Pakistan police detain eight Sindh building authority officials after Karachi building collapse

Pakistan police detain eight Sindh building authority officials after Karachi building collapse
Members of the media report from the ground near a five-storey residential building that collapsed on Friday, July 4, in Karachi, Pakistan July 7, 2025. (REUTERS)
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Updated 10 July 2025
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Pakistan police detain eight Sindh building authority officials after Karachi building collapse

Pakistan police detain eight Sindh building authority officials after Karachi building collapse
  • Twenty-seven people died when dilapidated building in Lyari collapsed last Friday 
  • Incident exposes issue of unsafe housing in city home to over 20 million people

KARACHI: Eight officials of the Sindh Building Control Authority (SBCA) and the owners of a building that collapsed in Karachi last week have been detained in connection with the incident, Pakistani police said on Thursday. 

A five-story residential building, Fotan Mansion, collapsed last Friday around 10 am in the impoverished Lyari neighborhood of Karachi, trapping dozens under the rubble and prompting a large-scale rescue operation. Rescue officials recovered 27 bodies from the rubble after three days. 

The collapse of the dilapidated building once again exposed the persistent issue of unsafe and poorly regulated housing in Karachi, Pakistan’s most populous city, which is home to over 20 million people. The rapid urbanization and weak enforcement of building codes have put countless residents at risk.

“We have detained eight officials of the SBCA and the owners of the building in connection with the first information report regarding the building collapse in Lyari,” Senior Superintendent of Police (SSP) City Arif Aziz told Arab News. 

The complaint was registered under criminal sections covering public servant misconduct, negligence in building safety, unintentional death, intentional bodily harm and property damage. These offenses carry penalties ranging from fines and short-term imprisonment to financial compensation and long-term jail.

Sindh Chief Minister Murad Ali Shah suspended Director General SBCA Ishaque Khuhro and ordered an inquiry over the incident on Monday. 

He also directed the SBCA to carry out safety inspections of all buildings in the city. The Sindh government announced Rs1 million ($3,513) in compensation for the families of the 27 victims.

Many of the building’s occupants were members of the low-income Hindu minority community, and residents estimated that around 40 people were inside when the structure collapsed.

Fotan Mansion had been declared unsafe three years ago, according to the SBCA. This incident is the latest in a series of deadly building collapses in Karachi.

In February 2020, a five-story building in Rizvia Society collapsed, killing at least 27 people. The following month, another residential structure in Gulbahar came down, claiming 16 lives.

In June 2021, a three-story building in Malir collapsed, resulting in four deaths. Just last year, in August, a building collapse in Qur’angi killed at least three people.


World Anti-Doping Agency drops Pakistan from monitoring list

World Anti-Doping Agency drops Pakistan from monitoring list
Updated 12 September 2025
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World Anti-Doping Agency drops Pakistan from monitoring list

World Anti-Doping Agency drops Pakistan from monitoring list
  • Pakistan is no longer being monitored for possible sanctions against its players
  • WADA promotes, coordinates and monitors the fight against doping in sports

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan has been taken off the World Anti-Doping Agency’s (WADA) watchlist and is no longer under monitoring for possible sanctions, state media said on Friday.

The country was placed on the list last year for “outstanding non-conformities” with WADA’s updated anti-doping code and was warned to meet key requirements by January 2025 or risk its athletes being banned from competition.

WADA said the compliance procedure against Pakistan’s anti-doping agency was closed after all corrective actions were completed, according to the Associated Press of Pakistan (APP).

“This is not just a bureaucratic victory,” the news agency quoted Director General Pakistan Sports Board Yasir Pirzada as saying in its report. “It is a lifeline for Pakistani athletes and sports federations.”

APP said Pakistan enforced measures ranging from policy alignment to procedural reforms to meet global standards.

WADA promotes, coordinates and monitors the fight against doping in sports. It works with governments, sports bodies and labs worldwide to ensure fair play and athlete health.

Doping in sports refers to the use of banned substances or methods to enhance performance and giving athletes an unfair advantage.

It undermines fair competition, poses serious health risks and damages the integrity of sport. Anti-doping agencies worldwide conduct testing and enforcement to ensure a level playing field.

