By Staff Reporter
ISLAMABAD: Security forces killed 54 militants attempting to cross from Afghanistan in a major operation over two nights, the military said on Sunday, describing it as the deadliest single engagement in its anti-terrorism campaign.
By Staff Reporter
ISLAMABAD: Security forces killed 54 militants attempting to cross from Afghanistan in a major operation over two nights, the military said on Sunday, describing it as the deadliest single engagement in its anti-terrorism campaign.
ISLAMABAD: A sharp rise in the River Jhelum’s water level sent residents of Muzaffarabad scrambling to higher ground on Saturday, as fears mounted that India’s suspension of the Indus Waters Treaty had triggered deliberate flooding downstream.
ISLAMABAD: Pakistan has asked China to expand its currency swap line by 10 billion yuan, Finance Minister Muhammad Aurangzeb said, as the cash-strapped nation seeks to bolster reserves and plans a debut panda bond by year-end to diversify funding.
ISLAMABAD: The military said on Saturday that two soldiers were killed, and 15 militants were eliminated in three separate intelligence-based operations in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, as the country battles a surge in militant violence.
ISLAMABAD: World Liberty Financial (WLF), a decentralised finance (DeFi) platform backed by US President Donald Trump, has signed a landmark Letter of Intent (LoI) with the Pakistan Crypto Council (PCC) to accelerate blockchain innovation, stablecoin adoption, and DeFi integration across Pakistan.
Monitoring Desk
ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s defence minister on Friday rejected accusations of Islamabad’s involvement in a terror attack that killed 26 people this week in occupied Kashmir, calling for an international investigation into the incident, The New York Times reported.
ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif on Saturday urged a “neutral and transparent” investigation into a deadly attack in occupied Kashmir earlier this week, dismissing Indian suggestions of cross-border involvement as “baseless allegations.”
ISLAMABAD: Saudi Arabia and Iran separately offered on Friday to mediate between India and Pakistan, urging de-escalation after a deadly attack in Indian occupied Kashmir reignited tensions between the nuclear-armed rivals, raising concerns of a broader confrontation.
India’s abrupt suspension of the Indus Waters Treaty on April 24, 2025, following a deadly terrorist attack in Kashmir, has thrust South Asia into a perilous standoff, with Pakistan warning that any tampering with its water lifeline would be an “act of war.” The decision, outlined in a sharply worded letter from India’s Jal Shakti Ministry Secretary Debashree Mukherjee to her Pakistani counterpart Syed Ali Murtaza, dismantles a 65-year-old pact that has endured wars and crises, exposing the fragility of trust between two nuclear-armed neighbors.
ISLAMABAD: Deputy Prime Minister Ishaq Dar on Thursday challenged India to provide evidence backing its claims of Pakistani involvement in a weekend attack in occupied Kashmir that killed 26 people, dismissing the allegations as “baseless” while warning of reciprocal measures against New Delhi’s diplomatic and economic escalations.