Pakistan using diplomatic means to bring back nationals after Gaza aid flotilla raid – Ishaq Dar

Ishaq Dar, Deputy Prime Minister and Minister for Foreign Affairs of Pakistan, speaks during a High-level International Conference for the Peaceful Settlement of the Question of Palestine and the Implementation of the Two-State Solution at UN headquarters in New York City, US, July 28, 2025. (Reuters/File)
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Updated 03 October 2025
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Pakistan using diplomatic means to bring back nationals after Gaza aid flotilla raid – Ishaq Dar

  • Pakistan and Israel have no diplomatic relations and maintain hostile stance over the Palestinian issue
  • Last month, the UN envoys of the two countries exchanged sharp words at a Security Council session

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s Deputy Prime Minister Ishaq Dar said on Friday the government was closely monitoring developments related to the Gaza aid flotilla, adding that it was using diplomatic channels to secure the safe return of its nationals, including a Pakistani politician in Israel’s detention.

The flotilla, intercepted by Israeli forces earlier this week, had set sail in late August and was carrying medicine and food to the Palestinian enclave. It comprised more than 40 civilian vessels and around 500 parliamentarians, lawyers and activists, including Swedish campaigner Greta Thunberg and former Pakistani senator Mushtaq Ahmad Khan, who were all detained as they attempted to breach Gaza’s humanitarian blockade.

Israel’s siege began in March and has led to widespread starvation and child malnutrition.

Media reports said earlier in the day the Israeli government had started deporting the detained activists after far-right National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir was filmed visiting the site where they were being held, accusing them of supporting “terrorism.”

“Pakistan Foreign Office has been closely following the situation concerning the Sumud Flotilla and taking all possible steps to ensure the safety of our nationals,” Dar said in a post on social media. “According to our latest feedback, only former Senator Mushtaq Ahmad Khan remains in Israeli detention.”

He said that over the past 36 hours, Pakistan had been actively engaged in diplomatic outreach, including through friendly countries, to ensure the safety and early return of all its nationals.

Dar reiterated Pakistan’s condemnation of Israel’s interception of the flotilla in international waters while en route to deliver humanitarian aid to Gaza and called for the immediate release of all detainees.

PM CALLS JI CHIEF

Meanwhile, Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif spoke by phone with the leader of ex-senator Khan’s party to discuss the Middle East situation and the flotilla case.

“Pakistan has always raised its voice for our Palestinian brothers and sisters at every international forum and will continue to do so,” Sharif told Jamaat-e-Islami (JI) chief Hafiz Naeemur Rehman, according to a statement released by his office.

“The government is playing an active role to ensure the safe return of all Pakistanis detained from the Global Sumud Flotilla, especially former senator Mushtaq Ahmad Khan, through engagement with friendly countries and international organizations,” he added.

Sharif also emphasized the urgency of a ceasefire in Gaza and reiterated Pakistan’s long-standing position in favor of the establishment of a Palestinian state based on pre-1967 borders, with East Jerusalem as its capital.

Pakistan does not recognize Israel and has always spoken in favor of the Palestinian right to self-determination.

Last month, the UN envoys of the two countries exchanged sharp words at a Security Council session following Israel’s airstrike in Doha, which Pakistan opposed.

Israel also maintains close ties with Pakistan’s archrival India, whose military used Israeli drones during the four-day military conflict with Pakistan, the only Muslim-majority nation with nuclear weapons.


Kazakhstan offers to finance rail link to Pakistan ports via Afghanistan

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Kazakhstan offers to finance rail link to Pakistan ports via Afghanistan

  • Kazakh envoy says country ready to fully fund Central Asia-Pakistan rail corridor
  • Project revives Pakistan’s regional connectivity push despite Afghan border disruptions

ISLAMABAD: Kazakhstan has offered to fully finance a proposed railway linking Central Asia to Pakistan’s ports via Afghanistan, according to a media report, a move that could revive long-stalled regional connectivity plans and deepen Pakistan’s role as a transit hub for landlocked economies.

The proposal would connect Kazakhstan to Pakistan’s ports of Karachi and Gwadar through Turkmenistan and Afghanistan, providing Central Asia with direct access to warm waters and offering Pakistan a long-sought overland trade corridor to the region.

“We are not asking Pakistan for a single penny,” Kazakhstan’s ambassador to Pakistan, Yerzhan Kistafin, said in an interview with Geo News on Tuesday. “This is not aid. It is a mutually beneficial investment.”

Pakistan has for years sought to position itself as a gateway for Central Asian trade, offering its ports to landlocked economies as part of a broader strategy to integrate South and Central Asia.

However, its ambition has faced setbacks, most recently in October last year when border skirmishes with Afghanistan prompted Islamabad to shut key crossings, suspending transit and bilateral trade.

Kistafin said the rail project would treat Afghanistan not as an obstacle but as a transit partner, arguing that trade and connectivity could help stabilize the country.

“Connectivity creates responsibility,” he said. “Trade creates incentives for peace.”

Under the proposed plan, rail cargo would move from Kazakhstan through Turkmenistan to western Afghanistan before entering Pakistan at Chaman and linking with the national rail network.

Geo News reported the Afghan segment, spanning about 687 kilometers, is expected to take roughly three years to build once agreements are finalized, with Kazakhstan financing the project.