Pakistan invited to Muslim states’ meeting in Turkiye on next steps for Gaza peace plan

US President Donald Trump (center) speaking next to US Secretary of State Marco Rubio during a multilateral meeting with Turkey's President Tayyip Erdogan, Jordan's King Abdullah, Pakistan's Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif, Egypt's Prime Minister Mostafa Madbouly, Saudi Arabia's Foreign Minister Faisal bin Farhan Al-Saud, Qatar's Emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani, Indonesia's President Prabowo Subianto and United Arab Emirates' Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Foreign Affairs Abdullah bin Zayed Al Nahyan, during the 80th United Nations General Assembly, in New York City, New York, U.S., September 23, 2025. (Reuters/File)
Short Url
Updated 31 October 2025
Follow

Pakistan invited to Muslim states’ meeting in Turkiye on next steps for Gaza peace plan

  • Invited countries met US President Donald Trump in September before the plan was unveiled
  • Turkiye says it will discuss implementation of the plan, accuses Israel of trying to undermine it

ISTANBUL: Turkiye will on Monday host a meeting of foreign ministers from Muslim countries to discuss a US peace plan for Gaza, Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan said.

Fidan told reporters on Friday that the Istanbul meeting would “evaluate our progress and discuss what we can achieve together in the next stage.”

A ministry spokesman said ministers from Egypt, Indonesia, Jordan, Pakistan, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates had all been invited.

The foreign ministers of all these countries met US President Donald Trump on September 23 on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly in New York.

“A glimmer of hope emerged, offering a glimmer of hope for everyone,” Fidan said during a joint news conference with his Estonian counterpart Margus Tsahkna.

There were a number of issues that needed to be addressed at the meeting, he said.

“What are the obstacles to its implementation? What are the challenges to be faced? What are the next steps? What will we be discussing with our Western friends? And what support is there for the ongoing talks with the United States?“

Fidan accused Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of “looking for a pretext to violate the ceasefire [in Gaza] and relaunch the genocide under the eyes of the whole world.”

Turkiye sent an 81-strong distaster response team to Gaza a week ago to help with search and rescue operations.

But it is still waiting at the border for Israeli approval to enter the Palestinian territory, said Fidan.

The foreign ministry was still “working intensively” and its army was discussing the possibility of joining the international force to oversee the ceasefire, said Fidan.

But Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Saar said on Monday it would not be reasonable for them to let Turkiye participate because of their “hostile approach” to Israel.

“So it is not reasonable for us to let their armed forces enter [the] Gaza Strip, and we will not agree to that, and we said it to our American friends,” said Saar.


Pakistani students recount perilous journey home from Iran as Middle East conflict escalates

Updated 13 sec ago
Follow

Pakistani students recount perilous journey home from Iran as Middle East conflict escalates

  • 792 Pakistanis repatriated via land and air corridors, officials say
  • Many evacuees are students enrolled in Iranian universities

ISLAMABAD: Hundreds of Pakistani students are fleeing Iran this week as escalating hostilities in the Middle East spill across key population centers, forcing them to abandon studies and undertake perilous overland journeys back home.

Iran has been rocked since last week by joint US and Israeli strikes that killed Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, followed by retaliatory missile attacks targeting American military bases across the Gulf region. The escalation has disrupted air travel, heightened military activity along Iran’s southern coastline and turned strategic locations such as Bandar Abbas, near the Strait of Hormuz through which roughly 20 percent of global oil supplies pass, into flashpoints.

Among those returning is Misbah Hussain, a 22-year-old medical student from Pakistan’s coastal district of Badin in Sindh province. Her education in Iran’s Hormozgan province, which borders the Strait of Hormuz, was abruptly cut short by missile strikes near her university hostel.

“I cannot put those scenes into words,” said Hussain, describing the attacks near her hostel at the Hormozgan University of Medical Sciences in the Iranian coastal city of Bandar Abbas.

She said she had traveled by road from Bandar Abbas to the Pakistan-Iran border, changing three to four different cabs along the way as the security situation deteriorated. After crossing into Pakistan, she continued her journey to Karachi via the coastal highway in a vehicle arranged by the local administration, before heading onward to her hometown of Badin, where, she said, her family would witness her “second life.”

“Missiles landed a short distance from where we were staying,” she said, “and continued during our journey back. We could see missiles hitting along the way. There were moments when we felt we might not survive.”

Bandar Abbas, Iran’s main southern port, has seen intensified military activity in recent days as regional airspace remains largely restricted. Students described sirens, outgoing missile launches and the constant fear of further escalation.

“I had gone there 13 days ago, and the conditions worsened,” Hussain added, noting that examinations were abruptly canceled as students fled the city.

The students’ journey home has proved arduous. From Bandar Abbas, they traveled east through Iran’s Sistan-Baluchestan province toward the Gabd-Rimdan border crossing into Pakistan’s southwestern province of Balochistan. The route, normally a commercial corridor, has become a critical evacuation pathway for the roughly 35,000 Pakistanis currently residing in Iran, according to officials.

Nazir Hussain, another student at the university, described a chaotic departure marked by transport shortages and inflated fares.

“We left Iran under extreme fear,” Nazir told Arab News over the phone as he neared his home city of Hyderabad. “Transport was unreliable, drivers exploited the situation by charging excessive fares. At every stage, we felt uncertain and unsafe.”

The overland journey to the Gabd border spans nearly 800 kilometers (about 497 miles) from Bandar Abbas. Students said they could not wait for formal evacuation arrangements.

“We couldn’t wait for the government help to arrive. We just left a warzone, and this is what we could do, but the journey was extremely painful,” Nazir said.

After crossing into Pakistan, many students were assisted by local authorities in Gwadar before undertaking another nearly 700-kilometer (435-mile) journey to major cities such as Karachi and Hyderabad.

Speaking at a press conference, Pakistan’s Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Ishaq Dar said on Tuesday a 24-hour crisis management unit has been activated to assist Pakistani nationals across the Gulf, where an estimated 4.5 million Pakistanis live and work.

According to government figures, 792 Pakistanis have been repatriated from Iran so far, including 650 who crossed through the Gabd-Rimdan and Taftan border crossings in the past 48 hours. A significant number of those returning are students enrolled in Iranian universities.

“The safety of Pakistanis abroad and the sovereignty of Pakistan remain our foremost priorities,” Dar told reporters in Islamabad, adding that Azerbaijan has been designated as an additional evacuation base for Pakistanis in northern Iran.

Despite official assurances that authorities are working “round the clock,” some students say support on the ground has been limited.

“Assistance with transport and communication could make an enormous difference for students stranded in dangerous situations,” Nazir said. “But, unfortunately, in our case it didn’t exist.”

Officials estimate that around 3,000 Pakistani students remain in Iran. With airspace disruptions and ongoing hostilities, many face the difficult decision of staying in a volatile environment or risking long overland travel to reach safety.

“We had only heard about death before,” student Misbah Hussain said. “This time we saw it with our own eyes.”