Pakistan calls Israel-Palestine dispute ‘war between oppressor and oppressed’ amid continuing Gaza airstrikes

A man reacts outside a burning collapsed building following Israeli bombardment in Gaza City on October 11, 2023. At least 30 people have been killed and hundreds wounded as Israel pounded the Gaza Strip with hundreds of air strikes overnight, a Hamas government official said on October 11. (AFP)
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Updated 11 October 2023
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Pakistan calls Israel-Palestine dispute ‘war between oppressor and oppressed’ amid continuing Gaza airstrikes

  • PM Kakar says the Palestine issue has played a pivotal role in pushing Muslim populations toward religious extremism
  • He maintains Pakistan’s Palestine policy has long been in place, says nothing has changed which warrants a change in it

ISLAMABAD: Caretaker Prime Minister Anwaar-ul-Haq Kakar on Tuesday characterized the ongoing violence in West Asia as “the war between the oppressor and the oppressed,” as Israel continued to besiege the Gaza Strip and its warplanes pounded residential neighborhoods in response to a recent Hamas attack.
The Palestinian group initiated a surprise attack against Israel over the weekend, describing it as retribution for the deteriorating conditions of its people under Israeli occupation. The ensuing violence has so far claimed at least 1,900 lives on both sides and exacerbated an already dire humanitarian crisis for Palestinians.
“We have a stance: Israel is known and understood to be an occupying state which is what we also believe,” the prime minister told a YouTube channel during an interview. “And we consider the people of Palestine as persecuted. This is the war between the oppressor and the oppressed. More than Israel and Palestine, this [conflict] is between two nations that have remained caught in a specific state.”

Kakar said that Jews were persecuted during the Second World War when Germany was ruled by Hitler, adding as soon as they came out of that situation and established a Zionist state, they started persecuting the Palestinians.
“The biggest party to this dispute are Palestinians themselves,” he continued. “We believe as a state and society that the first right to decide their political future lies with Palestinians.”
However, he mentioned the proposal recommending a two-state solution to the dispute while lamenting that Israel was in a “state of denial” about it.
The prime minister blamed Israel’s intransigence for complicating the situation in the Middle East and compounding the problems of Palestinians.
He also noted that such geopolitical complications were instrumental in pushing young Muslims toward extremism.




Palestinians inspect the massive destruction from Israeli airstrikes in Gaza City's al-Rimal district, on October 10, 2023. (AFP)

“There are two problems – one in Palestine and the other in Kashmir – which have deeply contributed to the radicalization of our population,” he said. “Wherever religion has been used in politics as a tool, these two issues have been joined together quite deeply.”
Kakar said if the world wanted civilizations to coexist peacefully, it will have to realize that the solution to these two problems will be pivotal.
He also categorically denied that Pakistan was trying to shift its Palestine policy, saying that nothing had changed over the years to warrant such a change.
Pakistan’s stance on Palestine had been in place for long, he continued, and the caretaker administration had also been pursuing the same policy.

 


Pakistan urges ‘time-bound and irreversible’ path to Palestinian statehood at UN

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Pakistan urges ‘time-bound and irreversible’ path to Palestinian statehood at UN

  • Pakistan warns the Security Council Israeli settlement expansion has reached its highest level in the West Bank
  • It says Islamabad backs sustained ceasefire, expanded humanitarian access, protection of UNRWA’s role in Gaza

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan on Tuesday called for a time-bound and irreversible political process leading to the establishment of a sovereign Palestinian state, urging the international community to move beyond declarations and turn long-standing commitments into concrete action.

Addressing a Security Council briefing on the Middle East, Pakistan’s ambassador to the United Nations said repeated diplomatic initiatives had underscored that the status quo was untenable and that only a credible political horizon, grounded in international law, could deliver durable peace.

His remarks came as the Security Council reviewed the implementation of Resolution 2334, which calls on Israel to halt settlement activity in occupied Palestinian territory.

Pakistan said recent diplomatic efforts — including a high-level conference in July and the General Assembly’s endorsement of the New York Declaration reaffirming the two-state framework — had sought to preserve the possibility of a negotiated settlement between Israelis and Palestinians.

It said follow-up meetings at Sharm El-Sheikh, along with US-led initiatives under President Donald Trump aimed at halting the fighting, were intended to reopen a political process toward Palestinian statehood.

“A time-bound and irreversible political process, anchored in relevant UN resolutions must lead to the establishment of a sovereign, independent and contiguous State of Palestine on the basis of pre-1967 borders, with Al-Quds Al-Sharif as its capital,” Pakistan’s Permanent Representative Asim Iftikhar Ahmad told the council.

“It is high time to turn promises into action and speed up this process,” he added.

Ahmad said Pakistan backed Security Council Resolution 2803, which calls for efforts to sustain the ceasefire, expand aid access and restart a political track toward Palestinian statehood.

He said settlement activity in the occupied West Bank, including East Jerusalem, had reached its highest levels since the United Nations began systematic monitoring, citing UN findings that more than 6,300 housing units were advanced during the reporting period.

Such actions, he said, had “no legal validity” under international law but continued to undermine the viability of the two-state solution.

Pakistan also defended the role of the UN Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA), saying it remained indispensable for Palestinian refugees and must not be weakened by what it called unfounded criticism.

Ahmad condemned the storming of UNRWA’s headquarters in East Jerusalem earlier this month, calling it a violation of international law and the inviolability of UN premises, and urged full, safe and unimpeded humanitarian access to Gaza, along with the immediate start of reconstruction without annexation or forced displacement.