Pakistan competes internationally in cricket, hockey, football, squash, wrestling, boxing, athletics, weightlifting and shooting apart from sending athletes to the Olympics, Paralympics and regional events like the South Asian Games.


Taliban clampdown on women forces UN to close aid centers amid Pakistan deportations

Taliban clampdown on women forces UN to close aid centers amid Pakistan deportations
Updated 12 September 2025
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Taliban clampdown on women forces UN to close aid centers amid Pakistan deportations

Taliban clampdown on women forces UN to close aid centers amid Pakistan deportations
  • UN calls closing of centers aiding 7,000 returnees daily an operational move, not punishment
  • One of its top officials says talks underway with the Taliban to end ban on female aid workers

GENEVA: The U.N. refugee agency (UNHCR) has closed eight centres providing support to Afghan refugees forced back to the country because Taliban authorities are preventing female U.N. staff from entering them, an official said on Friday.

The United Nations says Pakistan is driving Afghan refugees back home against their will, warning that around 1 million people could be affected. In the first week of September alone, nearly 100,000 people crossed back, UNHCR data showed.

Arafat Jamal, UNHCR Representative to Afghanistan, said it closed eight centres providing cash and other support to returnees on Sept. 9 because of the ban on female aid workers.

"This was an operational decision. It is not a decision taken to punish anyone or to make a statement, but simply it demonstrates that we cannot work without female workers in certain circumstances," he told a Geneva press briefing by video link from Kabul.

"It is a huge step, and it is creating an enormous amount of suffering for these people," he said, adding that these centres typically helped around 7,000 people a day.

The work at the centres involves personal interviews and biometrics which he said cannot be done by men on Afghan women, he added.

Some of those deported from Pakistan recently are among those who have lost their homes in the country's worst earthquake in years that struck on the night of August 31 into September 1 and was followed by powerful aftershocks.

The United Nations called on Thursday for the Taliban administration to lift restrictions on its local female staff, warning that aid for earthquake victims and other vulnerable Afghans is at risk.

While the restrictions have been in place for years, Jamal said they were now being more strictly enforced, adding that military observers had been placed outside its compounds to enforce the ban.

"The reasons now for the reinforcement are unclear, but what I can say is that it's been done in quite a dramatic fashion," he added. Negotiations with the Taliban continue on this point, he added, and he hopes to reopen the centres.


Pakistan pledges to stand with Qatar after Israeli strikes target Hamas leaders in Doha

Pakistan pledges to stand with Qatar after Israeli strikes target Hamas leaders in Doha
Updated 12 September 2025
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Pakistan pledges to stand with Qatar after Israeli strikes target Hamas leaders in Doha

Pakistan pledges to stand with Qatar after Israeli strikes target Hamas leaders in Doha
  • Israel attempted to kill Hamas political leaders with the attack in Doha, which has been mediating a ceasefire in Gaza
  • Islamabad earlier called on the United Nations Security Council to hold Israel accountable for its ‘unprovoked aggression’

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan on Friday pledged its support to Qatar for the defense of its sovereignty after this week’s Israeli airstrikes targeted Hamas leaders in Doha, raising alarm about a potential military escalation in an already volatile region.

Israel attempted to kill the political leaders of Hamas with the attack on Tuesday, in what the United States (US) described as a unilateral attack that does not advance American and Israeli interests.

The United Nations Security Council (UNSC) condemned the strikes, but did not mention Israel in a statement agreed to by all 15 members at an emergency meeting summoned at the request of Algeria, Pakistan and Somalia.

On Thursday, Pakistan Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif met with Qatar’s Emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al-Thani in Doha to stress Muslim unity as the Gulf country called for a collective regional response to Israeli airstrikes.

“The Prime Minister conveyed Pakistan’s strongest condemnation of the Israeli attack on Doha on September 9, terming it a blatant and flagrant violation of Qatar’s sovereignty and territorial integrity,” Shafqat Ali Khan, a spokesperson for the Pakistani foreign office, told reporters in Islamabad.

