Pakistan, Saudi Arabia discuss security cooperation, legal status for Rohingya Muslims in Kingdom

In a screengrab taken from a video shared by Government of Pakistan on November 25, 2025, Pakistan's Interior Minister, Mohsin Naqvi (left) in conversation with Saudi Arabia's Interior Minister Prince Abdulaziz bin Saud bin Naif in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. (Government of Pakistan)
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Updated 25 November 2025
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Pakistan, Saudi Arabia discuss security cooperation, legal status for Rohingya Muslims in Kingdom

  • Pakistani interior minister meets Saudi counterpart to strengthen policing and security ties
  • Both sides agree to launch training exchanges, hold next working group meeting in December

KARACHI: Pakistan’s Interior Minister Mohsin Naqvi held talks with Saudi Interior Minister Prince Abdulaziz bin Saud bin Naif in Riyadh on Tuesday, with discussions focused on security cooperation, police training exchanges and resolving the long-standing legal status of Rohingya Muslims living in the Kingdom.

Saudi Arabia hosts a large Pakistani diaspora and remains one of Pakistan’s closest security partners. The two countries routinely cooperate on counterterrorism, policing and law enforcement, while Pakistan has long advocated for regularizing the legal status of Rohingya Muslims who migrated to the Kingdom decades ago.

“Talks were also held regarding resolving the long-standing issue of the legal status of Rohingya Muslims,” the Pakistani interior ministry said in a statement. 

During the meeting, the two sides reviewed security cooperation and agreed to establish training exchange programs for police and paramilitary forces. They also decided that the Pakistan–Saudi Interior Ministries Working Group will convene its next session next month.

The Saudi interior minister, according to the statement, thanked Naqvi for Pakistan’s role in efforts related to the legal status of Rohingya Muslims and conveyed condolences over Monday’s suicide attack on the Federal Constabulary headquarters in Peshawar in which three personnel were killed. 

General Fayyadh bin Hameed Al-Rowaili, Chief of General Staff (CGS) of the Saudi armed forces, also visited Pakistan this week and held separate meetings with Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif, Pakistan Army Chief Field Marshal Asim Munir and Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Committee General Sahir Shamshad Mirza.


Pakistan condemns Sudan attack that killed Bangladeshi UN peacekeepers, calls it war crime

Updated 14 December 2025
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Pakistan condemns Sudan attack that killed Bangladeshi UN peacekeepers, calls it war crime

  • Six peacekeepers were killed in a drone strike in Kadugli as fighting between Sudan’s army and the RSF grinds on
  • Pakistan, a major troop contributor to the UN, says perpetrators of the attack must be identified, brought to justice

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan on Sunday extended condolences to the government and people of Bangladesh after six United Nations peacekeepers from the country were killed in a drone strike in southern Sudan, condemning the attack and describing it as a war crime.

The attack took place amid a full-scale internal conflict that erupted in April 2023 between the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) and the Rapid Support Forces (RSF), a powerful paramilitary group, following a power struggle after the collapse of Sudan’s post-Bashir political transition.

Omar Al-Bashir, who ruled Sudan for nearly three decades, was ousted by the military in 2019 after months of mass protests, but efforts to transition to civilian rule later faltered, plunging the country back into violence that has since spread nationwide.

The drone strike hit a logistics base of the United Nations Interim Security Force for Abyei (UNISFA) in Kadugli, the capital of South Kordofan state, on Saturday, killing the Bangladeshi peacekeepers. Sudan’s army blamed the RSF for the attack, though there was no immediate public claim of responsibility.

“Pakistan strongly condemns the attack on @UNISFA in Kadugli, resulting in the tragic loss of 6 Bangladeshi peacekeepers & injuries to several others,” the country’s permanent mission to the UN said in a social media message. “We honor their supreme sacrifice in the service of peace, and express our deepest condolences to the government and people of #Bangladesh.”

“Such heinous attacks on UN peacekeepers amount to war crimes,” it added. “Perpetrators of this horrific attack must be identified and brought to justice. As a major troop-contributing country, we stand in complete solidarity with all Blue Helmets serving the cause of peace in the perilous conditions worldwide.”

According to Pakistan’s UN mission in July, the country has deployed more than 235,000 peacekeepers to 48 UN missions across four continents over the past eight decades.

Pakistan also hosts one of the UN’s oldest peacekeeping operations, the United Nations Military Observer Group in India and Pakistan (UNMOGIP), and is a founding member of the UN Peacebuilding Commission.

More than 180 Pakistani peacekeepers have lost their lives while serving under the UN flag.

Pakistan and Bangladesh have also been working in recent months to ease decades of strained ties rooted in the events of 1971, when Bangladesh — formerly part of Pakistan — became independent following a bloody war.

Relations have begun to shift following the ouster of former Bangladeshi prime minister Sheikh Hasina last year amid mass protests.

Hasina later fled to India, Pakistan’s neighbor and arch-rival, creating space for Islamabad and Dhaka to rebuild their relationship.