Iran Supreme Leader’s killing fuels protests, complicates Pakistan’s ties with US

1 / 2
U.S. President Donald Trump looks at Pakistan's Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif speaking following the official signing of the first phase of the Gaza ceasefire agreement between Israel and Hamas, during a world leaders' summit on ending the Gaza war, in Sharm El-Sheikh, Egypt, on October 13, 2025. (REUTERS/File)
2 / 2
A billboard with a picture of Iran's slain supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei is seen installed on a building at the Valiasr Square in Tehran on March 5, 2026. (AFP)
Short Url
Updated 05 March 2026
Follow

Iran Supreme Leader’s killing fuels protests, complicates Pakistan’s ties with US

  • Deadly unrest erupts after demonstrators breach US consulate in Karachi, with at least 26 killed nationwide 
  • Pakistan is home to world’s second-largest Shiite population after Iran, making Khamenei killing sensitive domestically

LAHORE: Pakistan’s efforts to preserve close ties with President Donald Trump ‌are being put to the test after protesters stormed the US consulate in Karachi last week and poured onto streets elsewhere over the killing of Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei in US and Israeli strikes.

Islamabad is looking to balance the anger among its minority Shiite Muslim community, the second-largest in the world after Iran, and its ​alliance with Washington, underlined by its membership of Trump’s Board of Peace this year, where Israel also has a seat at the table.

Complicating the challenge is Pakistan’s worst fighting in years with Afghanistan, the other nation on its western border along with Iran.

Pakistan’s relationship with the US has strengthened since Trump returned to the White House last year, ending more than a decade on Washington’s blacklist and providing a useful counterbalance to its troubled ties with India. The mercurial Trump has a close relationship with Field Marshal Asim Munir, the most powerful man in Pakistan.

Pakistan also maintains deep military, economic and political ties with Saudi Arabia and recently signed a strategic defense pact that states aggression against either state should be treated as an attack on both.

Saudi Arabia and other Gulf states have been targeted by Iran in its counter-strikes following the US and ‌Israel attacks.

“Pakistan is trying ‌to maintain domestic peace by expressing solidarity with Iran, while it also risks being pulled ​into ‌the orbit ⁠of the ​war ⁠by the US and Saudis,” said Arsalan Khan, assistant professor at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville.

“If the war progresses, then it may find itself making trade-offs between domestic peace and its geopolitical commitments.”

The government has not commented on the issue, although a senior security official told Reuters: “Balancing relationships and blowback is the most pressing issue for Pakistan.”

NEW SPIRIT OF REVOLUTION’

At least 26 people were killed as protesters clashed with police following news on Sunday of the death of Khamenei, seen by Pakistan’s Shiites as their spiritual leader. In Karachi, US Marines fired on protesters who breached the walls of the consulate, two US officials have said. Video footage of the incident showed some of the protesters were armed and fired into the compound.

Senior Shiite clerics in Pakistan ⁠have announced days of mourning and warned that more protests would follow, which could lead to bursts ‌of instability in its main cities, analysts said.

Khamenei’s “death has not weakened the Shiites but ‌united them with a new spirit of revolution and independence from the slavery of the ​US and its allies,” Shiite cleric Sajid Ali Naqvi told Reuters.

Shiites, or ‌Shias in the Urdu language, make up about one-fifth of Pakistan’s 240 million people. The vast majority of Pakistan’s people are Sunni ‌Muslims.

The minority community has often been targeted in sectarian attacks, including by Islamic State and the Sunni Islamist group Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan.

A schism between Sunnis and Shiites developed after the Prophet Muhammad died in 632 when his followers could not agree on a successor. Emotions over the issue have boiled through to modern times, and have even pushed some countries to the brink of civil war.

PRODUCT OF PAKISTAN’S SECTARIAN HISTORY

Pakistan’s own political history, alongside Khamenei’s revered status, have shaped the Shiite ‌response to the Iranian leader’s killing, said Madiha Tahir, an assistant professor at Yale.

While General Zia ul Haq unleashed a brand of Sunni Muslim Islamization in Pakistan in the 1980s, the 1979 Iranian revolution ⁠created a new source of support ⁠and theological ties for its Shiites.

“Pakistani Shias found themselves marginalized in an increasingly sectarian state and vulnerable to violence,” Tahir said.

