Pakistan says Israel burying two-state solution with settlement push, condemns Gaza occupation plan

Pakistan’s Pakistan’s ambassador Asim Iftikhar Ahmad, Asim Iftikhar Ahmad, is addressing a session at the UN in New York, US, on August 27, 2025. (@PakistanUN_NY/X)
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Updated 28 August 2025
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Pakistan says Israel burying two-state solution with settlement push, condemns Gaza occupation plan

  • Country’s UN envoy warns 83% of those killed in Gaza are civilians, slams settler violence and Al Aqsa incursions
  • He points out Israel’s military onslaught in Gaza continues since it faces no real consequences for its actions

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan told the United Nations on Wednesday Israel is burying the two-state solution by expanding settlements in the occupied West Bank and East Jerusalem, while facing no real consequences to prevent the killing of civilians with impunity in Gaza.

Addressing a UN Security Council briefing on the Middle East, Pakistan’s ambassador Asim Iftikhar Ahmad said Israel’s military campaign and declared plan to fully occupy Gaza City would lead to further humanitarian catastrophe.

Gaza has been under Israeli assault for 691 consecutive days, with more than 62,000 Palestinians killed, including nearly 19,000 children and at least 270 journalists, according to figures cited by the envoy.

“Pakistan condemns Israel’s so-called ‘military operation’ and planned full occupation of Gaza City – which is nothing but a blueprint for further humanitarian catastrophe, threatening to displace once more up to one million people,” Ahmad said.

“Simultaneously, annexation in the West Bank and East Jerusalem continues unabated,” he added. “The E-1 settlement plan is a deliberate attempt to bury the two-State solution. We strongly condemn this action, which constitutes a clear violation of international law, including Security Council resolutions.”

The Pakistan diplomat noted Israel was deliberately and systematically killing civilians in Gaza.

“Even Israel’s own military data, as reported in the international media, admits that 83 percent of those killed are civilians,” he continued. “Yet, the indiscriminate military onslaught continues, because Israel is confronted with no real consequences for its actions.”

“Hospitals, schools, homes – nothing has been spared,” he added. “The world is now witnessing live-streamed killing of journalists and rescue workers.”

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s government has declared its intent to occupy Gaza, while reports of settler violence have surged in the West Bank.

Rights groups and diplomats have also documented periodic visits by far-right Israeli officials to the Al Aqsa Mosque compound in Jerusalem, where they have performed Jewish prayers and rituals despite long-standing arrangements barring such acts.

The Pakistani envoy highlighted famine had taken hold in Gaza City, threatening half a million people, and accused Israel of using hunger as a weapon of war.

“Food stacks up at borders because of systematic obstruction by Israel,” he said, warning that starvation of civilians could amount to a war crime.

Pakistan, a longstanding supporter of Palestinian statehood, called for an immediate and permanent ceasefire, unhindered humanitarian access, the release of hostages and Palestinian prisoners and an end to forced displacement and settlement expansion.

It also reiterated support for a two-state solution that would establish a sovereign Palestinian state within pre-1967 borders, with East Jerusalem as its capital.


Four people, including two policemen, killed in twin blasts in northwest Pakistan

Updated 07 March 2026
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Four people, including two policemen, killed in twin blasts in northwest Pakistan

  • Attack on police van in South Waziristan and motorbike-mounted IED in Lakki Marwat hits KP province
  • Violence comes amid a surge in militancy and cross-border clashes between Pakistan and Afghanistan

ISLAMABAD: At least four people, including two policemen, were killed and about 20 others wounded in two separate blasts in Pakistan’s northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province on Saturday, officials said, the latest violence in a region grappling with militant violence.

One explosion targeted a police patrol van in Wana, the main town of South Waziristan district near the Afghan border, while another blast caused by explosives mounted on a motorbike struck a market area in Lakki Marwat district, according to police officials and preliminary reports.

The incidents come amid rising militant violence in Pakistan’s northwest, where authorities say armed groups operate from across the border in Afghanistan, straining relations between Islamabad and the Taliban administration in Kabul, with both sides engaged in a military conflict since last month.

“The control room received information in the evening about a bomb blast targeting a police van in Wana Bazaar,” a police official in the area, who did not want to be named, confirmed while speaking to Arab News over the phone.

He confirmed two deaths in the incident while saying more than 25 people had been injured.

The official said rescue teams responded promptly and shifted three seriously injured people to a nearby hospital in Wana.

In another incident during the day in Lakki Marwat, an improvised explosive device attached to a motorbike exploded near shops.

“Two people have been killed and about 10 have been injured in an IED blast in Lakki Marwat,” Raza Khan, Deputy Superintendent of Police in Bannu, told Arab News.

“The deceased are identified as Shoaib Ur Rehman and Furqan Ullah,” he added. “Shoaib, the owner of the shop, was the brother of the Lakki peace committee head.”

Peace committees in the region are informal, community-based groups that work with security forces to report militant activity and maintain order, making their members frequent targets of attacks.

Pakistan’s Interior Minister Mohsin Naqvi condemned the attacks and expressed grief over the incidents.

“I strongly condemn the blast near a police patrolling vehicle in Wana Bazaar,” Naqvi said in a statement, confirming the killing of four people, including two police personnel.

“Khyber Pakhtunkhwa police are on the front line in the war against terrorism,” he said, noting the force had made “unforgettable sacrifices” in the fight against militant groups.

Militant violence has surged in Pakistan’s border regions in recent months, particularly in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Balochistan provinces.
Islamabad has repeatedly accused the Afghan Taliban government of allowing militant groups, including the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), to operate from Afghan territory — a charge Kabul denies — as cross-border tensions between the two neighbors have escalated.