Pakistan to host OIC conference on women’s rights at UN headquarters next month

A general view shows UN Headquarters in New York City on Januray 24, 2023. (AFP/File)
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Updated 23 February 2023
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Pakistan to host OIC conference on women’s rights at UN headquarters next month

  • The conference will be held on March 8 and will coincide with International Women’s Day
  • Pakistan also condemned killing of 11 Palestinians by Israeli forces in occupied West Bank

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s foreign office on Thursday announced to host a daylong conference on the rights of women in Islam from the Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) platform on March 8 at the United Nations headquarters in New York.

March 8 is globally celebrated as International Women’s Day, prompting civil society activists and other individuals to raise their voice in favor of reproductive rights, end to gender-based violence and other issues.

Pakistani women rights organizations also commemorate the day in all major urban centers while highlighting issues related to social discrimination and their safety in public and private spaces.

“Pakistan in its capacity as the chair of the OIC Council of Foreign Ministers is hosting a one-day conference on ‘Women in Islam: Understanding the Rights and Identity of Women in the Islamic World’ on 8th March 2023 at the UN Headquarters on the sidelines of the 67th Session of the United Nations Commission on the Status of Women [CSW],” said foreign office spokesperson Mumtaz Zahra Baloch during her weekly news briefing.

“The objective of the conference is to bridge the perception-reality gap on the rights of women in Islam and celebrate the experiences and successes of iconic Muslim women,” she continued. “The forum will aim to establish an annual policy dialogue on the margins of CSW to address challenges and explore opportunities to advance the role of women in OIC countries.”

Pakistan has also tried in the past to actively utilize the OIC forum to dispel any misperceptions related to Islam and Muslims internationally. It was instrumental in getting International Day to Combat Islamophobia institutionalized on March 15 along with other Muslim countries.

KILLING OF PALESTINIANS

The foreign office spokesperson also condemned the Israeli forces for killing 11 Palestinians in the occupied West Bank city of Nablus during a raid carried out on Wednesday that left dozens of others injured.

“We condemn all acts that lead to the killing of innocent civilians including in occupied Palestinian territory,” she said. “Pakistan’s position on Palestine is consistent and we support a comprehensive approach for resolving the issue.”

“We maintain that there should be a total withdrawal of Israel from the occupied territories including Jerusalem,” she continued.

Baloch said Palestinians should be allowed to exercise their right to self-determination, adding they should be able to live peacefully in their own state that is based on the “pre-1967 borders with Al-Quds Al-Sharif as its capital.”

“We also call upon the just resolution of the plight of Palestinian refugees in accordance to the UN resolutions,” she added.


Pakistan extends airspace ban on Indian aircraft until Mar. 23

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Pakistan extends airspace ban on Indian aircraft until Mar. 23

  • This marks the ninth extension of the ban, first imposed in April after heightened tensions over an attack in Indian-administered Kashmir
  • Restriction has forced Indian airlines to reroute their flights that resulted in increased fuel consumption, travel times and operating costs

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan has extended a ban on Indian-registered aircraft from using its airspace until late March, the Pakistan Airports Authority (PAA) said on Friday, prolonging restrictions that have disrupted flight routes for Indian airlines.

Pakistan first imposed the restriction on Apr. 23 last year as part of a series of tit-for-tat measures announced by both countries days after an attack in Indian-administered Kashmir. New Delhi blamed the attack that killed 26 tourists on Pakistan, Islamabad denied it.

Tensions had quickly escalated between the neighbors after India targeted several sites in Pakistan and Azad Kashmir, triggering four-day-long missile, drone and artillery exchanges before a the United States brokered a ceasefire took on May 10, 2025.

"Pakistan’s airspace will remain closed to all Indian military and civil registered aircraft until Mar. 23," the PAA said in a statement.

This marks the ninth extension of the ban that has forced Indian airlines to reroute international flights, increasing fuel consumption, travel times and operating costs.

Air India, which operates numerous flights to Europe and North America, is lobbying the Indian government to convince China to let it use a sensitive military airspace zone in Xinjiang to shorten routes as the financial toll from the ban on Indian carriers flying over Pakistan mounts, according to Reuters.