An explosion in Pakistan has killed at least 12 people outside a judicial complex in Islamabad. Authorities are reporting the blast as a “suicide attack”.
Video: Deadly blast outside court in Pakistan


An explosion in Pakistan has killed at least 12 people outside a judicial complex in Islamabad. Authorities are reporting the blast as a “suicide attack”.

Prince Harry has made surprise appearance at an event supporting veterans, just days after penning a passionate essay about what it means to be British.
The Duke appeared in a video at the Heroic Hearts Project Gala on Saturday, an event in California held to support veterans with PTSD. The surprise cameo seemingly came just hours before Harry and his wife Meghan were spotted partying the night away at Kris Jenners’ 70th birthday bash at Jeff Bezos’ lavish mansion.
Harry was seen on screen during the presentations, offering words of kindness and support for all the veterans. “The future is about stepping into what is next, stronger, connected and with a sense of purpose,” he said in a pre-recorded clip. “As a combat veteran who cares deeply about mental fitness, I’ve seen how important genuine, veteran-led support is.
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“You guys have created this safe space, where courage isn’t defined by silence but by showing up. Where strength isn’t the absence of struggle, but the willingness to face it.”
Harry – who previously served two tours of Afghanistan – wore military medals on his suit, along with a remembrance poppy. The video appeared to have been filmed outside his Montecito home in California, where he has lived since stepping down from royal life in 2020.
Back on home soil, the Royal Family led the nation in Remembrance of those who have served their country. King Charles took the lead by laying the first wreath at the Cenotaph on Remembrance Sunday, followed by Prince William as Queen Camilla and the Princess of Wales looked on.
And today, The Princess of Wales is leading the nation as it falls silent at 11am to remember the war dead at an emotional event. Kate is at the National Memorial Arboretum in Staffordshire to mark Armistice Day, where she will later lay a wreath and meet the families of serving military personnel, their families, as well as veterans.
Harry has not taken part at events at the Cenotaph since 2019 after he and Meghan quit the UK and royal life in 2020. Instead, he carried out a series of Remembrance-related events last week in Toronto – the timing of which raised eyebrows since Harry announced his visit just minutes after his older brother Prince William completed his first engagement in Brazil.
He also released a personal essay on what it means to be British, despite living thousands of miles away in the US. In the piece, titled ‘The Bond, The Banter, The Bravery: What it means to be British – By Prince Harry’, the duke acknowledged that although he “currently” lives in the US, he reflects that “Britain is, and always will be, the country I proudly served and fought for”.
When he stepped down as a working royal, Harry was stripped of his military posts, including his role as Captain General of the Royal Marines. It was reported in 2020 that Harry had asked for a wreath to be laid on his behalf at the Cenotaph – but his request was refused. In the biography Finding Freedom, it was claimed he was denied because he was no longer a “frontline royal”.
Speaking to the Mirror this week, Jennie Bond said: “Harry was hurt to the quick when he was told a wreath could not be laid at the Cenotaph on his behalf, after he stepped back as a working royal. His Army days were some of the most important of his life, and I do have some sympathy with him over this.
“I don’t see what harm it could possibly have done to allow him, albeit remotely, to pay tribute to his fellow comrades in arms. So now he is doing it his way: flying to Canada to meet veterans and support military charities.
“And I think he is playing a valuable role in doing so he should simply have shifted his visit by a few days to be there closer to Remembrance Day itself — and avoid the clash with William.

