Celebrated Pakistani classical dancer says ‘escorted out’ of British event for Gaza ceasefire call

An undated file photo of Pakistani classical dancer and human rights activist Sheema Kermani. (Photo courtesy: Sheema Kermani/Facebook)
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Updated 18 November 2023
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Celebrated Pakistani classical dancer says ‘escorted out’ of British event for Gaza ceasefire call

  • Sheema Kermani spoke up for peace in Gaza at a gathering arranged to celebrate King Charles’s birthday
  • British High Commission says she disrupted an important climate change speech before voluntarily leaving

KARACHI: Pakistan’s legendary classical dancer and leading human rights activist Sheema Kermani said on Saturday she was “escorted out” of an event at the British Deputy High Commission in Karachi after she called for peace in Gaza by raising the slogan “Ceasefire Now.” 

Israel besieged the Gaza Strip and launched airstrikes after a surprise attack was initiated by Hamas on Oct. 7 in response to the deteriorating condition of Palestinian people living under Israeli occupation. 

According to Palestinian health authorities, at least 12,000 people, including 5,000 children, have died in the area since the beginning of the Israeli offensive that has led to disproportionate killings of civilians in attacks on hospitals and residential neighborhoods. 

Western leaders, including British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak, visited Israel last month to express solidarity with its people in the wake of the Oct. 7 attack that led to the killings of about 1,200 Israelis. 

Kermani said she raised the slogan to seek an end to Israel’s relentless bombardment and military invasion of Gaza at a gathering arranged to celebrate King Charles’s birthday on Friday. 

“Amid the congratulations showered upon the British Government and the royal family, there was a visible absence of any acknowledgment of the atrocities unfolding in Gaza,” she said while speaking to Arab News. 

“Unable to remain silent, I felt compelled to take a stand and raised a slogan calling for ceasefire,” she continued. “Regrettably, as I was being escorted out and I left the gathering, none of the other attendees, not a single one, chose to join me in expressing their dissent.” 

Responding to Arab News’s query about the incident, a spokesperson of the British High Commission issued this written statement: “We are disappointed that an important speech on tackling climate change in Pakistan was interrupted at the UK’s National Day event. A disruptive guest was asked to stop shouting, but instead volunteered to leave and later apologised to High Commission staff.” 

Historians widely view the Israel-Palestine issue as an outcome of British colonialism since its authorities expressed support for the establishment of a national homeland for the Jewish people in Palestine in the 1917 Balfour Declaration. 

At the time, Palestine was part of the Ottoman Empire, and the declaration significantly influenced the future geopolitical landscape of the region. 

Britain was later granted the mandate to govern Palestine by the League of Nations after World War I. 

This period between 1920 and 1948 was marked by rising tensions and conflict between the Jewish and Arab populations, making it difficult for the British administration to balance the commitments made in the Balfour Declaration with the political and civil rights of the Arab population in Palestine. 


Kazakhstan offers to finance rail link to Pakistan ports via Afghanistan

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Kazakhstan offers to finance rail link to Pakistan ports via Afghanistan

  • Kazakh envoy says country ready to fully fund Central Asia-Pakistan rail corridor
  • Project revives Pakistan’s regional connectivity push despite Afghan border disruptions

ISLAMABAD: Kazakhstan has offered to fully finance a proposed railway linking Central Asia to Pakistan’s ports via Afghanistan, according to a media report, a move that could revive long-stalled regional connectivity plans and deepen Pakistan’s role as a transit hub for landlocked economies.

The proposal would connect Kazakhstan to Pakistan’s ports of Karachi and Gwadar through Turkmenistan and Afghanistan, providing Central Asia with direct access to warm waters and offering Pakistan a long-sought overland trade corridor to the region.

“We are not asking Pakistan for a single penny,” Kazakhstan’s ambassador to Pakistan, Yerzhan Kistafin, said in an interview with Geo News on Tuesday. “This is not aid. It is a mutually beneficial investment.”

Pakistan has for years sought to position itself as a gateway for Central Asian trade, offering its ports to landlocked economies as part of a broader strategy to integrate South and Central Asia.

However, its ambition has faced setbacks, most recently in October last year when border skirmishes with Afghanistan prompted Islamabad to shut key crossings, suspending transit and bilateral trade.

Kistafin said the rail project would treat Afghanistan not as an obstacle but as a transit partner, arguing that trade and connectivity could help stabilize the country.

“Connectivity creates responsibility,” he said. “Trade creates incentives for peace.”

Under the proposed plan, rail cargo would move from Kazakhstan through Turkmenistan to western Afghanistan before entering Pakistan at Chaman and linking with the national rail network.

Geo News reported the Afghan segment, spanning about 687 kilometers, is expected to take roughly three years to build once agreements are finalized, with Kazakhstan financing the project.