Pakistan parliament speaker denounces Israel’s ‘genocide’ in Gaza

Pakistan parliament speaker Sardar Ayaz Sadiq (second right) is pictured at the 148th Inter-parliamentary Union Assembly held in Geneva, Switzerland on March 24, 2024. (@NAofPakistan/X)
Short Url
Updated 25 March 2024
Follow

Pakistan parliament speaker denounces Israel’s ‘genocide’ in Gaza

  • Sardar Ayaz Sadiq was speaking at 148th Inter-parliamentary Union Assembly in Geneva
  • Gaza health ministry says Israeli air and ground campaign has killed more than 31,988 people

ISLAMABAD: The speaker of the Pakistan National Assembly, Sardar Ayaz Sadiq, has strongly denounced Israel for its “genocide” of Palestinians, including women, children, and the elderly, state-run Radio Pakistan reported on Monday. 

Sadiq was speaking at the 148th Inter-parliamentary Union Assembly being held in Geneva.

Israel’s war against Hamas in Gaza has killed thousands, caused a humanitarian catastrophe and raised the chances of a wider conflict across the Middle East. The Health Ministry in Gaza said the Israeli air and ground campaign had killed more than 31,988 people and injured 74,188 by March 21. The ministry has said children under 18 make up more than 40 percent of those killed.

“Speaker expressed disappointment over inaction of the international community, particularly the UN Security Council, and called for an immediate and unconditional ceasefire and justice for Palestine,” Radio Pakistan said, reporting on Sadiq’s speech. 

“He also expressed unwavering solidarity and pledged support for Palestinians in their just cause for a viable, independent, and contiguous state based on the pre-1967 borders, with Al-Quds Al-Sharif as its capital.”

The UN agency for Palestinian refugees, UNRWA, has said as of March 16, up to 1.7 million people, or over 75 percent of the population, had been displaced since Oct. 7 when the war began, some of them several times. More than 1 million displaced are in Rafah on Gaza’s southernmost fringe close to the boundary with Egypt.

More than 60 percent of housing units have been destroyed, along with 392 education facilities, 123 ambulances and 184 mosques, it said. 

Children are dying of starvation in northern Gaza, World Health Organization chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said on X on March 4, citing a WHO team that visited two hospitals.

Famine is imminent and likely to occur by May in northern Gaza and could spread across the enclave by July, the world’s hunger watchdog, known as the Integrated Food-Security Phase Classification (IPC), said on March 18.

It said 70 percent of people in parts of northern Gaza were suffering the most severe level of food shortage, more than triple the 20 percent threshold to be considered famine. In all, 1.1 million Gazans, about half the population, were experiencing “catastrophic” shortages of food.

With inputs from Reuters 


Pakistan says $50 million meat export deal with Tajikistan nearing finalization

Updated 5 sec ago
Follow

Pakistan says $50 million meat export deal with Tajikistan nearing finalization

  • Islamabad expects to finalize agreement soon after Dushanbe signals demand for 100,000 tons
  • Pakistan is seeking to expand agricultural trade beyond rice, citrus and mango exports

ISLAMABAD: Tajikistan has expressed interest in importing 100,000 tons of Pakistani meat worth more than $50 million, with both governments expected to finalize a supply agreement soon, Pakistan’s food security ministry said on Tuesday.

Pakistan is trying to grow agriculture-based exports as it seeks regional markets for livestock and food commodities, while Tajikistan, a landlocked Central Asian state, has been expanding food imports to support domestic demand. Pakistan currently exports rice, citrus and mangoes to Dushanbe, though volumes remain small compared to national production, according to official figures.

The development came during a meeting in Islamabad between Pakistan’s Federal Minister for National Food Security and Research Rana Tanveer Hussain and Ambassador of Tajikistan Yusuf Sharifzoda, where agricultural trade, livestock supply and food-security cooperation were discussed.

“Tajikistan intends to purchase 100,000 tons of meat from Pakistan, an import valued at over USD 50 million,” the ambassador said, according to the ministry’s statement, assuring full facilitation and that Islamabad was prepared to meet the demand.

The statement said the two sides agreed to expand cooperation in meat and livestock, fresh fruit, vegetables, staple crops, agricultural research, pest management and standards compliance. Pakistan also proposed strengthening coordination on phytosanitary rules and establishing pest-free production zones to support long-term exports.

Pakistan and Tajikistan have long maintained political ties but bilateral food trade remains below potential: Pakistan produces 1.8 million tons of mangoes annually but exported just 0.7 metric tons to Tajikistan in 2024, while rice exports amounted to only 240 metric tons in 2022 out of national output of 9.3 million tons. Pakistan imports mainly ginned cotton from Tajikistan.