At Pakistan conference, Palestinians call for concrete actions to end Israeli aggression in Gaza

In this handout photograph, taken and released by the Save Gaza Campaign, a civil society movement based in Pakistan, Dr. Khalid Qaddoumi (2L), a spokesperson and head of the West Asia Desk of the Islamic Resistance Movement Hamas, speaks as Pakistan’s former human rights minister Shireen Mazari (3L) gestures along with Mushtaq Ahmad Khan (2R), ex-senator, and Abdul Basit (R), retired Pakistani diplomat, during a panel discussion at the Palestine Conference in Islamabad on November 10, 2024. (Photo courtesy: Facebook/Save Gaza Campaign)
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Updated 24 December 2024
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At Pakistan conference, Palestinians call for concrete actions to end Israeli aggression in Gaza

  • Palestine Conference, held on occasion of International Human Rights Day, widely attended by politicians, activists, and students
  • Speakers urge Muslim countries to boycott Israel, halt trade, sever diplomatic ties and block Israel’s communication routes

ISLAMABAD: Palestinian leaders and activists at a conference held in Islamabad on Tuesday called on the global community, particularly Muslim nations, to take concrete actions to stop Israel’s military offensive in Gaza, ensure a ceasefire and hold leaders like Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to account under international laws.
The Palestine Conference, held on the occasion of International Human Rights Day, was jointly organized by the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan and the Save Gaza Campaign, a civil society movement based in Pakistan. The forum was attended by a large number of Pakistanis, including politicians, rights activists, civil society members, journalists, and students.
The ongoing Israeli military campaign in Gaza has killed more than 43,000 people and injured thousands more since the Oct 7, 2023 attacks by Hamas in Isarel. Israel’s 13-month military campaign has displaced an estimated 1.9 million Palestinians, many of them multiple times. Bombings, movement restrictions and evacuations ordered by Israel’s military block access to health care and keep aid workers from reaching people in need, with aid organizations and charities repeatedly warning of crisis-level hunger affecting nearly two million people. A United Nations-backed assessment last month warned that famine is looming in northern Gaza due to a near-halt in food aid. Essential goods such as water, fresh produce, and medicines are also scarce.




In this handout photograph, taken and released by the Save Gaza Campaign, a civil society movement based in Pakistan, Dr. Khalid Qaddoumi (C), a spokesperson and head of the West Asia Desk of the Islamic Resistance Movement Hamas, receives a souvenir at the Palestine Conference in Islamabad on November 10, 2024. (Photo courtesy: Facebook/Save Gaza Campaign)

Speaking to Arab News, Dr. Khalid Qaddoumi, a spokesperson and head of the West Asia Desk of the Islamic Resistance Movement Hamas, said it was the responsibility of the international community to act on arrest warrants issued by the International Court of Justice (ICC) last month against Netanyahu for alleged crimes against humanity.
The Israeli premier was an “internationally recognized war criminal” and should be held accountable, Qaddoumi said, calling on global powers to stand by the laws which they had themselves drafted at the UN and other human rights forums. 
“Unfortunately, those bottom lines of humanity ... have been violated continuously by the Israeli army and Israeli government, and with the green light from the world powers,” Qaddoumi said in an interview to Arab News on the sidelines of the conference. 
However, Qaddoumi said Israel could not break the Palestinian people or their resistance.
“Today 2.4 million Palestinians are still in their homeland despite the Israelis, aggressions, operations, and crimes and they fail to impose the enforced displacement, even our people in the north, they are in their own destroyed houses without water,” he added.




This handout photograph, taken and released by the Save Gaza Campaign, a civil society movement based in Pakistan, shows artwork presented at the Palestine Conference in Islamabad on November 10, 2024. (Photo courtesy: Facebook/Save Gaza Campaign)

The Hamas representative said while Pakistan was providing humanitarian assistance to Palestine, it also needed to employ diplomatic and political means to get the borders opened.
“If the borders are not open, those things [humanitarian aid] will not come as we get not more than 40 trucks a day, which is a joke at a time that the minimum need is more than 1,000 trucks a day,” he said. 
“We were expecting for the last 47 years [but] nothing has come, unfortunately, except statements but now is the opportunity for the Muslim Ummah and countries like Pakistan to move forward and develop their action.”
Bilal Al Astal, a Palestinian journalist from Khan Younis and the director general of Friends of Palestine, an advocacy network that aims to raise awareness and foster international support for Palestine, said though Israel had destroyed nearly 88 percent of the Gaza Strip, including schools, hospitals, and all other infrastructure, there were reasons to be hopeful. 
“We need to remain somewhat optimistic about the situation,” he said, adding that the current situation had put a spotlight on Israel, with more and more countries openly recognizing it as “real perpetrators of genocide.”
“Along with these sacrifices, we have seen some advantages, more countries including European nations are now recognizing Palestine,” Astal added. 




