Pakistan PM joins Arab-Islamic Summit in New York as Trump, Qatari Emir press to end Gaza war

Pakistan Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif attends meeting of the Arab Islamic leaders hosted by US President Donald Trump and Qatar Emir Sheikh Tamim Bin Hamad Al Thani in New York on September 23, 2025. (Handout/PMO)
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Updated 24 September 2025
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Pakistan PM joins Arab-Islamic Summit in New York as Trump, Qatari Emir press to end Gaza war

  • Summit on UNGA sidelines gathers leaders of Pakistan, Qatar, Jordan, Indonesia and others
  • Leaders urge urgent steps to halt Gaza war that has killed over 65,000 Palestinians

KARACHI: Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif on Tuesday joined an Arab-Islamic Summit hosted by US President Donald Trump and Qatar’s Emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani in New York, where Muslim leaders discussed ways to end the war in Gaza.

Israel’s military offensive in Gaza, launched in October 2023, has killed more than 65,000 Palestinians, mostly women and children, and destroyed large parts of the enclave’s civilian infrastructure, according to Palestinian health authorities.

Growing international frustration with Washington over the war in Gaza spilled into the open at the UN General Assembly this week, with US allies recognizing a Palestinian state in a major test for Trump’s Middle East policy.

“We want to end the war in Gaza. We’re going to end it. Maybe we can end it right now,” Trump said at the Arab-Islamic summit on the sidelines of the UNGA that brought together leaders and ministers from Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Turkiye, Egypt, Jordan, Pakistan and Indonesia.

Trump said Muslim leaders were uniquely placed to help resolve the crisis.

“We have to get the 38 back, and we have to get the 20 back, and I think we’ll be able to do it,” he said. “This is the group that can do it, more than any other group in the world ... So, it’s an honor to be with you.”

Qatar’s emir told the gathering the world was counting on the US president “to end this war and to help the people of Gaza.”

He added: “The situation is very, very bad there. So we are here to meet, to do everything we can to stop this war and to bring the hostages back.”

Sharif, according to his office, met Qatar’s emir, Jordan’s King Abdullah II and Indonesia’s President Prabowo Subianto ahead of the summit. He later held informal talks with Trump and praised him for efforts to resolve global conflicts, including a four-day war between Pakistan and India in May.


Pakistan urges Afghan rulers to ‘rid their soil of terrorists’ at regional meeting in Tehran

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Pakistan urges Afghan rulers to ‘rid their soil of terrorists’ at regional meeting in Tehran

  • Iran hosts meeting of special representatives on Afghanistan from Pakistan, China, Russia, Central Asian countries
  • Pakistan alleges militants use Afghan soil to launch attacks against it, charges the Afghan Taliban deny repeatedly

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s special envoy on Afghanistan Mohammad Sadiq urged rulers in Kabul on Sunday to rid their soil of “terrorists,” saying the move would inspire confidence in its neighbors to engage with the country.

Sadiq, who is Pakistan’s special representative to Afghanistan, was part of a high-level meeting hosted by Iran in Tehran to discuss issues related to Afghanistan. The meeting featured Afghan affairs representatives from Pakistan, Tajikistan, Uzbekistan, Turkmenistan, China and Russia, Iranian state news agency IRNA said. 

Pakistan blames a surge in attacks on its soil on militants it says are based in Afghanistan, a charge Kabul denies. The allegations have caused tensions between the neighbors to rise, resulting in deadly border clashes in October that saw dozens of soldiers killed on both sides. 

“It is imperative that the current de facto rulers [in Afghanistan] take steps to ameliorate their suffering,” Sadiq wrote on social media platform X. 

“And the foremost step in this regard would be to rid their soil indiscriminately of all types of terrorists.”

Sadiq said he agreed with other participating countries during the meeting that the “threat of terrorism” originating from Afghanistan’s soil is a “big challenge” for the region. 

“Also made this point that only an Afghanistan that does not harbor terrorists will inspire confidence in the neighboring and regional countries to meaningfully engage with Afghanistan, helping to realize the country’s immense economic and connectivity potential,” he concluded. 

Officials from Pakistan and Afghanistan engaged in three rounds of peace talks in Türkiye, Qatar and Saudi Arabia since the October clashes but were unable to reach an agreement. 

While Pakistan has vowed it would go after militants in Afghanistan that threaten it, Kabul has said it would retaliate to any act of aggression from Islamabad.