000 seats have been reserved under the government scheme, while the remainder will be allocated to private tour operators.

Under Pakistan’s Hajj scheme, the estimated cost of the government package ranges from Rs1,150,000 to Rs1,250,000 ($4,049.93 to $4,236), subject to final agreements with service providers.