Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan is visiting Shi’ite-led Iran amid reports that he will attempt to mediate a decades-long dispute between Iran and Saudi Arabia.
The leaders of China and India vowed during an informal summit to cooperate against "radicalization" at a time of rising tensions over Beijing's support for Pakistan in its dispute with India over the divided region of Kashmir.
Major political parties appear to be throwing their weight behind an Islamist leader’s protest aimed at ousting Pakistan’s civilian government.
Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan is likely to visit neighboring Iran and Saudi Arabia for possible mediation between the two archrivals and Muslim-majority countries.
Chinese President Xi Jinping will visit India to hold an informal summit with Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi on October 11 and 12.
Allegations of widespread fraud have cast a dark cloud over Afghanistan's September 28 presidential election, where low voter turnout and a lack of vote counts have increased skepticism about the outcome.
Pakistan has offered new concessions to China in a visible effort to revive economic relations with the neighboring giant.
Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan’s civilian government is facing an unprecedented protest aimed at toppling his administration.
Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan is set to meet with Chinese President Xi Jinping and Prime Minister Li Keqiang in Beijing to discuss economic cooperation between the two neighbors and the situation in Kashmir.
In a sign that disagreements between President Ashraf Ghani and Chief Executive Abdullah Abdullah are likely to overshadow Afghanistan’s immediate future, the leading contenders for the presidency are publicly arguing over an official.
Indian activists and a U.S. senator were blocked from visiting the Indian-administered portion of Kashmir, as tensions remain high in the disputed Himalayan region that has entered the third month of a crisis caused by a near-total lockdown.
Taliban negotiators say they have met in Pakistan with Zalmay Khalilzad, the U.S. peace envoy for Afghanistan, for the first time since President Donald Trump in September called the peace process “dead.”
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