In this handout photograph, taken and released by the Save Gaza Campaign, a civil society movement based in Pakistan, Mushtaq Ahmad Khan, a former senator and the patron of the Save Gaza Campaign, gestures at the Palestine Conference in Islamabad on November 10, 2024. (Photo courtesy: Facebook/Save Gaza Campaign)

Mushtaq Ahmad Khan, a former senator and the patron of the Save Gaza Campaign, demanded that the international community, the Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC), and particularly the government of Pakistan “move beyond mere condemnations” and take “concrete actions to stop the Israeli genocide.”
“They [Muslim countries] should boycott Israel, halt trade, sever diplomatic relations, prevent Israel and its supporters from using air, sea, and land routes for communication, and employ oil as a strategic tool against Israel and its allies,” he added.
“As around 430 days have passed since the genocide of Palestinians by Israelis began, we demand human rights for Palestinians and urge the international community to take actionable steps.”


Pakistan’s Sindh announces judicial inquiry into deadly Karachi plaza fire

Updated 51 min 34 sec ago
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Pakistan’s Sindh announces judicial inquiry into deadly Karachi plaza fire

  • Around 80 people were killed in Karachi Gul Plaza fire that broke out on Jan. 17, says Sindh information minister
  • Says initial fact-finding committee discovered fire tenders were provided water with delay, which affected firefighting

ISLAMABAD: Sindh Information Minister Sharjeel Inam Memon announced on Thursday that the provincial government has requested a judicial inquiry into a deadly Karachi shopping plaza inferno that killed around 80 people earlier this month. 

The fire broke out at Karachi’s famous Gul Plaza, a multi-story shopping complex in the city’s Saddar area, on the night of Jan. 17. The blaze killed 80 and took three days to extinguish, while rescue and relief efforts took over a week. 

Speaking to reporters during a news conference, Memon said a Sindh cabinet sub-committee, chaired by Chief Minister Murad Ali Shah, reviewed a fact-finding committee report on the Karachi Gul Plaza fire. 

He said the fact-finding committee discovered that the Civil Defense department conducted fire safety audits of the mall and other buildings since 2023, but no effective, precautionary or legal action was taken to ensure such incidents were avoided. He said as a result, the Civil Defense director and the department’s additional controller for district South were both suspended. 

“A letter is being written to the honorable chief justice of the Sindh High Court in which we are requesting the chief justice to appoint a serving judge for a judicial inquiry,” Memon said. 

“So that we can review everything in accordance with the law himself and take decisions on it.”

Memon said that there were around 2,000 to 2,500 people in the building when the fire broke out, adding that these included workers and visitors. 

He said the sub-committee had also noted that fire tenders were provided water with delay which affected the firefighting services of the Karachi Municipal Corporation (KMC), Rescue 1122 and fire brigades. 

The minister said the government had also suspended the chief engineer and in-charge hydrants of the Karachi Water and Sewerage Corporation, and that action will be taken against them. 

Memon said the committee had also concluded that the KMC, Rescue 1122 and fire brigades’ firefighting tools and training to deal with an inferno of such a scale were “inadequate.”

He said the government has also suspended the senior director of municipal services in the KMC and that departmental action against him will be taken for not ensuring that the fire staff was properly prepared to tackle such a blaze. 

The minister said the sub-committee had directed the relevant department to carry out a needs assessment so that the firefighting capabilities of the provincial and local government are further strengthened. 

Fires have become an increasingly frequent occurrence in Karachi, a megacity of more than 20 million people, where fire services remain severely overstretched and under-resourced relative to population density and the scale of commercial activity.

Successive deadly incidents have drawn criticism of the provincial Sindh administration over lax enforcement of building codes, inadequate inspections and limited emergency response capacity.

Sindh’s opposition parties, especially the Muttahida Quami Movement-Pakistan, accuse the Sindh government of neglecting Karachi’s infrastructural development. The provincial government rejects these allegations.