“Pakistan will continue to stand shoulder to shoulder with the brotherly people and the leadership of Qatar in defense of their national sovereignty and security.”

Khan said the leadership and people of Pakistan were deeply disturbed by this attack.

“The Prime Minister emphasized that Israel’s present aggression in the Middle East must be stopped and the Ummah needed unity among its ranks in the face of Israeli provocations,” he said.

“The Prime Minister appreciated Qatar’s responsible, constructive and mediatory role in efforts to bring peace in Gaza and stressed that such acts of Israeli aggression were clearly meant to undermine regional stability and threaten ongoing diplomatic and humanitarian efforts.”

Qatar has been hosting and mediating in negotiations aimed at securing a ceasefire in the Gaza war.

Speaking at the UNSC, Qatari Prime Minister Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al-Thani accused Israel of trying to derail efforts to end the war in Gaza, which has killed over 64,000 Palestinians since Oct. 2023, by attacking Hamas leaders in Doha, but pledged to continue its mediation efforts.

Pakistan’s permanent representative to the UN, Ambassador Asim Iftikhar Ahmad, said at a time when delicate negotiations on Gaza peace deal were progressing toward a possible breakthrough, striking the territory of a principal mediator and those directly involved in negotiations is a deliberate attempt to “sabotage diplomacy, derail peace efforts, and prolong the suffering of civilians.”

“It is evident, that Israel, the occupying power, is bent on doing everything to undermine and blow-up every possibility of peace,” he said. “Israel’s destructive policies are incompatible with the international community’s quest for peace and stability. Sadly, it has been emboldened by the weak response, and inaction by this Council.”

He called on the UNSC to hold Israel accountable for its “unprovoked aggression.”

“The Council must go beyond; must hold Israel accountable; safeguard the role and protection of mediators engaged in peace efforts; and recommit to the centrality of international law and the UN Charter in maintaining international peace and security,” Ahmad added.


Disaster authority says nine killed in Punjab boat capsize as floodwaters rush southwards

Disaster authority says nine killed in Punjab boat capsize as floodwaters rush southwards
Updated 12 September 2025
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Disaster authority says nine killed in Punjab boat capsize as floodwaters rush southwards

Disaster authority says nine killed in Punjab boat capsize as floodwaters rush southwards
  • The boat was transporting 25 people to safety when it capsized near Multan in southern Punjab, where rains and floods have killed 97 people since late Aug.
  • Authorities in southern Sindh province reinforce flood responses after more than 4,500 villages and over 4.4 million people affected in the Punjab province

ISLAMABAD: At least nine people were killed after a boat capsized near the historic Multan city in Pakistan eastern Punjab province, the provincial disaster management authority said on Friday, as floodwaters continued to move southwards threatening the Sindh province.

Punjab, home to more than half of the country’s 240 million people and its main farming belt, has been devastated since record monsoon rains and India’s release of excess water swelled the Ravi, Chenab and Sutlej rivers in late August, killing 97 people and submerging over two million acres of farmland.

The deluges have affected more than 4,500 villages and over 4.4 million people, according to Punjab Relief Commissioner Punjab Nabeel Javed. Rescuers have so far transported 2.4 million people and 19.1 million livestock to relief camps after rescuing them from marooned villages in several districts.

A rescue boat this week capsized during a similar operation near Multan in southern Punjab, where the three rivers have been flowing in high floods after leaving a trail of destruction in northern and central districts of the country’s breadbasket province.

“The boat was transporting 25 people to safety when it capsized near Jalal Pur Pirwala,” PDMA spokesperson Mazhar Hussain told Arab News. “Nine people lost their lives in the incident.”

The development came as the inflow of water was recorded 69,812 cusecs in Ravi river at Sidhnai, 96,598 cusecs in Sutlej at Islam headworks and 665,576 cusecs at Panjnad headworks at the confluence of Sutlej and Chenab in Bahawalpur from where the water heads toward the Indus river in Sindh that empties in the Arabian Sea.

Provincial authorities in Sindh were busy evacuating people and livestock from riverine areas in the province, following a Flood Forecasting Division’s warning of a “very high” flood level in the Indus in the next 24 hours.

