Pakistan sends 14th consignment of relief items for Gaza

Pakistan’s National Disaster Management Authority dispatches relief items for the people of Palestine from Karachi, Pakistan, on February 23, 2025. (PID)
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Updated 24 February 2025
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Pakistan sends 14th consignment of relief items for Gaza

  • Ninety tons of relief items include bell and winterized tents and tarpaulin sheets, says state media 
  • Pakistan has so far sent 25 relief consignments to Middle East affected by Israel’s military aggression

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s 14th consignment of relief items for the people of Palestine arrived at Egypt’s El Arish International Airport on Sunday, state-run media reported, with Islamabad promising more aid for the people of Gaza affected by Israeli military aggression. 

Pakistan’s National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA) collaborated with leading non-profit organization Al-Khidmat Foundation to dispatch the shipment on Sunday, which is the 25th overall relief consignment sent to people affected by Israeli military actions in the Middle East. 

A special aircraft that flew from the Jinnah International Airport in Karachi carrying 90 tons of relief supplies, including bell and winterized tens and tarpaulin sheets, landed at El-Arish International Airport on Sunday. 

“Officials from embassy of Pakistan, Cairo received the relief consignment and handed over to Egyptian Red Crescent Society for onward dispatch to Palestinian Red Crescent Society inside Gaza,” state-run Associated Press of Pakistan (APP) reported. 

“More consignments from the government and people of Pakistan are on their way and will be delivered soon to the Palestinians inside Gaza.”

Israel’s war on Gaza, which began after Oct. 2023 attacks by Hamas, has killed over 48,000 people, injured thousands more and displaced almost all of the 2 million population of the territory.

Pakistan has so far dispatched a total of 1,478 tons of relief aid exclusively for Palestine, demonstrating the country’s continued commitment to supporting the people of Gaza in these difficult times, according to the Press Information Department. 

Overall, the South Asian country has dispatched 1,961 tons of humanitarian aid, including 372 tons for Lebanon and 111 tons for Syria.


Sindh chief minister pledges compensation within two months after Karachi plaza fire

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Sindh chief minister pledges compensation within two months after Karachi plaza fire

  • Murad Ali Shah says government is working with Karachi chamber to help shopkeepers restart businesses
  • January fire that killed at least 67 brought safety of Karachi’s commercial buildings under sharp focus

KARACHI: Sindh Chief Minister Murad Ali Shah said on Friday compensation for shopkeepers affected by last month’s deadly Gul Plaza shopping mall blaze would be released within two months amid calls for improved fire safety regulations to protect commercial buildings in Karachi.

The fire at Gul Plaza in January killed at least 67 people and left more than 15 missing, triggering renewed criticism of lax enforcement of building codes and emergency preparedness in Pakistan’s largest city.

Authorities said the blaze spread rapidly through the multi-story commercial complex, complicating rescue efforts and raising questions about wiring, access routes and fire safety systems in older markets.

“The government in collaboration with the Karachi Chamber is actively working to help shopkeepers restart their businesses and aims to ensure that compensation is provided within two months so that the shopkeepers can buy inventories to restart their businesses,” the chief minister said while addressing the inauguration of the My Karachi Exhibition, an annual trade and consumer exhibition, according to an official statement.

He said temporary locations had been identified where shopkeepers could operate rent-free until reconstruction is completed, paying only basic maintenance costs.

Shah reiterated the Sindh administration’s commitment to provide Rs 10 million ($36,000) to the families of those who died in the fire, along with immediate relief of Rs 500,000 ($1,785) for affected shopkeepers.

He said Gul Plaza would be rebuilt within two years “in the same manner and with the same number of shops,” adding that the new structure would be safer and constructed “without a single square inch extra.”

Business leaders at the event called for stricter enforcement of fire safety standards across Karachi’s commercial districts, citing unregulated electrical wiring and poor compliance as recurring causes of deadly market fires.