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- PSX slides as KSE-100 index drops sharply during trading
- Bangladesh: Bus falls into Padma River, at least 18 dead
- Iran’s supermarket offers customers credit, asks to pay after war
- Search continues for girl who drowned in water pipeline in Gulshan-e-Hadeed
- Sindh makes online registration mandatory for health officers
- Foreign airlines told to carry return fuel for flights to Pakistan
- US, Israel remove Iranian officials from target list to allow talks
- Early morning rain hits parts of Karachi, more showers likely
Author: admin
The European Union’s new Security Strategy for 2026 may appear, on paper, as a blueprint for a more capable and secure Europe. In practice, however, it represents something far more perilous — a turning point that could push the continent deeper into confrontation and insecurity. This ambitious scheme is not about peace or collective safety. It is, rather, the codification of Europe’s gradual militarization under the pretext of “strategic autonomy” — an agenda that risks transforming Ukraine into a permanent frontline state and the rest of Europe into a tightly controlled military bloc. The European Commission’s insistence on building what…
In the bustling corridors of Istanbul last week, a carefully orchestrated diplomatic engagement between Pakistan and the Afghan Taliban ended, at least for now, with frustration and disillusionment. Pakistan’s foreign office has painted a picture of negotiations conducted in good faith, only to be met repeatedly with what it describes as evasive maneuvers, empty assurances, and a troubling lack of accountability from its counterparts in Kabul. The third round of talks, convened on 7 November under the auspices of Turkey and Qatar, had been framed by Islamabad as a crucial opportunity: a chance to convert verbal commitments into tangible, verifiable…
In a development that promises to reshape Pakistan’s legislative and judicial landscape, the federal cabinet on Saturday approved the 27th constitutional amendment, signaling Islamabad’s intent to resolve longstanding ambiguities in the country’s governance structures. The meeting, chaired by Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif via video link from Baku, underscored the administration’s continued commitment to institutional reform, even as the nation navigates a politically charged environment and heightened public scrutiny. Law Minister Azam Nazir Tarar, who briefed the cabinet on the amendment and presented its draft, emphasized the legal and democratic rationale behind the initiative. The cabinet’s decision to grant clause-by-clause approval…
Pakistan and Afghanistan returned to the negotiating table in Istanbul this week for the third round of talks but deadlock persisted, a meeting that on paper promised a fragile but tangible path towards a ceasefire. Hosted jointly by Turkey and Qatar, the talks brought the delegations face to face after a series of shuttle diplomacy sessions conducted by mediators. The ostensible goal, according to officials in Ankara, was to finalize practical mechanisms to enforce the truce, including monitoring and verification systems that would allow violations to be promptly investigated and addressed. For Islamabad, the test was simple, even if far…
The debate surrounding Pakistan’s potential twenty-seventh constitutional amendment has sparked an unusual degree of attention and scrutiny, reaching deep into the country’s political, legal, and policy-making spheres. Unlike past amendments, which were frequently driven by immediate political expediency or sought broad institutional overhauls, this proposal appears deliberate, measured, and reflective. It does not seek to expand the reach of existing institutions for partisan advantage, nor does it aim to redraw the balance of power in dramatic fashion. Instead, its focus is on refinement—on making established structures more coherent, efficient, and resilient. In many ways, this signals a maturing political consciousness:…
The government’s decision to push the 27th Constitutional Amendment through both houses of parliament by 14 November is more than a procedural milestone. It is, in essence, a political reckoning—a test of strength, strategy, and, above all, of Pakistan’s fragile democratic maturity. The move, planned to be spearheaded by the Senate before reaching the National Assembly, has already begun to expose familiar fissures in the coalition and, equally, the quiet calculations that now define parliamentary politics in Islamabad. The amendment, the details of which remain closely held, represents a broader attempt to adjust the constitutional machinery in light of ongoing…
