Pakistan begins burials for 13 migrants drowned off Africa

Family members and residents carry the coffin of Arslan Khan, a victim of last month’s migrant boat capsizing off North Africa, during his funeral ceremony in Mirza Virkan village, in eastern Punjab province, on February 6, 2025. A Pakistan village on February 6 buried one of its residents among 13 migrants from the country who drowned as their boat capsized off North Africa last month. (AFP)
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Updated 06 February 2025
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Pakistan begins burials for 13 migrants drowned off Africa

  • Each year thousands of Pakistanis pay large sums to traffickers to launch risky and illegal journeys to Europe
  • Pakistanis are frequently among those drowned on crammed migrant boats which sink on Mediterranean Sea

MIRZA VIRKAN: A Pakistani who drowned along with 12 compatriots when a boat carrying dozens of migrants capsized off northwest Africa was buried in his hometown on Thursday.
Each year thousands of Pakistanis pay large sums to traffickers to launch risky and illegal journeys to Europe, where they hope to find work and send funds to support families back home.




Family members and residents gather around the coffin of Arslan Khan, a victim of last month’s migrant boat capsizing off North Africa, during his funeral ceremony in Mirza Virkan village, in eastern Punjab province, on February 6, 2025. (AFP)

Pakistanis are frequently among those drowned on crammed boats which sink on the Mediterranean Sea separating North Africa from Europe — the world’s deadliest migrant route.
Islamabad’s foreign ministry this week said 13 of its citizens were among the dead recovered from a boat which went down in the Atlantic.




Adnan Khan, brother of Arslan Khan, a victim of last month’s migrant boat capsizing off North Africa, shows his photograph during funeral ceremony in Mirza Virkan village, in eastern Punjab province, on February 6, 2025. (AFP)

Around 80 passengers were aboard the vessel, which left Mauritania and sailed north toward Spain’s Canary Islands before it capsized near the Western Sahara port of Dakhla, the ministry said on January 16.
On Thursday the village of Mirza Virkan in eastern Punjab province buried Arslan Khan — one of four bodies from the shipwreck repatriated a day earlier.




Ramazan Khan (C), father of Arslan Khan, a victim of last month’s migrant boat capsizing off North Africa, breaks down during a funeral ceremony in Mirza Virkan village, in eastern Punjab province, on February 6, 2025. (AFP)

“We sent Arslan to build a better future, and the trafficker assured us that he would send him legally,” his 34-year-old brother Adnan Khan told AFP.
“We sold our property and animals for Arslan’s future, but the trafficker betrayed us — he sent back our brother’s dead body.”




Family members and residents offer prayers during a funeral ceremony of Arslan Khan, a victim of last month’s migrant boat capsizing off North Africa, in Mirza Virkan village, in eastern Punjab province, on February 6, 2025. (AFP)

Pakistan has one of the highest rates of emigration in the world, according to the United Nation’s International Organization for Migration.
Many migrants depart from Punjab and the northeastern region of Pakistan administered Kashmir because their communities have historic ties to the country’s diaspora in Europe.
An official from the Federal Investigation Agency, speaking anonymously to AFP in 2023, estimated Pakistanis attempt 40,000 illegal trips every year.
In June that year the Mediterranean witnessed one of its worst migrant shipwrecks when a rusty and overloaded trawler sank overnight.
It was carrying more than 750 people — up to 350 of them Pakistanis according to Islamabad — but only 82 bodies were ever recovered.


Saudi defense delegation visits Pakistan’s foreign office for diplomatic briefing

Updated 09 January 2026
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Saudi defense delegation visits Pakistan’s foreign office for diplomatic briefing

  • Delegation briefed on Pakistan’s foreign policy priorities and bilateral ties with Saudi Arabia
  • Visit reflects close defense cooperation, including a bilateral security pact signed last year

ISLAMABAD: A Saudi defense delegation visited Pakistan’s foreign ministry on Friday to learn about Islamabad’s diplomatic priorities and engagements as the two countries strengthen security collaboration and consult more closely on regional and international issues.

The visit comes amid sustained high-level engagement between Islamabad and Riyadh, with regular contacts spanning defense, diplomacy and economic cooperation.

A 15-member delegation from the King Abdullah Bin Abdulaziz Command and Staff College met officials at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, said an official statement.

“The visit of the delegation to Pakistan is a manifestation of excellent defense and security relations between the two countries,” the foreign ministry said.

It added that officials briefed the delegation on Pakistan’s foreign policy issues and bilateral relations with Saudi Arabia, followed by an interactive session.

The head of the delegation thanked Pakistani authorities for facilitating the visit, the statement said.

Pakistan and Saudi Arabia maintain close defense and security cooperation, including training exchanges and joint exercises.

In September last year, the two countries signed a bilateral security agreement under which aggression against one would be treated as a threat to the other.

While Saudi diplomats are regular visitors to the Pakistani foreign ministry, such visits by defense delegations are rare, reflecting that the two sides seek to understand each other’s defense and diplomatic perspectives more closely.