Pakistan urges world to ‘act swiftly’ to halt accelerated glacier melt at COP30

This aerial photograph taken on September 5, 2022 shows the makeshift tents of internally displaced flood-affected people after heavy monsoon rains at Dera Allah Yar town in Jaffarabad district of Balochistan province. (AFP/File)
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Updated 16 November 2025
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Pakistan urges world to ‘act swiftly’ to halt accelerated glacier melt at COP30

  • Pakistan is home to over 7,253 glaciers, containing more glacial ice than any other country outside polar regions
  • Unprecedented changes across glacier systems disrupting water supplies, food production, says climate minister

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s Minister for Climate Change Dr. Musadik Malik warned the international community on Sunday that accelerated glacier melt in the Hindukush-Karakorum-Himalaya (HKH) Mountain range is placing millions at risk, state media reported. 

Pakistani officials and experts have warned that unusually high temperatures in the country’s northern areas are resulting in the rapid melting of glaciers. Islamabad has highlighted that this prolonged melting phenomenon could lead to water shortages and threaten lives in the longer run. 

Pakistan is home to more than 7,253 known glaciers and contains more glacial ice than any other country on earth outside the polar regions. Almost all these glaciers lie in the northern region of Gilgit-Baltistan and the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province.

“Pakistan has urged the international community to act swiftly to protect the rapidly deteriorating cryosphere, warning that accelerated glacier melt in the Hindu Kush–Karakoram–Himalaya (HKH) region is placing millions at increasing risk,” state-run Associated Press of Pakistan (APP) reported. 

Dr. Malik was speaking at a virtual high-level dialogue during the ongoing COP30 summit in Belem, Brazil. The minister said the world is witnessing “unprecedented” changes across glacier systems, permafrost zones and snow-covered regions.

“He warned that these shifts are already disrupting water supplies, food production and the safety of mountain communities,” APP said. 

Glaciers are an essential source and provide around 70 percent of fresh water for Pakistan that flows into the rivers, supplying drinking water to humans, ecological habitats and for agricultural activity, and even powers electricity.

Dr. Malik said the HKH— often referred to as earth’s “Third Pole,” is warming nearly twice as fast as the global average, threatening the largest freshwater store outside the polar regions.

Participants from Turkiye, Azerbaijan, Nepal and Bhutan at the conference called for stronger regional frameworks for scientific cooperation, improved early-warning systems and targeted investments to boost community preparedness,” the state-run media said. 

Pakistan, despite contributing less than 1 percent to global greenhouse gas emissions, is counted among the countries that are at most risk from climate change. 

Heavy rains, coupled with the melting of glaciers in 2022 submerged a third of the country at one point. The cataclysmic floods killed at least 1,700 people, affected over 33 million and caused damages of over $30 billion, Islamabad estimated. 

Pakistan also saw a deadly monsoon season this year, with heavy rains and the melting of glaciers killing over 1,000 people from late June onwards. Floods in the eastern Punjab province destroyed large swathes of crops and affected over 4.6 million people in late August. 


Pakistani man convicted in US in political assassination plot tied to Iranian paramilitary

Updated 07 March 2026
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Pakistani man convicted in US in political assassination plot tied to Iranian paramilitary

  • Asif Merchant, 47, worked for Pakistani banks for decades before going into clothing and other businesses
  • He testified he met a Revolutionary Guard operative who gave him countersurveillance training, assignments

NEW YORK: A Pakistani business owner who tried to hire hit men to kill a US politician was convicted Friday in a trial that showcased allegations of Iran-backed plotting on American soil.

As the Iran war unfolded in the Mideast, Asif Merchant acknowledged in a US court that he sought to put an assassination in motion during the 2024 presidential campaign — a plot that was quickly disrupted by American investigators before it had a chance to proceed.

A jury in Brooklyn convicted Merchant on terrorism and murder for hire charges.

The verdict after only a couple hours of deliberations followed a weeklong trial that included remarkable testimony from Merchant himself.

Merchant told the jury he was carrying out instructions from a contact in the Islamic Republic’s powerful paramilitary Revolutionary Guard. According to Merchant, the handler never specified a target but broached names including then-candidate Donald Trump, then-President Joe Biden and Nikki Haley, the former UN ambassador who was also in the race for a time.

The Iranian government has denied trying to kill US officials.

The nascent plot fell apart after Merchant showed an acquaintance what he had in mind by using objects on a napkin to depict a shooting at a rally. He asked the man to help him hire assassins. Instead, he was introduced to undercover FBI agents who were secretly recording him, as had the acquaintance.

Merchant told the supposed hit men he needed services that could include killing “some political person” and paid them $5,000 in cash in a parked car in Manhattan.

“This man landed on American soil hoping to kill President Trump — instead, he was met with the might of American law enforcement,” US Attorney General Pam Bondi said in a statement released after the conviction.

Merchant’s attorney, Avraham Moskowitz, didn’t immediately reply to a message seeking comment.

Merchant, 47, worked for Pakistani banks for decades before going into clothing and other businesses. He has two families, in Pakistan and Iran, and he sometimes visited the US for his garment business.

Merchant testified that he met a Revolutionary Guard intelligence operative about three years ago. The contact gave him countersurveillance training and assignments including the assassination scheme, Merchant said.

He maintained that he had to do his handler’s bidding to protect loved ones in Iran. The defendant said he reluctantly went through the motions but thought he’d be arrested and explain his situation to authorities before anyone was killed.

“I was going along with it,” he said, speaking in Urdu through a court interpreter.

Prosecutors emphasized that Merchant admitted taking steps to enact the plan on behalf of the Revolutionary Guard, which the US considers a foreign terrorist organization, and he didn’t proactively go to authorities.

Instead, he was packing for a flight to Pakistan when he was arrested on July 12, 2024, a day before an unrelated attempt on Trump’s life in Butler, Pennsylvania. Officials said it appeared the Butler gunman acted alone but that they had been tracking a threat on Trump’s life from Iran, a claim that the Islamic Republic called “unsubstantiated and malicious.”

When Merchant subsequently spoke to FBI agents to explore the possibility of a cooperation agreement, he didn’t say he had acted out of fear for his family.

Prosecutors argued that he didn’t back up a defense of acting under duress. Merchant sought to persuade jurors he simply didn’t think the agents would believe him because they seemed to “think that I am some type of super-spy,” which he said he was “absolutely not.”