Disgraced hip hop mogul Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs has entered into rehab behind bars – a move that could cut up to a year from his sentence.
The I’ll Be Missing You hitmaker is currently being held at the Federal Correctional Institution in Fort Dix, New Jersey, a low-security prison after he was convicted on two counts of transportation to engage in prostitution. He was sentenced on October 3 to 50 months in prison and received 14 months’ credit for time already served.
Now, his spokesman, Juda Engelmayer, has confirmed the Bad Boy Entertainment founder had entered the programme and is “committed to sobriety, healing and trying to set an example for others”. He added: “Mr Combs is an active participant in the Residential Drug Abuse Program (RDAP) and has taken his rehabilitation process seriously from the start.”
Engelmayer said the rapper has been accepted into the programme and is working in the prison’s church library.
“He works in the chapel library, where he describes the environment as warm, respectful, and rewarding,” he said. According to the federal inmate locator, Combs is scheduled for release in May 2028.
Successful completion of RDAP could reduce that date, though he would still be subject to five years’ supervision after release, alongside drug testing and mental health treatment conditions. He is currently appealing his sentence.
Prosecutors had sought more than 11 years, citing what they described as a sustained pattern of coercion, manipulation and violent sexual abuse.
During the trial, former girlfriend Cassie Ventura testified that Combs used violence to force her participation in so-called “freak-offs” – drug-fuelled sex sessions involving sex workers he hired. She told the court she felt “disgusted” and “humiliated” afterwards.
At sentencing, US District Judge Arun Subramanian told Combs he “abused the power and control with women you professed to love” and said: “You abused them physically, emotionally and psychologically.” Combs apologised to Ventura and another former girlfriend, calling his conduct “disgusting, shameful and sick.”
Combs’ legal team reached out to President Donald Trump for a pardon after the conviction, according to a source close to the defence.
In an interview with Newsmax on August 1, Trump said he had once been “very friendly” with Diddy, but claimed Combs “was very hostile” during his presidential campaign.
Asked whether he would pardon the artist, Trump replied, “I would say so.”
Combs is living in a nine-person room inside a larger 200-bed unit.
Engelmayer said he has restarted “Free Game with Diddy,” a class designed to help inmates build confidence, learn entrepreneurial skills, and plan for employment after release.

Arsenal have asked for their Premier League game away at Everton in the run-up to Christmas be played a day earlier as they look to avoid playing two matches in three days.
It is understood the Gunners have applied for the game, which is currently scheduled for Sunday, 21 December at 14:00, be moved to Saturday, 20 December at 20:00 BST.
The Premier League leaders are scheduled to play their EFL Cup quarter-final against Crystal Palace on 23 December.
The cup game was moved by the EFL from the original date of 16 December because that scenario would have seen Palace, who are competing in the Conference League in Europe, play three times in five days.
Arsenal want to play the Everton game a day earlier to allow extra recovery time for Mikel Arteta’s players before they face Palace.
While Arsenal have made clear their preference for their first visit to Hill Dickinson Stadium be moved to the Saturday, it is understood that is not the only potential date under consideration by the Premier League.
After the EFL changed the date for the cup quarter-final between the two London clubs, Arteta said: “Hopefully they will move our Premier League match, because to play two days later doesn’t make any sense.



Burger King plans to more than triple the number of its restaurants in China within a decade under a new joint venture with a local partner, the fast-food giant says.
The joint venture, Burger King China, will receive $350m in investment from the private equity firm CPE under a plan to drive the brand’s expansion, parent company Restaurant Brands International (RBI) said in a statement on Monday.
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Under the deal, the fast-food chain will seek to expand to more than 4,000 locations in China by 2035, up from roughly 1,250 at present.
Once the tie-up is completed, Beijing-based CPE will hold a stake of about 83 percent in the company with RBI retaining an approximately 17 percent stake along with a seat on the board of directors.
RBI CEO Joshua Kobza said the deal would unlock Burger King’s “full potential” in China.
“China remains one of the most exciting long-term opportunities for Burger King globally,” Kobza said in a statement.
“Our recent investments and this joint venture underscore our confidence in the Chinese market.”
Burger King entered the Chinese market in 2005, opening its first outlet opposite a Buddhist temple in downtown Shanghai.
But the burger chain, founded in 1953 in Jacksonville, Florida, under the name Insta-Burger King, has struggled to match the success of its United States-based rivals such as McDonald’s and KFC.
KFC had more than 12,600 restaurants in China as of September while McDonald’s operated about 6,800 outlets in the country last year, according to company data.
Last week, US coffee chain Starbucks announced it would sell a 60 percent stake in its China business to a Hong Kong-based private equity firm after years of losing market share to local competitors.

