Pakistan condemns Israel for southern Lebanon strike that killed 13

Lebanese army soldiers secure the site of an Israeli airstrike that targeted a building in the southern Lebanese village of Deir Kifa on November 19, 2025. (AFP/File)
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Updated 22 November 2025
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Pakistan condemns Israel for southern Lebanon strike that killed 13

  • Israel’s targeted crowded Ain Al-Helweh Palestinian refugee camp in southern Lebanon on Tuesday 
  • Pakistan’s president urges international community to uphold fragile ceasefire in the Middle East

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s President Asif Ali Zardari this week condemned Israel for its recent strike on a Palestinian refugee camp in southern Lebanon, demanding the withdrawal of Israeli troops from the area and expressing solidarity with the people of Lebanon. 

Israel carried out an airstrike on the Ain Al-Helweh camp in southern Lebanon on Tuesday, which Lebanese authorities said killed at least 13 people. Israel said the strike was carried out at a Hamas training compound, alleging that 13 fighters associated with the group were killed. 

The Pakistani president congratulated Lebanon on its Independence Day, celebrated on Nov. 22 every year, adding that ties between Islamabad and Beirut will remain strong. 

“We strongly condemn Israeli aggression,” Zardari said in a statement issued from the president’s official residence. “We demand the withdrawal of Israeli forces from southern Lebanon.”

The Pakistani president said Islamabad fully supports Lebanon’s sovereignty and territorial integrity, urging the international community to uphold the fragile ceasefire in the Middle East. 

He called for the safe return of displaced Lebanese citizens. 

The crowded Ain Al-Helweh camp, located on the outskirts of the coastal city of Sidon, is the largest Palestinian refugee camp in Lebanon.

Israel has kept up strikes on Lebanon despite a ceasefire agreed last November that sought to halt more than a year of hostilities with Hamas ally Hezbollah, including two months of full-blown war.


OIC’s COMSTECH stresses academic collaborations across Muslim world in Islamabad meeting

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OIC’s COMSTECH stresses academic collaborations across Muslim world in Islamabad meeting

  • COMSTECH holds annual meeting in Islamabad featuring 30 delegates from Iran, Somalia, Palestine, Indonesia and other OIC states
  • Limited pool of skilled professionals one of the foremost challenges facing Muslim world, notes COMSTECH secretary general 

ISLAMABAD: The OIC Standing Committee on Scientific and Technological Cooperation (COMSTECH) called for stronger academic collaboration across Islamic states to secure the future of higher education in the Muslim world, state-run media reported on Saturday. 

COMSTECH’s Coordinator General Prof. Dr. Muhammad Iqbal Choudhary was speaking at the Annual Meeting of the COMSTECH Consortium of Excellence at the organization’s Secretariat in Islamabad. The event brought together vice chancellors, rectors, and senior representatives from leading universities across OIC member and observer states. 

Nearly 30 international delegates representing universities from Iran, Somalia, Palestine, Indonesia, Malaysia, Thailand, Uganda, Bangladesh, Benin, Cameroon, Gabon, Côte d’Ivoire, and Senegal joined their counterparts from several Pakistani institutions at the meeting. Participants attempted to chart a collective path forward for tertiary education in OIC countries.

“Collaborations, knowledge sharing, best practices, exchange of scholars, technology transfer and joint academic programs are vital for overcoming the educational challenges faced across the OIC region,” Choudhary said, according to the state-run Associated Press of Pakistan (APP).

The COMSTECH secretary general noted that one of the foremost developmental challenges facing OIC nations remains the limited pool of skilled professionals and workforce. 

He said this gap can only be bridged through strengthened tertiary education systems and expanded opportunities for knowledge transfer.

Discussions at the event highlighted the urgent need for competency-driven education, modern pedagogical tools, university–industry partnerships and collaborative training programs designed to equip graduates with the skills necessary to address emerging global challenges.

“The Annual Meeting served as a vital platform for reviewing progress achieved over the past year, identifying future priorities, and deepening academic cooperation to promote scientific excellence and sustainable development across the OIC region,” the APP said.