Islamabad hosts speakers’ moot featuring delegates from over 40 nations, including Saudi Arabia, Palestine

A general view of the Pakistan's Parliament House during the presidential election in Islamabad on March 9, 2024. (AFP/ file)
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Updated 11 November 2025
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Islamabad hosts speakers’ moot featuring delegates from over 40 nations, including Saudi Arabia, Palestine

  • This is Inter-Parliamentary Speakers’ Conference’s inaugural assembly since it was formed in April 2025
  • Conference is designed as platform for parliamentary leaders to discuss peace, security, legislative cooperation

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan is hosting a two-day Inter-Parliamentary Speakers’ Conference (ISC) in the capital city of Islamabad today, Tuesday, with representatives from over 40 nations including Saudi Arabia and Palestine attending. 

The ISC was constituted in Seoul in April 2025 under its founding chairman Syed Yousuf Raza Gilani, who also serves as Pakistan’s current Senate chairman. The ISC features more than 45 speakers of parliaments across the world as its members, according to its website. This will be its first assembly since it was formed earlier this year. 

The two-day conference, which is being held in Islamabad from Nov. 11-12, brings together speakers, deputy speakers and parliamentary representatives from over 40 countries in an effort to expand Pakistan’s role in global parliamentary diplomacy, according to event organizers. It comes at a moment of heightened regional tensions, particularly surrounding the humanitarian crisis in Gaza and shifting alignments in the Middle East and South Asia.

“Ladies and gentlemen, parliaments as the custodians of the people’s will and the democratically elected representatives of their aspirations, have a unique and indispensable role to play in this endeavor,” Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif said in his address. 

“We are guardians of the most precious hope and sacred trust that our people have reposed in us.”

State broadcaster Radio Pakistan reported that delegations from Saudi Arabia, Malaysia, Palestine, Algeria, Barbados, Azerbaijan, Uzbekistan, Kenya, Tajikistan Morocco, Maldives, Serbia, Philippines and Rwanda have already arrived in Islamabad for the conference. 

It said the ISC reflected Pakistan’s growing role in advancing global parliamentary diplomacy.

The conference is designed as a platform for parliamentary leaders to exchange views on peace, security, development and legislative cooperation, including how elected bodies can address shared global challenges. Organizers say discussions are expected to cover economic resilience, digital governance, conflict mediation, humanitarian relief cooperation, climate adaptation and parliamentary transparency.

Pakistan has stepped up parliamentary diplomacy in recent years, seeking to expand political ties beyond the executive branch and build coalitions on issues such as Gaza, Kashmir, climate vulnerability and developing-country debt reform. 


Pakistan’s Sharif congratulates Bangladesh PM hopeful on ‘resounding victory’ in election

Updated 27 min 46 sec ago
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Pakistan’s Sharif congratulates Bangladesh PM hopeful on ‘resounding victory’ in election

  • At 60, BNP’s Tarique Rahman is preparing to take charge of Bangladesh, driven by what he calls an ambition to ‘do better’
  • The election comes nearly a year and half after the ouster of Sheikh Hasina in a deadly uprising in the South Asian nation

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif on Friday congratulated Tarique Rahman on the “resounding victory” of his Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) in parliamentary elections, saying that he looked forward to working closely with the new Bangladeshi leadership.

BNP’s media unit said on X Friday it had secured enough seats in Parliament to govern on its own, though rival group Jamaat-e-Islami raised concerns over delayed results. The final tally has not yet been announced by the Election Commission, but several local media outlets reported the BNP crossing the 151-seat threshold needed for a majority in the 300-member Parliament.

BNP is headed by the 60-year-old Rahman, its prime ministerial candidate who returned to Bangladesh in December after 17 years in self-exile in London. He is the son of former Prime Minister Khaleda Zia, who died in December.

“I extend my warmest felicitations to Mr. Tarique Rahman on leading the BNP to a resounding victory in the Parliamentary elections in Bangladesh,” Sharif said on X. “I also congratulate the people of Bangladesh on the successful conduct of the elections.”

Sharif’s statement comes amid Islamabad’s efforts to rebuild relations with Bangladesh, amid a thaw in relations between the two countries. Pakistan and Bangladesh were part of the same country until Bangladesh’s secession following a bloody civil war in 1971, an event that long cast a shadow over bilateral ties.

Both countries have moved closer since August 2024 following the ouster of Hasina, who was considered an India ally, in a mass uprising. 

“I look forward to working closely with the new Bangladesh leadership to further strengthen our historic, brotherly multifaceted bilateral relations and advance our shared goals of peace, stability, and development in South Asia and beyond,” Sharif said.