From Al-Ahli Hospital, Pakistani-American doctor paints harrowing picture of Gaza under fire

This handout photo shows Syed Irfan Ali (center), a Pakistani-American doctor working at Al-Ahli Arab Hospital in Gaza. (Handout/Independent Urdu)
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Updated 16 August 2025
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From Al-Ahli Hospital, Pakistani-American doctor paints harrowing picture of Gaza under fire

  • Israel’s war on Gaza, which began after Oct. 2023 attacks by Hamas, has killed more than 61,700 Palestinians, including a large number of women and children
  • Dr. Syed Irfan Ali details the painful situation of Gazans, describes them as the most “thankful to Allah” despite the shortages of food, water and electricity

ISLAMABAD: Syed Irfan Ali, a Pakistani-American doctor working at Al-Ahli Arab Hospital in Gaza, has said that an explosion sound in Gaza every two minutes without interruption, whether it is of a tank shell or an Apache helicopter fire, describing the scale of Israeli military offensive in the territory.

Since Oct. 2023, Isreal has killed more than 60,000 Palestinians, many of them women and children, according to data from Gaza’s Health Ministry. In late July 2025, the ministry reported that at least 18,500 children and 9,800 women have been killed by Israel.

The United Nations (UN) and aid groups have reported widespread shortages of food, power and safety equipment in the territory that has been besieged by the Israeli military, with hundreds dying of hunger.

An explosion was heard in the backdrop of an interview by The Independent Urdu on Thursday with Dr. Ali, who graduated from Lahore’s Allama Iqbal Medical College and later trained in anesthesia and pain management at the Harvard University.

“You would have heard this explosion, this is going on non-stop. It goes on every two minutes,” he said, describing the situation in Gaza. “These people have not only lost their homes, whatever they had, cars, homes, whatever memories they had inside home, the pictures, the achievements, diplomas and degrees, they lost everything.”




This handout photo shows Syed Irfan Ali (left), a Pakistani-American doctor working at Al-Ahli Arab Hospital in Gaza. (Handout/Independent Urdu)

United Nations (UN) spokesman Stephane Dujarric this week warned that starvation and malnutrition in Gaza are at the highest levels since the war began.

The UN says nearly 12,000 children under 5 were found to have acute malnutrition in July — including more than 2,500 with severe malnutrition, the most dangerous level. The World Health Organization says the numbers are likely an undercount.

Dr. Ali said all of Gaza residents were forced to live in tents without food, water or electricity as Israeli military had laid waste to the territory through its air and ground strikes.

The Pakistani-American doctor, who has traveled to various countries on humanitarian missions and is in Gaza for the third time, said that the malnutrition is so severe in the territory that 15- to 16-month-old teenager had a hemoglobin of 6 grams per deciliter, against a healthy average of 12-18 g/dL.

Speaking about the situation at Al-Ahli Hospital, Dr. Ali said the facility has been functioning despite being bombed but is under “severe pressure.”




This handout photo shows Syed Irfan Ali (left), a Pakistani-American doctor working at Al-Ahli Arab Hospital in Gaza. (Handout/Independent Urdu)

“The hospital’s capacity is less than 100 beds, but there are about five or six hundred patients here who are inpatients. Inpatients means that those poor people lie down with a pillow or blanket wherever they find a place,” he said, adding that two attacks near the hospital killed “many children” on Wednesday.

The medic, however, showered his praise on Gazans for being most “thankful to Allah” despite all the adversity.

“Their level of ‘iman’ [faith] is at a very different level,” he said. “When you live among them, when you spend time among them, you feel like you are in the most blessed people in the most blessed place.”

Dr. Ali appealed to the Pakistani people to prioritize the Palestinian people above their personal needs.

“Pray for them as much as you can, help them as much as you can, and prioritize them even more than your own family,” he added.


Pakistan business group presses for corporate tax rationalization in IMF talks

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Pakistan business group presses for corporate tax rationalization in IMF talks

  • Pakistan Business Council calls for abolition of super tax, phased corporate rate cut to 25%
  • PM Sharif has said government is considering reduction in direct taxes in upcoming budget

KARACHI: Pakistan’s business policy advocacy group urged the government to rationalize corporate tax rates during talks with an International Monetary Fund (IMF) delegation on Saturday, arguing such a step would be critical to shifting the economy from stabilization to export-led growth.

The Pakistan Business Council (PBC), which represents many of the country’s largest private-sector companies, said the current tax structure places a disproportionate burden on documented and compliant enterprises.

The engagement follows the arrival of an IMF staff mission in Pakistan earlier this week to begin review talks that will determine the release of the next tranche under the country’s $7 billion Extended Fund Facility (EFF) and the $1.4 billion Resilience and Sustainability Facility (RSF).

The team is expected to start formal negotiations next week, discussions seen as critical to sustaining Pakistan’s fragile economic recovery and maintaining external financing stability.

“Stabilization has provided breathing space,” PBC Chairperson Dr. Zeelaf Munir said according to a statement after the meeting with the IMF delegation headed by mission chief Iva Petrova. “The priority now is institutionalizing growth.”

“A competitive and equitable tax framework, predictable energy pricing and policy consistency are essential to expand exports, attract investment and generate employment at scale,” she continued. “The private sector stands ready to deploy capital where reform signals remain clear and credible.”

In its presentation to the Fund team, the PBC called for the abolition of the super tax, an additional levy imposed in recent years on high-earning companies and individuals to shore up revenues, in all its forms. It also demanded a phased reduction of the corporate tax rate to 25%, and rationalization of advance and withholding tax regimes that businesses say function as de facto minimum taxes.

The PBC urged the broadening of the tax base through stronger enforcement to bring untaxed sectors into the net, rather than increasing the burden on existing taxpayers.

Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif said earlier this week on Wednesday the government was considering reducing direct taxes in the upcoming federal budget to support businesses, while maintaining that indirect taxes collected from consumers must be properly deposited into the national exchequer.

The IMF review discussions with the Pakistani authorities are expected to focus on fiscal consolidation, monetary policy, structural reforms and climate-related benchmarks tied to the RSF program, as Islamabad seeks to secure continued external financing and strengthen macroeconomic stability.