On Friday, Bilawal Bhutto-Zardari, a former foreign minister and head of the ruling Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) in Sindh, lamented a delay by the central government in issuing an international appeal for assistance.

“The delay by the government to initiate their international appeal for assistance through UN mechanisms is beyond comprehension. This is standard practice for disasters of this scale internationally,” he said on X.

“Countries all over the world do the same within the first 72 hours of such disasters. There is no excuse to cut of the millions affected from this assistance. We demand the government initiate this process immediately.”

The United Nations has already allocated $5 million from its Central Emergency Response Fund (CERF) to support Pakistan’s response efforts to the ongoing devastating floods, UN Secretary General’s spokesperson Stéphane Dujarric said this week.

Monsoon season brings Pakistan up to 80 percent of its annual rainfall, but increasingly erratic and extreme weather patterns are turning the annual rains, which are vital for agriculture, food security and the livelihoods of millions of farmers, into a destructive force.

Rains, floods, landslides and similar incidents have killed at least 946 people nationwide since June 26, according to the National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA). The disaster has revived memories of the 2022 deluges, when a third of the country was submerged, over 1,700 people were killed and losses exceeded $35 billion.

The NDMA has warned the ongoing spell of monsoon rains, the last of this season, is likely to continue for another two days.

Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif on Thursday directed the climate change ministry draft a 300-day plan within 15 days to mitigate risks from monsoon rains and melting glaciers, state media reported.

Climate Change Minister Musadik Malik said the plan would include preventive measures aimed at reducing losses from the next year’s monsoon season.

“We must act within our own resources, with the support of our civil administration, welfare institutions, and armed forces to safeguard our children and communities,” the Associated Press of Pakistan (APP) news agency quoted Malik as saying.

“This is not unique to Pakistan. The entire world is changing, and all nations must wake up to this reality.”


Aviation watchdog wraps up Pakistan safety review, verdict on direct flights to US pending

Aviation watchdog wraps up Pakistan safety review, verdict on direct flights to US pending
Updated 12 September 2025
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Aviation watchdog wraps up Pakistan safety review, verdict on direct flights to US pending

Aviation watchdog wraps up Pakistan safety review, verdict on direct flights to US pending
  • FAA team concludes week-long safety audit of Pakistan’s aviation regulator
  • Outcome to decide resumption of direct flights to United States after five years

KARACHI: The United States Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) has concluded a weeklong assessment of Pakistan’s aviation safety system in Karachi, the Pakistan Civil Aviation Authority (PCAA) said on Friday, a review that Islamabad hopes will pave the way for the resumption of direct flights to America after five years.

The audit, conducted with the PCAA, examined Pakistan’s legal, regulatory and operational framework. The FAA delegation will now return to Washington to deliberate on its findings before issuing a formal outcome.

“While the outcome of this assessment cannot yet be predicted, the track record of DG CAA Nadir Shafi Dar and his team — particularly their success in restoring direct routes to the European Union and the United Kingdom — provides reason for cautious optimism,” the PCAA said in a statement.

The five-member FAA delegation, accompanied by officials from the US Embassy, held extensive discussions with PCAA counterparts during the week. The review included verification of regulatory documents, evaluations of safety oversight mechanisms and briefings on compliance with international standards.

A second FAA team is expected later this year to evaluate airport and airspace security protocols in Pakistan.

The visit is part of Pakistan’s bid to regain access to the US market, from which national carrier Pakistan International Airlines (PIA) has been barred since June 2020. The ban followed a deadly Karachi plane crash that killed nearly 100 people and a subsequent scandal over fake pilot licenses.

Earlier this year, European and British regulators lifted their restrictions on PIA after nearly five years, allowing the airline to resume flights to those markets. 

A favorable outcome by the FAA could restore PIA’s US routes, reducing travel times for the nearly 700,000 Pakistani expatriates living in America and boosting confidence in the country’s aviation sector.

Muhammad Umair, a Karachi-based aviation analyst, told Arab News earlier this week that the FAA visit marked “the first major step” toward restoring the routes but warned the process could take months.

“They will review all safety and security protocols, identify any gaps, and ask the Pakistani authorities to address them,” he said.