Turkiye urges dialogue after Pakistan-India tensions, condemns Israeli attacks on Iran and Gaza

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Updated 09 July 2025
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Turkiye urges dialogue after Pakistan-India tensions, condemns Israeli attacks on Iran and Gaza

Turkiye urges dialogue after Pakistan-India tensions, condemns Israeli attacks on Iran and Gaza
  • Fidan praises Pakistan’s “calm attitude” during May tensions, warns of “severe results” of conflict between nuclear-armed states
  • Turkish foreign minister says Israeli strikes on Iran shift focus from Gaza “genocide,” calls for ceasefire, coordinated support for Palestinians

ISLAMABAD: Turkish Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan on Wednesday urged Pakistan and India to pursue “meaningful and efficient dialogue” to avoid future conflict, warning that an air war between the neighbors earlier this year highlighted the “severe” risks of escalation between two nuclear-armed states. 

In May 2025, the most intense India–Pakistan military confrontation in decades erupted following an April 22 attack in Indian-administered Kashmir, which killed 26 people. New Delhi, without providing evidence, said Islamabad was behind the assault, which denies the charge.

India responded on May 7 by launching a series of airstrikes targeting what it called suspected militant infrastructure in Pakistan. Pakistan retaliated with its own drone, artillery, and missile strikes. After four days of hostilities, a US-mediated ceasefire was agreed on May 10, halting the confrontation amid global alarm over the risk of escalation.

“In April-May, there has been tension experienced between Pakistan and India, which we closely followed, and all the international society has seen the wisdom-oriented and calm attitude of Pakistan,” Fidan said during a press conference in Islamabad.

“This tension has been an important indicator that when two nuclear powers come face to face that this is going to have very severe results,” he added. 

“We have actually seen this ceasefire as an important decision, and in order to eliminate similar tensions, we believe that there has to be meaningful and efficient dialogue between the parties. As Turkiye, we’re always ready to support this so that there will be peace and there will not be any clashes.”

Fidan, along with the Turkish defense minister, is visiting Pakistan as part of efforts to deepen bilateral ties and discuss regional security challenges, including the ongoing war in Gaza and rising tensions in the Middle East after Israel’s attacks on Iranian nuclear facilities and other targets last month.

“Unfortunately, the attacks have actually shaken the trust first toward the international regime on the prevention of nuclear expansions, and we have actually conveyed our messages to the parties [US, Iran] for the restart of the nuclear negotiations,” Fidan said.

“We’re in constant contact with Pakistan, and both countries are contacting both parties of the conflict. Turkiye believes that there has to be peaceful resolutions through negotiations, and we will continue to have a constructive contribution to this.”

Commenting on the Israeli military campaign in Gaza, which began in October 2023, Fidan said Turkiye condemned the ongoing Israeli attacks and supported an immediate and lasting ceasefire.

“Israel attacks are, and aggressions are, not just a risk for our region but for the whole world. At this current status quo, we do hope that the ceasefire will be permanent,” he said.

He added that the Israeli strikes on Iran had diverted international attention from what he described as the “massacre in Gaza and the genocide in Gaza.”

“Today, we [Turkiye and Pakistan] also discussed about the joint steps that we can take for our Palestinian brothers,” Fidan said.

“Within this plan, the Israel attacks and aggression should end, and we hope that peace will be brought to Gaza and calm will be established. We will continue to support the Palestinian people and the Palestinian cause.”


Punjab agrees to partner with Global Green Growth Institute to develop carbon-credit projects

Punjab agrees to partner with Global Green Growth Institute to develop carbon-credit projects
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Punjab agrees to partner with Global Green Growth Institute to develop carbon-credit projects

Punjab agrees to partner with Global Green Growth Institute to develop carbon-credit projects
  • Province’s chief minister discusses partnership with the top GGGI official on the sidelines of COP30
  • Development comes as Punjab reels from its worst monsoon floods this year, a persistent smog crisis

ISLAMABAD: Punjab Chief Minister Maryam Nawaz Sharif agreed on Thursday to partner with the Global Green Growth Institute (GGGI) to develop carbon-credit projects and expand access to climate financing, during a meeting with the institute’s leadership on the sidelines of the COP30 summit in Brazil.

An independent intergovernmental organization, GGGI was launched in Rio de Janeiro during a United Nations conference on sustainable development in 2012 and works with developing countries to design climate-finance projects and operationalize carbon-market instruments.

The collaboration comes as Punjab faces intensifying climate stresses, including its worst monsoon floods this year and a prolonged smog crisis that has forced school closures in recent years and caused respiratory diseases.

“GGGI will help strengthen Pakistan’s capacity in global carbon markets and carbon financing and assist the country in gaining access to carbon markets worldwide,” the Punjab administration said in a statement circulated after the chief minister’s meeting with the organization’s director general, Sang-Hyup Kim.

It said that GGGI offered to convert the present administration’s climate-improvement initiatives into carbon credits to develop green-growth projects.

“GGGI will also support Punjab in establishing carbon-credit programs at the provincial level,” it added.

Global carbon markets allow countries and companies to trade carbon credits, which are like certificates earned by projects that cut or remove emissions.

The sellers are usually developing countries or organizations running activities like reforestation, clean energy or pollution-control projects. The buyers are countries or companies that still produce emissions and need a way to meet their climate targets.

They purchase these credits to balance out the pollution they cannot eliminate. The system works because the atmosphere is shared, with a ton of emissions reduced in Pakistan having the same effect on the climate as a ton reduced in Europe or the United States.

The statement said the chief minister told the GGGI official that Punjab plans to move forward on green-financing proposals tied to air-quality mitigation, water and sanitation, reforestation and e-mobility, saying these areas would form the backbone of the province’s climate-resilience strategy.

It added that the GGGI director general appreciated the Punjab administration’s commitment to environmental improvement, hoping that the partnership would help advance sustainable development goals.

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