“At the same time, the Iranian Revolution meant that they could draw on Iran for aid. It had a profound effect on Shia communities and politics in Pakistan.”

For Pakistan’s Shiites, the Ayatollah in Iran turned into a defender of their identity, said Kamran Bokhari, senior director at the New Lines Institute in Washington.

“Add in anti-Americanism and anti-Israeli sentiment and you can see how this becomes a powerful potion,” he said.

LIKE OUR POPE’

Shiite leaders linked to the Millat-e-Jafaria network and other groups, including the cleric Naqvi, have called for protests and investigations into the killings of demonstrators, and demanded a criminal case against the US consul general.

“He was our representative. He was like our pope,” said Syed Hussain Ali, who runs the digital platform Hussaini Khayal and organized a vigil to mourn Khamenei.

Officially, Pakistan Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif has condemned Khamenei’s killing, calling it a “violation of international law.”

But he did not name the US and also said “Pakistan stands in full solidarity with Saudi Arabia and our brotherly Gulf countries in this perilous time.”

Analysts ​say the Shiite protests could fade in time but the deaths ​of demonstrators may keep tensions alive, especially with funerals for those killed drawing large crowds.

“Each one of those deaths is a reminder of the embattled place of Shias within Pakistan,” Tahir said. “There is definite potential for this to continue.”


Pakistani religious parties call nationwide protests over US-Israel strikes on Iran

Updated 7 sec ago
Follow

Pakistani religious parties call nationwide protests over US-Israel strikes on Iran

  • Public anger has been on the rise in Pakistan amid US, Israeli strikes on Iran
  • Nationwide protests have claimed lives of at least 25 people in the country

ISLAMABAD: Pakistani religio-political parties have called for nationwide protests on Friday over ongoing United States-Israeli strikes on Iran and the killing of Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, they said, amid Iran’s retaliatory strikes on Israel and US interests in the Gulf region.

Khamenei was killed in the first hours of the US-Israeli air campaign that began on Saturday in the first assassination of a country’s top ruler by an airstrike. His killing sparked violent protests in Pakistan, with at least 25 people killed in clashes with law enforcers.

The joint air assault ⁠is nearing the ⁠end of its first week after opening salvos killed Iran’s leaders and set off a regional war, with Iranian retaliatory attacks in Israel, the Gulf and Iraq, and Israeli extending scope of its attacks to Iran’s ally ⁠Hezbollah in Lebanon.

“Today, Jamaat-e-Islami (JI) will hold peaceful protests to condemn the joint US-Israeli strikes on Iran and express solidarity with the Iranian people,” Salman Shaikh, the JI media director, told Arab News on Friday. “Demonstrations are scheduled to take place after Jummah (Friday) prayers outside mosques as well as at all district headquarters across Pakistan.”

Anger has been on the rise in Pakistan, particularly among members of the Shiite minority, amid US and Israeli strikes on Iran that have killed Khamenei and other senior officials. While Shiites are a minority nationwide, they form a majority in some northern districts and boast significant numbers in major urban centers.

Demonstrators in Pakistan’s southern port city of Karachi also stormed the US Consulate on Sunday, smashing windows and attempting to burn the building. Police responded with batons, tear gas, and gunfire, leaving 10 people dead and more than 50 injured.

Senator Raja Nasir, chief of the Majlis Wahdatul Muslimeen (MWM) party, said his party’s workers and supporters would hold peaceful protests across the country after Friday prayers over the killing of Khamenei and the “open aggression” of the United States and Israel.

“These peaceful protests are not just a reaction, but a clear declaration of resistance against oppression, tyranny and global colonialism,” he said on X. “Their aim is to awaken the Muslim Ummah, express solidarity with the oppressed, and send a message to the world that the voice of truth and justice cannot be suppressed.”

Meanwhile, security have been beefed up and routes leading to sensitive government and diplomatic buildings in Pakistan’s capital of Islamabad have been closed by authorities to prevent any untoward incident.

Demonstrators in Pakistan’s southern port city of Karachi stormed the US Consulate on Sunday, smashing windows and attempting to burn the building. Police responded with batons, tear gas, and gunfire, leaving 10 people dead and more than 50 injured.

The US embassy and its consulates in Karachi and Lahore canceled visa appointments and American Citizen Services on Monday, citing security concerns.