Pakistan interior minister arrives in Oman to discuss standoff with India 

Pakistan’sInterior Minister Mohsin Naqvi (left) meets Oman’s Interior Secretary Sayyid Khalid bin Hilal bin Saud Al Busaidi in Muscat, Oman, on May 4, 2025. (Pakistan’s interior ministry)
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Updated 04 May 2025
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Pakistan interior minister arrives in Oman to discuss standoff with India 

  • Mohsin Naqvi will meet Omani officials in Muscat to discuss regional situation during day-long visit 
  • New Delhi has accused Islamabad of backing perpetrators of Apr. 22 attack in Indian-administered Kashmir

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s Interior Minister Mohsin Naqvi arrived in Muscat on a day-long visit on Sunday, the interior ministry said, to meet high-level Omani officials and discuss the regional situation amid Islamabad’s spike in tensions with New Delhi. 

In an earlier statement, the interior ministry said Naqvi would depart for a visit to Gulf countries today in light of the regional situation. However, it did not mention which Gulf countries other than Oman he would visit. 

Naqvi’s visit takes place as fears of a military confrontation between India and Pakistan loom large after New Delhi accused Islamabad of backing the perpetrators of an Apr. 22 attack in Indian-administered Kashmir that killed 26 tourists. Pakistan denies involvement and has called for an international probe into the incident. 

“Federal Interior Minister Mohsin Naqvi has arrived in Muscat on a one-day official visit to Oman,” the interior ministry said in a statement. 

It said Naqvi was received at the airport by Oman’s Interior Secretary Sayyid Khalid bin Hilal bin Saud Al Busaidi and Pakistan’s Ambassador to Oman Syed Naveed Safdar Bokhari and other dignitaries. 

“We want to enhance cooperation with Oman in combating drug trafficking and human smuggling,” Naqvi was quoted as saying by his ministry. 

The statement said Naqvi will meet senior Omani officials to present Pakistan’s stance on the evolving regional situation following Islamabad’s surging tensions with New Delhi. 

Pakistan has increasingly engaged countries such as the US, China, Saudi Arabia, Turkiye, South Korea and other nations in recent days to present its point of view regarding its tensions with India. 

The border forces of both countries have traded fire for 10 consecutive days along the Line of Control frontier in Kashmir, which acts as a de facto border between India and Pakistan, international media reports say. 

Both countries have also traded diplomatic barbs, expelled each other’s nationals and closed a key lander border route.

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi this week gave the Indian military “operational freedom” to respond to the Kashmir attack. Pakistan has since then conducted war exercises and vowed that any military action from India would invite a “strong” response. 

Both nuclear-armed nations have fought two out of three wars since 1947 over the disputed Kashmir territory. India and Pakistan claim the entire region but administer only parts of it


Pakistani man on trial over Trump assassination plot with ties to Iran— US prosecutors

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Pakistani man on trial over Trump assassination plot with ties to Iran— US prosecutors

  • Asif Merchant, 47, met with men in New York in 2024 he thought he was recruiting to carry out political assassinations, prosecutors say
  • Merchant is a deeply religious man who frequently traveled to Iran and Pakistan to meet his separate families, his lawyers say 

NEW YORK: The trial began this week of a Pakistani man who US prosecutors say had ties to the Iranian government and traveled to New York to meet with men he thought he was recruiting to carry out political assassinations on American soil, including potentially of President Donald Trump.

Asif Merchant, 47, faces a life sentence if he’s convicted of “terrorism” charges. His trial got underway Wednesday in a federal court in Brooklyn.

Prosecutors said in court filings that a man who Merchant initially met when he arrived in New York in April 2024 later notified authorities about the plot and became a confidential informant, The New York Times reported. Merchant later paid a $5,000 advance to two would-be assassins who were actually undercover FBI agents, prosecutors said.

At the time, Merchant did not specify who the target would be, but court filings show the potential targets included high-level officials such as Trump.

Merchant, who has maintained his innocence, is a deeply religious man who frequently traveled to Iran and Pakistan, where he has separate families, which his lawyers noted is legal in both countries he calls home. They told jurors Wednesday that there was simply not enough evidence to show their client was involved in some type of plot.

Prosecutors told jurors that Merchant sketched out his plans by putting objects on a hotel napkin to represent people and places in a potential assassination plot, including the target, crowd and buildings. The killing would have occurred during the run-up to the 2024 presidential election.

The FBI has foiled several alleged attacks through sting operations in which agents posed as terror supporters, supplying advice or equipment. Critics say the strategy can amount to entrapment of mentally vulnerable people who wouldn’t have the wherewithal to act alone.