Islamabad, Pakistan – Pakistan’s Senate on Monday approved a constitutional amendment that aims to bring sweeping changes to the country’s judicial system and to the military’s command structure amid criticism that it seeks to weaken oversight over the government and leaders of the nation’s powerful army.
The proposed 27th Amendment eventually sailed through the Senate in a raucous evening sitting after the opposition boycotted the session.
Like in the Senate, the amendment now needs to secure a two-thirds majority in the National Assembly, the lower house of parliament, which is expected to vote on the draft on Tuesday afternoon. If it gets those votes, the amendment would need President Asif Ali Zardari’s signature to become law.
But both the contents of the proposed amendment and the manner in which the Pakistani government has sought to push it through have sparked criticism, including from senior sitting judges, even as other experts said the changes are justified.
The 27th Amendment of the constitution, if it becomes law, would in effect grant immunity from criminal prosecution to the top-most military leaders while also reshaping the military’s command structure. These would be through changes to Article 243 of Pakistan’s Constitution.
Separate provisions in the amendment aim to set up a Federal Constitutional Court (FCC), among other legal reforms.
But while many constitutional amendments are controversial, critics have questioned the rush with which the current amendment has been moved. Law Minister Azam Nazeer Tarar presented it in the Senate on Saturday, the same day that the cabinet approved it.
Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif – who was in Baku, Azerbaijan, on a state visit along with army chief Field Marshal Asim Munir – attended the cabinet meeting virtually before his return to Islamabad on Sunday.
After consultations within the government and with its allies, a revised draft was circulated in the Senate on Monday and passed the same evening. By contrast, the 26th Amendment, while also criticised by the opposition, followed months of public debate.
So what is the 27th Amendment all about? What makes it so controversial? And how are its defenders justifying it?
Article 243 defines the relationship between Pakistan’s civilian government and the military.
The revision amends Article 243 to create a new post of chief of defence forces (CDF), to be held by the army chief. This essentially gives the army chief authority also over the air force and the navy. If the amendment is passed, the post of chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Committee (CJCSC) would be abolished later this month.
The CJCSC is currently held by four-star General Sahir Shamshad, who is due to retire on November 27.
Since independence in 1947, Pakistan’s military, especially the army, has been the most powerful institution in national life. Four coups and decades of direct and indirect military rule have entrenched that influence, and the army chief has long been the country’s most powerful figure.
Its current holder, Munir, became army chief in November 2022 and was promoted to five-star rank on May 20, just 10 days after the country ended its four-day conflict with India.
The 27th Amendment would also grant five-star officers lifetime immunity while allowing them to “retain rank, privileges and remain in uniform for life”.
Munir is only the second Pakistani military officer, after Field Marshal Ayub Khan in the 1960s, to have received the five-star designation. None of the other military branches, such as the air force or navy, has had a five-star official.
The proposed amendment also creates the post of commander of the National Strategic Command (NSC), responsible, among other things, for the country’s nuclear command. The head of the NSC would be appointed only from the army in consultation with the army chief/CDF.
According to the Pakistani Constitution at present, Article 248 stipulates that “no criminal proceedings whatsoever shall be instituted or continued against the president or a governor in any court during his term of office.” But once out of office, they enjoy no such privileges.
Military generals currently have no such immunity. Before the 27th Amendment, the title of field marshal was considered purely honorific with no additional powers or privileges. However, the proposed changes would essentially codify the ranking as a recognised constitutional position.
If the amendment passes, it would take a two-thirds majority in parliament to remove a five-star-ranked official – even though an elected government, by contrast, loses power when a simple majority in parliament votes against it. And a five-star officer would enjoy immunity from criminal prosecution for life.
“Democracy does not survive where impunity is made a constitutional right,” Rida Hosain, a Lahore-based constitutional lawyer, told Al Jazeera. “It grants a nonelected army officer protections and powers that no democratically elected leader in the country has.”

