Pakistan PM urges ceasefire, delivery of humanitarian aid to Gaza in meeting with UN chief

Pakistan PM urges ceasefire, delivery of humanitarian aid to Gaza in meeting with UN chief
Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif meets United Nations Secretary General Antonio Guterres (right) on the sidelines of the 80th Session of the United Nations General Assembly in New York on September 26, 2025. (PMO)
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Updated 27 September 2025
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Pakistan PM urges ceasefire, delivery of humanitarian aid to Gaza in meeting with UN chief

Pakistan PM urges ceasefire, delivery of humanitarian aid to Gaza in meeting with UN chief
  • Shehbaz Sharif, António Guterres discuss multilateralism, climate finance for developing nations and Indus Waters Treaty among a host of issues
  • PM Sharif reaffirms Islamabad’s support to end Israel’s war on Gaza, opening a ‘political horizon’ for irreversible path to Palestinian statehood

ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif has met United Nations (UN) Secretary-General António Guterres and urged him to play his role for a ceasefire in Gaza and ensure delivery of humanitarian aid to the territory, Sharif’s office said on Saturday.

The meeting took place on the sidelines of the 80th session of the UN General Assembly, being held in the backdrop of Israel’s nearly two-year war on Gaza, which has killed over 65,000 Palestinians since Oct. 2023, and its military actions against other Middle Eastern states as well as raging conflicts elsewhere in the world.

Sharif and Guterres discussed strengthening multilateralism, climate finance for developing nations, India’s announcement of putting the Indus Waters Treaty (IWT) in abeyance, the Kashmir dispute and externally sponsored militancy in Pakistan, according to the Pakistan prime minister’s office.

“Sharing serious concern over the burning issue of Gaza, the Prime Minister reaffirmed Pakistan’s support for efforts for an immediate ceasefire and ending the war, provision of humanitarian assistance, and opening a political horizon for an irreversible path to Palestinian statehood,” Sharif’s office said.

Pakistan does not recognize Israel and calls for an independent Palestinian state as per the aspirations of the Palestinian people, with Al-Quds Al-Sharif as its capital and according to the pre-1967 borders.

The meeting came hours after Sharif told the UNGA that the Israeli leadership has unleashed a campaign against the innocent Palestinians in blind pursuit of its “nefarious goals,” which history will always remember as one of its “darkest chapters,” calling on the international community to find a path to ceasefire.

“For nearly 80 years, the Palestinians have courageously endured Israel’s brutal occupation of their homeland. In the West Bank, each passing day brings new brutality, illegal settlers who terrorize and kill with impunity, and nobody can challenge them and question them. And in Gaza, Israel’s genocidal onslaught has unleashed unspeakable terror upon women and children in a manner we have not witnessed in annals of history,” he told the UNGA session.

“We must find a path to a ceasefire now and just now... Pakistan firmly supports the demand of the Palestinian people for the establishment of a sovereign Palestinian state with pre-1967 borders and Al-Quds Sharif as its capital. Palestine can no longer remain under Israeli shackles. It must be liberated and liberated with full commitment and full force.”

 

 

In his meeting with Guterres, the Pakistan premier expressed gratitude for the secretary-general’s appreciation of Pakistan’s rescue and relief efforts, but stressed the need for climate finance for developing nations.

“The prime minister underlined the need for concerted international actions, including mobilization of additional climate finance to mitigate the impacts of climate change on the most climate vulnerable countries like Pakistan,” Sharif’s office said.

While Pakistan contributes less than 1 percent to global greenhouse gas emissions, it remains one of the most vulnerable countries to climate-related disasters. Officials say the South Asian country suffers around $4 billion annually due to climate change and this year’s monsoon floods, which killed over 1,000 people, affected 4.7 million and washed away crops on 4 million acres of land, could deepen that blow.

The prime minister reiterated Pakistan’s commitment to continue playing a constructive role as a member of the UN Security Council for regional and international peace and security.

“The secretary-general lauded Pakistan’s strong voice and critical role at the UN, including principled positions at the Security Council,” Sharif’s office said. “They agreed on the need for concerted efforts to further enhance and strengthen the indispensable role of the United Nations in advancing global peace and development.”


Pakistan cancels Eni LNG cargoes, seeks to renegotiate Qatar supplies

Pakistan cancels Eni LNG cargoes, seeks to renegotiate Qatar supplies
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Pakistan cancels Eni LNG cargoes, seeks to renegotiate Qatar supplies

Pakistan cancels Eni LNG cargoes, seeks to renegotiate Qatar supplies
  • Move comes amid surplus gas in Pakistan due to lower industrial demand, higher renewable output
  • Islamabad also in talks with Qatar to defer or resell LNG cargoes under existing supply agreements

KARACHI: Pakistan has struck a deal to cancel 21 liquefied natural gas cargoes under its long-term contract with Italy’s Eni as part of a plan to curb excess imports that have flooded its gas network, according to an official document and two sources.

The document from state-owned Pakistan LNG Ltd. (PLL) to the country’s Ministry of Energy dated October 22 said 11 cargoes planned for 2026 and 10 for 2027 would be canceled at the request of gas distributor SNGPL.

Only the planned January shipment in both years, and the December shipment in 2027, would be retained to meet peak winter demand, according to the document, reviewed by Reuters.

Two sources familiar with the matter in Pakistan said that Eni had agreed to the move under the contract’s flexibility provisions. LNG is in strong demand globally, and suppliers typically stand to earn more by selling cargoes in the spot market than under long-term contracts.

Eni declined to comment. PLL, SNGPL, and Pakistan’s petroleum ministry did not reply to requests for comment.

RENEGOTIATING SUPPLIES FROM QATAR

PLL’s move marks one of Pakistan’s most significant steps yet to rein in LNG purchases as rising renewable generation and lower industrial demand leave it with surplus imported gas.

Eni signed a long-term LNG supply deal with PLL in 2017, committing to deliver one cargo per month until 2032, with the option to divert shipments to other destinations.

The first source, and a third, said that Pakistan was also in talks with Qatar about gas supplies from the Gulf state, with options including deferring some cargoes or reselling them under existing contract clauses. Last week a technical team visited Karachi to schedule the cargoes. The talks are ongoing and no decision has been reached, the first and third sources said.

QatarEnergy did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

TOO MUCH GAS, TOO LITTLE DEMAND

Pakistan’s long-term LNG supply deals with Qatar and Eni together cover around 120 cargoes a year, including on average nine a month from two Qatari contracts and one from Eni.

But Pakistan’s LNG imports have fallen sharply this year as demand from power producers dropped amid higher solar and hydropower output.

Lower gas use by power plants and industrial units generating their own electricity have added to the surplus, leaving the system significantly oversupplied for the first time in years.

The glut has forced Pakistan to sell gas at steep discounts, curb local production, and consider offshore storage or reselling excess cargoes, according to government presentations reviewed by Reuters.

Eni’s last delivered cargo to Pakistan was received at the GasPort terminal on January 3, according to Kpler data. The first source, and a fourth one, said Pakistan had also agreed a deal with Eni not to receive any further cargoes in 2025.

Eni shipped out 12 cargoes to Pakistan in 2024.