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- Israeli attacks continue across Gaza despite ceasefire claims
- Malaysia’s Anwar Ibrahim welcomes Pakistan’s efforts for Iran–US ceasefire talks
- Pakistan to launch Hajj flights from April 18, schedule announced
- LPG shipment from Oman reaches Pakistan, offloading delayed at Port Qasim
- Ex-CIA chief Brennan says he trusts Iran more than Trump
- St Petersburg hosts key forum on seamless Eurasian links
- Govt considers smart lockdown amid fuel crisis and regional tensions
- Tezgam Express derails near Lodhran, 25 injured; tracks restored
Author: Uzma Ehtasham
Uzma Ehtasham is a seasoned diplomatic correspondent and columnist, known for her insightful analysis of international affairs and nuanced reporting for leading newspapers. Her work bridges global events and local perspectives, providing readers with clear, informed, and engaging commentary.
By Uzma Ehtasham There are moments in diplomacy when a statement is far more than words; it becomes a mirror reflecting deeper anxieties, historical grievances, and ideological fears. Pakistan’s latest pronouncement, issued by its foreign office in Islamabad, is precisely such a moment. Officially, it responded to unusually sharp comments by India’s external affairs minister, S. Jaishankar, who criticized Pakistan’s institutions. On the surface, it was a formal rebuttal, insisting that Pakistan remains a responsible state whose armed forces and institutions safeguard its sovereignty. Yet beneath the measured phrasing, the statement conveys something far weightier: a profound unease over the…
By Uzma Ehtasham Turkey’s reported plans to establish a combat drone manufacturing facility in Pakistan mark a significant chapter in the deepening defence relationship between the two countries, revealing both strategic foresight and a shared ambition to enhance indigenous military capabilities. According to Bloomberg, Ankara intends not only to supply components for stealth and long-range drones to Pakistan for local assembly but also to involve Islamabad in its fifth-generation fighter jet program. While such announcements are still at the stage of discussion, Turkish officials familiar with the plan have described talks as constructive and ongoing, highlighting a mutual commitment to…
By Uzma Ehtasham President Asif Ali Zardari has formally approved a historic restructuring of Pakistan’s military leadership, appointing Field Marshal Syed Asim Munir as both the Chief of Army Staff and the country’s first-ever Chief of Defence Forces (CDF). At the same time, Chief of Air Staff Zaheer Ahmed Babar Sidhu has been granted a two-year extension. Acting on a summary submitted by Prime Minister Shahbaz Sharif, the decision places Munir at the helm of Pakistan’s newly unified military command for five years, signaling a landmark step towards integrated strategic planning and operational cohesion across the armed services. The creation…
By Uzma Ehtasham The testimony of Adeela Baloch, the young nurse accused of planning a suicide attack on behalf of the Baloch Liberation Army, did more than puncture the carefully crafted mythology of an insurgent movement. It forced a reckoning with the darker, hidden economies of coercion that have long sat beneath the rhetoric of resistance in Balochistan. When she spoke publicly last year, first in an interview with Al-Nahar TV and later in a strikingly long and uneasy press conference, she offered a narrative that felt at odds with the heroic portraits militants prefer to paint of themselves. Here…
By Uzma Ehtasham Pakistan’s air force has quietly reached a milestone that could reshape the country’s trajectory in space technology. In a move that signals both ambition and strategic foresight, the Pakistan Air Force (PAF) is preparing to launch its first homegrown nano-satellite, a development that could place operational control of national space assets squarely in the hands of the military. Senior officials confirmed on Wednesday that the satellite, a joint project between the Air Headquarters and the National University of Sciences and Technology (NUST), has successfully cleared all ground-based testing and is now poised to enter orbit, pending the…
By Uzma Ehtasham KARACHI: Sindh Minister for Labor and Social Protection, Saeed Ghani, stressed the importance of empowering women with digital tools, financial knowledge, and confidence to help them participate in the workforce, manage household resources effectively, and strengthen resilience to economic challenges and climate-related shocks. Saeed Ghani was speaking at the launch of the Digital and Financial Literacy Training (DFLT) program by the Sindh Social Protection Authority (SSPA), implemented by the Sustainable Development Policy Institute (SDPI) and supported by the European Union and the German Government through GIZ. Saeed Ghani said the initiative reflected the Sindh government’s broader vision…
By Uzma Ehtasham For many young Pakistanis, the dream of studying in Europe has become a complicated calculus, weighed down by soaring tuition fees, cutthroat scholarship competitions, and the hidden costs of life in cities where a part‑time job barely offsets rent. The allure of prestigious institutions in the United Kingdom, Germany, or France often comes with a heavy price: months of paperwork, endless consultancy fees, and the quiet, gnawing fear that a single misstep could erase months of preparation. In such a landscape of barriers and uncertainty, a lesser‑known alternative is quietly offering a lifeline to those willing to…
By Uzma Ehtasham India faced fresh criticism from Pakistan’s political and religious communities this week after Defence Minister Rajnath Singh suggested that Sindh, though not part of India today, remained “culturally” tied to it and could one day “again become part of India”. His remarks, delivered at a public event in New Delhi, revived long‑standing anxieties over the aggressive rhetoric that has increasingly shaped India’s posture under Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s 11‑year rule. The comments triggered swift outrage in Islamabad, where lawmakers described the remarks as a direct assault on Pakistan’s sovereignty. The National Assembly passed a unanimous resolution condemning…
By Uzma Ehtasham The Trump administration has set in motion a sweeping review of green cards issued to immigrants from nineteen countries, a measure framed as an urgent response to national security concerns. The announcement, delivered with stark emphasis by Joseph Edlow, head of the US Citizenship and Immigration Services, signaled a decisive shift in the administration’s approach to immigration oversight. Edlow confirmed that President Donald Trump had directed a thorough and stringent re-examination of all immigrants from countries deemed to pose a potential risk to the United States, a list that includes Afghanistan, Cuba, Haiti, Iran, Somalia, Venezuela, Myanmar,…
By Uzma Ehtasham In a moment of heightened tension across the region, Pakistan and Iran have demonstrated the rare power of solidarity and shared strategic vision. The recent visit of Dr Ali Ardeshir Larijani, Secretary of Iran’s Supreme National Security Council, to Islamabad was more than a diplomatic courtesy. It represented an affirmation of alignment between two neighbors whose histories, faith, and geography have long intertwined, yet whose relations have often been shaped by the pressures of regional rivalries. Larijani’s public expressions of gratitude for Pakistan’s moral and diplomatic support during Israel’s twelve-day assault on Gaza, combined with his declaration…