The draft amendment seeks to create a permanent Federal Constitutional Court.
The FCC would be headed by its own chief justice and staffed by an equal number of judges from each of Pakistan’s four provinces as well as from Islamabad. It would adjudicate in disputes between governments, either the federal government and a state government or when different state governments clash.
Judges of the FCC would retire at 68, unlike Supreme Court judges, who retire at 65. The FCC chief justice’s tenure would be capped at three years.
The draft also gives the president power to transfer a judge from one high court to another on the proposal of the Judicial Commission of Pakistan (JCP), the body responsible for recommending appointments to Pakistan’s superior judiciary.
After the 26th Amendment was passed last year, the transfer of judges was to happen from one high court to another high court only through a presidential order.
However, the judge’s consent was necessary for a transfer as were consultation with the chief justice of Pakistan and the two chief justices of respective high courts.
That would change under the new revision: The president would be able to transfer a judge on the recommendation of the JCP without the consent of the concerned judge.
Additionally, if a judge refuses his transfer, he would be given an opportunity to present his reasons before the JCP, and if the body finds the reasons invalid, the judge would have to retire.
Hosain said the amendment would mean judges can be transferred to other jurisdictions without their consent while refusal could lead to proceedings before the Supreme Judicial Council, the body which holds judges accountable.
“The fact that refusal leads to accountability proceedings being initiated is a veiled threat that weaponises administrative power to enforce compliance. It transforms an independent judicial office into one overshadowed by the constant fear of punitive or retaliatory transfer,” she added.
Reema Omer, legal adviser for the International Commission of Jurists (ICJ), a Geneva-based nongovernmental organisation of judges and lawyers, said the new amendment has concerning implications, particularly in the short and medium term.
“The executive will appoint the judges who will have the sole jurisdiction to hold the executive accountable,” she told Al Jazeera.
“It appears this is being done to shield the existing set-up from judicial scrutiny and accountability. Also, if and when required, the FCC can be used to give constitutional cover and legitimacy to these decisions of this set-up,” Omer added.
Senior sitting judges have criticised the amendment too.
Mansoor Ali Shah, the second most senior judge of the Supreme Court of Pakistan (SCP), wrote in an open letter to Chief Justice Yahya Afridi on Monday stating that the FCC does not represent a “genuine reform agenda” but is instead a “political device to weaken and control the judiciary”.
Calling it a “manipulation of [the] judicial process”, Shah said such a court cannot be independent.
“History does not easily forgive such abdications of duty; it records them as constitutional failures of leadership and moments when silence within institutions weakened the very edifice they were meant to guard,” he wrote.
The government’s rationale for bringing the changes to the constitution was presented in the draft of the amendment, in which it said the proposal stems from the increasing number of constitutional petitions being filed before the Supreme Court, which has “significantly impacted the timely disposal of regular civil and criminal cases”.
Changes to Article 243, the government has said, were proposed to improve the “procedural clarity and administrative structure relating to the armed forces”.
Some experts agreed.
Hafiz Ahsaan Ahmad Khokhar, an advocate of the Supreme Court, said a permanent FCC would provide “focused expertise and timely adjudication”.
“It is empowered to interpret the constitution, resolve federal-provincial disputes, determine the validity of laws and render advisory opinions. This ensures focused expertise and timely adjudication,” the Islamabad-based lawyer told Al Jazeera.
While the creation of the FCC will bring coherence, speed and discipline to constitutional adjudication, the introduction of the CDF office would unify strategic command and enhance coordination without disturbing the existing services’ autonomy, Khokhar argued.
“Both reforms are grounded in the realities of Pakistan’s governance challenges and increasing complexity of state functions. These measures will help Pakistan evolve into a mature, rule-based democracy where judicial, civil and defence institutions perform their specialised roles in harmony,” he said.
But these explanations have so far failed to satisfy sceptics.
The Human Rights Commission of Pakistan (HRCP) questioned the urgency with which the amendment was tabled.
“The government’s haste, including the absence of any meaningful consultation with the political opposition, the wider legal fraternity and civil society, calls into question the very intention behind moving this amendment bill,” the HRCP said.
HRCP deplores the manner in which the 27th Amendment to the Constitution is being tabled in Parliament. The government’s haste—including the absence of any meaningful consultation with the political opposition, the wider legal fraternity and civil society—calls into question the…
Omer of the ICJ warned the amendment marked a “fundamental change” for the judiciary.
“The 27th Amendment reduces the Supreme Court of Pakistan to only an appellate court. It is also no longer the ‘Supreme Court of Pakistan’ but only the ‘Supreme Court’ and its chief justice will be the CJ of the SC, not the CJ of Pakistan,” she said.
The judiciary, at least in the short and medium term, will be largely beholden to the executive, according to Omer.
“Any real accountability or review of the executive and parliament appears unlikely. And any relief to Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf against the wishes of the system also seems unlikely,” she added, referring to the largest opposition party, the PTI.
The PTI, led by former Prime Minister Imran Khan, who has been in jail for the past two years, governed from 2018 to 2022.
It was removed by a parliamentary vote of no confidence in April 2022. The party was disqualified from participating in last year’s elections, but independent candidates from the PTI nevertheless won the single largest share of seats (93) amid allegations of manipulation in the vote count, charges that the government rejected.
No party secured a majority, and Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif’s Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) formed the government in coalition with the Pakistan People’s Party (PPP).
Meanwhile, Hosain also cautioned that under the amendment, while the prime minister would continue to be exposed to political scrutiny and the will of elected representatives, immunity has been granted to the top generals.
“It institutionalises the supremacy of the uniform over the ballot,” she said.
Omer pointed out that Pakistani political parties, including the PPP, now an alliance partner of the ruling PML-N, had in the past resisted constitutional protections to the military. That, she said, had now changed.