Saudi Arabia crown prince holds power to lead Palestine peace efforts — Pakistan Ulema Council

Pakistan Ulema Council chairman Tahir Ashrafi speaks to Arab News in Islamabad, Pakistan, on November 6, 2024. (AN photo)
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Updated 07 November 2024
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Saudi Arabia crown prince holds power to lead Palestine peace efforts — Pakistan Ulema Council

  • Saudi Arabia to host Arab-Islamic summit on Nov. 11 to discuss Israel’s military aggression in Gaza and Lebanon
  • Saudi crown prince’s image as ambassador of peace recognized by Europe, US and Islamic world, Tahir Ashrafi says

ISLAMABAD: The power to lead peace efforts in Palestine rests with the Saudi crown prince, the Pakistan Ulema Council said on Wednesday, as Muslim countries gear up to discuss the Middle East unrest at the Arab-Islamic summit.

Since October last year, Israel has killed over 45,000 Palestinians in its air and ground attacks on Gaza. Last month, it also invaded Lebanon, killing 3,000 people since.

Saudi Arabia has repeatedly condemned Israel’s attacks and on Nov. 11 will hold the extraordinary Arab–Islamic summit between the Arab League and the Organization of Islamic Cooperation to address the situation.

“The power to lead peace efforts and address this issue rests solely with Mohammed bin Salman, no one else holds this level of influence,” PUC chairman Tahir Ashrafi told Arab News.

“He is the center of the Muslim [world], due to the Two Holy Mosques and he is the head of the OIC.”

The PUC head said that the Saudi crown prince’s image as an ambassador of peace was recognized worldwide, as he recalled his successful mediation efforts in 2022, which led to the release of prisoners from various countries as part of a prisoner exchange between Russia and Ukraine.

“The role of Saudi Arabia and Ameer Mohammed bin Salman as an ambassador of peace is acceptable to Europe, the Islamic world, the UK and the US,” Ashrafi said.

“His vision is very clear, and the vision is a two-state solution.”

Ashrafi was hopeful that next week’s summit would lead to a solution to the Palestine crisis.

“It is hoped that a suggestion or solution will be presented there that will help the world overcome the current situation,” he said.

“If the whole Muslim world and some European countries accept the Palestinian state and appoint their ambassadors, it will be a big step and it will give a lot of strength to the oppressed Palestinians and to the solution to this issue.”


Suicide bomber attacks security check post in northwestern Pakistan, kills civilian

Updated 07 March 2026
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Suicide bomber attacks security check post in northwestern Pakistan, kills civilian

  • Sixteen civilians, two security personnel wounded in blast near the Afghan border town of Miran Shah
  • Attack comes amid rising militancy as Pakistan steps up military campaign across the Afghan border

PESHAWAR: A vehicle-borne suicide bomber targeted a security check post in Pakistan’s northwestern district of North Waziristan on Friday, killing at least one civilian and wounding 16 others, several critically, police and hospital officials said.

The attack struck the Chashma Sarband check post on the Bannu–Miran Shah road in Miran Shah, the main town in the restive tribal district bordering Afghanistan, police said.

The blast comes amid a resurgence of militant attacks in Pakistan’s northwestern border regions and growing tensions with neighboring Afghanistan, where Islamabad says armed groups responsible for violence in Pakistan are based.

“Sixteen civilians were among those wounded, four of whom were in critical condition,” said Dr. Asif Iqbal, the medical superintendent at the district headquarters hospital in Miran Shah.

“One person has died at the hospital,” he said, adding that more injured victims were expected to be brought in.

Police spokesman Fazal Khan said the vehicle-borne suicide attack targeted the security checkpoint along the busy highway.

Two members of the security forces were also wounded in the explosion, he said.

Chief Minister of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Sohail Afridi condemned the attack and ordered authorities to submit a report on the incident.

“The incident in which civilians were injured in the Miran Shah Chashma check post explosion is tragic,” he said in a statement.

Afridi directed officials to ensure the best possible medical treatment for the injured and said emergency services and hospital staff had been placed on high alert.

“Cowardly acts of terrorism cannot weaken the resolve of the government and the public,” he added.

Pakistan has witnessed a rise in militant violence in recent months, particularly in regions bordering Afghanistan, where officials say groups such as the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), also known as the Pakistani Taliban, operate from bases across the frontier.

Islamabad accuses Afghanistan’s Taliban authorities of sheltering militants who carry out attacks inside Pakistan, a charge Kabul denies.

The tensions have escalated further after Pakistan launched air strikes inside Afghanistan earlier this year targeting what it described as militant camps, triggering cross-border clashes between the two neighbors and prompting Islamabad to expand military operations along the frontier.

Pakistan says the campaign, dubbed “Ghazab Lil Haq,” will continue until militant threats from across the border are neutralized.