ISLAMABAD: A Pakistani charity has collected Rs1 billion ($3.62 million) in donations to dispatch relief items including medicines and canned food to people living in Gaza while partnering with other international aid groups, as Israel intensifies attacks in the besieged territory.
Israel has rained bombs on the Gaza Strip for what it says is retaliation for a surprise attack launched by Hamas on October 7. According to Israeli authorities, over 1,300 people were killed in the attack and hundreds were taken hostages. Hamas says its raid was in response to the desecration of Al-Aqsa Mosque by Israeli forces and increased settler violence.
Israel has imposed a blockade on Gaza, refusing to allow Palestinian civilians access to food, medicines and relief items, as it continues to residential neighborhoods and other civilian infrastructure in the area.
Amid the bloody conflict in which over 8,400 Palestinians, including women and children, have died in airstrikes, Al-Khidmat Foundation in Pakistan has been struggling to send relief goods to Gaza.
“We have collected Rs1 billion from Pakistanis within two weeks to provide relief items to people in Gaza,” Abdus Shakoor, the foundation’s vice president, told Arab News on Saturday. “People have been donating generously and our funds were swelling on a daily basis.”
He said the foundation was collaborating with five international organizations, including three Turkish charities, to dispatch cooked food items, medicines and other relief goods to the people in Gaza.
“These organizations have offices, warehouses and workforce there in Gaza, so we have been delivering the aid with their assistance,” he continued, adding that Pakistani organizations could not enter or directly deliver the assistance to Palestinians.
Pakistan has no diplomatic relations with Israel and has for decades called for an independent Palestinian state. The passports provided by the country to its citizens explicitly say they are not valid to travel to Israel.
“Al-Khidmat Foundation has so far delivered the relief items including medicines worth $400,000,” he said.
Shakoor informed his organization had also handed over medicines and canned food worth Rs45 million ($162,527) to the Red Crescent to deliver in Gaza through its network.
“These medicines and food items are stuck in Egypt now as Israel was not letting in the aid,” he added.
Asked about the next phase of its operations, he said the foundation had started registering doctors, surgeons and paramedics to take them to Gaza and treat its residents.
“Over 1,500 doctors and paramedics have got themselves registered with us so far who are willing to go to Gaza to treat the people,” he continued. “We have been constantly in touch with our diplomatic mission in Cairo and will be sending teams of doctors, surgeons and paramedics as soon as we get a green signal for their visas.”
“If this doesn’t work, then we are planning to send Pakistani doctors to Gaza from UK, Australia and other western countries who are in fact dual nationals and don’t need visas to travel to Cairo,” he added. “We are getting a good response from the overseas doctors and dozens of them have already given their consent to go to Gaza.”
Shakoor said that Pakistanis could enter Gaza along with international charities only through one border crossing from Egypt.
“We are also working with some UN approved organizations to get to Gaza under their cover,” he said. “We have been constantly preparing our financial and human resources to get them to Gaza as quickly as possible besides dispatching the relief items.”
Pakistani charity collects $3.62 million to dispatch aid to Gaza through international agencies
https://arab.news/4w9hy
Pakistani charity collects $3.62 million to dispatch aid to Gaza through international agencies
- Al-Khidmat Foundation has so far sent relief items including medicines worth $400,000 to the Gaza Strip
- It has registers 1,500 doctors, paramedics while exploring ways of sending them to the besieged territory
Pakistan denies reports army ordered ‘depopulation’ in Tirah Valley ahead of anti-militant operation
Pakistan denies reports army ordered ‘depopulation’ in Tirah Valley ahead of anti-militant operation
- Tirah Valley residents started fleeing homes this month ahead of a planned military operation against militants
- Reports aimed at creating alarm among public, disinformation against security institutions, says information ministry
ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s information ministry on Sunday denied reports the army has ordered depopulation in the northwestern Tirah Valley ahead of a planned anti-militant offensive, stating that any movement of residents from the area is voluntary.
The denial from the government comes as residents of Tirah Valley in Pakistan’s northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) province bordering Afghanistan flee their homes ahead of a planned military operation by the army against militants, particularly the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) group.
Despite major military operations in the mid-2010s, Tirah Valley has remained a stronghold for insurgents, prompting authorities to plan what they describe as a targeted clearance.
“The government has taken notice of misleading claims in circulation regarding alleged ‘depopulation’ from Tirah Valley on the orders of the Army,” the Ministry of Information and Broadcasting (MoIB) said in a statement on Sunday.
“These assertions are baseless, malicious, and driven by ulterior motives aimed at creating alarm among the public, disinformation against security institutions and furthering vested political interest.”
The ministry said Pakistan’s federal government and the armed forces had not issued directives for any such depopulation of the territory. It clarified that law enforcement agencies are “routinely conducting targeted, intelligence-based operations strictly against terrorist elements” with care to avoid disruption to peaceful civilian life.
It said locals are increasingly concerned over presence of the “khawarij,” a term the military and government frequently use for the TTP, in Tirah Valley and desire peace and stability in the area.
The information ministry mentioned that the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Relief, Rehabilitation and Resettlement Department issued a notification on Dec. 26 last year for the release of funds, reportedly Rs4 billion [$14.24 million], for the “anticipated temporary and voluntary movement of population from certain localities of Tirah.”
It also said that the notification mentioned that the deputy commissioner of Khyber District, where Tirah Valley is located, said the voluntary movement of people reflects the views of the local population articulated through a jirga at the district level.
“Hence any stated position of the Provincial Government or their officials being conveyed to media that the said migration has anything to do with the Armed Forces is false and fabricated,” the information ministry said.
“Given with malafide intent to gain political capital and unfortunately malign security institutions and therefore highly regrettable.”
The evacuation has exposed tensions between the provincial government, run by former prime minister Imran Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party, and the military establishment over the use of force in the region.
“We have neither allowed the operation nor will we ever allow the operation,” KP Law Minister Aftab Alam Afridi said earlier this month, arguing that past military campaigns had failed to deliver lasting stability.
Pakistan military spokesperson Lt. Gen. Ahmed Shareef Chaudhry has previously defended security operations as necessary as militant attacks surge in the country.
In a recent briefing, Chaudhry said security forces carried out 75,175 intelligence-based operations nationwide last year, including more than 14,000 in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, attributing the surge in violence to what he described as a “politically conducive environment” for militants.










