PIA repatriates more Pakistanis stranded in Iran as regional tensions ground flights

Pakistani citizens who were residing in Iran arrive with their belongings in Quetta on June 17, 2025, amid the ongoing conflict between Israel and Iran. (AFP)
Short Url
Updated 18 June 2025
Follow

PIA repatriates more Pakistanis stranded in Iran as regional tensions ground flights

  • Iranian airspace shut to commercial traffic last week after Israeli airstrikes on Iran and a military confrontation that has entered sixth day
  • Foreign office official says Pakistan has started evacuating families of its diplomats and staff and some members of non-essential staff 

ISLAMABAD: A special PIA flight carrying 107 Pakistanis who had been stranded in Iran landed in Islamabad early Wednesday, the national carrier said, after regional airspace disruptions forced days-long travel delays and overland detours.

Flight PK-9552, arranged under government instructions, departed from the Turkmen capital of Ashgabat and arrived at Islamabad International Airport at 3am, PIA said in a statement.

The passengers had crossed into Turkmenistan by road after being unable to depart directly from Iran due to ongoing airspace restrictions following the start of a war between longtime Middle Eastern enemies Israel and Iran, since Friday. The two rivals launched new missile strikes at each other on Wednesday as the air war between them entered a sixth day despite a call from US President Donald Trump for Tehran’s unconditional surrender.

“Due to the closure of Iranian airspace, Pakistani nationals in Iran had to reach Turkmenistan through ground routes,” PIA said, adding that the repatriation was coordinated by Pakistan’s embassies in Tehran and Ashgabat.

“Our missions in Iran and Turkmenistan played a key role in facilitating this process,” PIA added.

Passengers stranded in Iran were mostly short-term visitors, religious pilgrims and workers caught in the fallout of recent regional hostilities. 

Iranian airspace was shut to commercial traffic last week amid rising military tensions, following Israeli airstrikes on Iran and heightened fears of a wider conflict. Several international carriers, including PIA, suspended or rerouted flights passing through Iranian airspace. Pakistani citizens thus found themselves unable to return home through normal flight routes.




An elderly Pakistani pilgrim who has been evacuated from Iran walks at the Pakistan-Iran border in Taftan on June 17, 2025. (AFP)

A PIA spokesperson said the national carrier took action “in continuation of its decades-long tradition of serving national interest in difficult times.”

Pakistan also repatriated 268 nationals from Iraq via two flights on Monday and 450 nationals from Iran on Sunday. 

Pakistan has condemned Israel’s strikes, calling them an unjustified violation of Iranian sovereignty, and has urged the international community to help de-escalate tensions through dialogue.

While no official figures have been released on how many Pakistanis remain in Iran, foreign ministry officials have confirmed that further evacuations would be arranged if the situation worsens. The foreign ministry has also said diplomatic missions were “in close contact with local authorities” to ensure the safety of all nationals.

Separately, a senior foreign office official said on Monday Pakistan had started evacuating families of its diplomats and staff as well as members of some non-essential staff from Iran.

“The foreign ministry is moving out families of diplomats and staff and some non-essential staff from Iran,” a foreign office official said in a statement.

“However Pakistan embassy in Tehran and our consulates will continue to remain functional.”


Peshawar church attack haunts Christians at Christmas

Updated 26 December 2025
Follow

Peshawar church attack haunts Christians at Christmas

  • The 2013 suicide attack at All Saints Church killed 113 worshippers, leaving lasting scars on survivors
  • Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif vowed to protect religious minorities on Christmas, act against any injustice

PESHAWAR: After passing multiple checkpoints under the watchful eyes of snipers stationed overhead, hundreds of Christians gathered for a Christmas mass in northwest Pakistan 12 years after suicide bombers killed dozens of worshippers.

The impact of metal shards remain etched on a wall next to a memorial bearing the names of those killed at All Saints Church in Peshawar, in the violence-wracked province of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa.

“Even today, when I recall that day 12 years ago, my soul trembles,” Natasha Zulfiqar, a 30-year-old housewife who was wounded in the attack along with her parents, told AFP on Thursday.

Her right wrist still bears the scar.

A militant group claimed responsibility for the attack on September 22, 2013, when 113 people were killed, according to a church toll.

“There was blood everywhere. The church lawn was covered with bodies,” Zulfiqar said.

Christians make up less than two percent of Pakistan’s 240 million people and have long faced discrimination in the conservative Muslim country, often sidelined into low-paying jobs and sometimes the target of blasphemy charges.

Along with other religious minorities, the community has often been targeted by militants over the years.

Today, a wall clock inside All Saints giving the time of the blast as 11:43 am is preserved in its damaged state, its glass shattered.

“The blast was so powerful that its marks are still visible on this wall — and those marks are not only on the wall, but they are also etched into our hearts as well,” said Emmanuel Ghori, a caretaker at the church.

Addressing a Christmas ceremony in the capital Islamabad, Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif vowed to protect religious minorities.

“I want to make it clear that if any injustice is done to any member of a minority, the law will respond with full force,” he said.

For Azzeka Victor Sadiq, whose father was killed and mother wounded in the blasts, “The intensity of the grief can never truly fade.”

“Whenever I come to the church, the entire incident replays itself before my eyes,” the 38-year-old teacher told AFP.