Over 100 Inmates Escape from a Pakistan Prison After an Earthquake Evacuation in Karachi 

Police officer stand guard as members of media film inside the premises of the district Malir prison from where more than 100 inmates escaped overnight, in Karachi, Pakistan, Tuesday, June 3, 2025. (AP)
Police officer stand guard as members of media film inside the premises of the district Malir prison from where more than 100 inmates escaped overnight, in Karachi, Pakistan, Tuesday, June 3, 2025. (AP)
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Over 100 Inmates Escape from a Pakistan Prison After an Earthquake Evacuation in Karachi 

Police officer stand guard as members of media film inside the premises of the district Malir prison from where more than 100 inmates escaped overnight, in Karachi, Pakistan, Tuesday, June 3, 2025. (AP)
Police officer stand guard as members of media film inside the premises of the district Malir prison from where more than 100 inmates escaped overnight, in Karachi, Pakistan, Tuesday, June 3, 2025. (AP)

More than 100 inmates escaped from a prison and at least one was killed in a shootout in the southern Pakistani city of Karachi overnight after they were temporarily moved out of their cells following mild earthquake tremors, officials said Tuesday.

Kashif Abbasi, a senior police official, said 216 inmates fled the prison in the capital of Sindh province before dawn. Of those, 78 had been recaptured. No one convicted or facing trial as a militant is among those who fled, he said.

One prisoner was killed and three security officials were wounded in the ensuing shootout, but the situation has been brought under control, Abbasi said, adding that police are conducting raids to capture the remaining escapees.

Ziaul Hassan, the home minister of Sindh province, said the jailbreak occurred after prisoners were evacuated from their cells for safety during the earthquake. The inmates were still outside of the cells when a group suddenly attacked guards, seized their weapons, opened fire and fled.

Though prisoners have escaped while being transported to court for trial, prison beaks are not common in Pakistan, where authorities have enhanced security since 2013 when the Pakistani Taliban freed more than 200 inmates in an attack on a prison in the northwestern district of Dera Ismail Khan.

Karachi has experienced several mild and shallow earthquakes in the past 24 hours, ranging from 2.6 to 3.4 in magnitude, according to the National Seismic Monitoring Center.



Iranians Look at Pakistan Talks with Mixture of Skepticism, Outright Fear

People walk past an anti-US mural on a street in Tehran, Iran, April 10, 2026. Majid Asgaripour/WANA (West Asia News Agency) via Reuters
People walk past an anti-US mural on a street in Tehran, Iran, April 10, 2026. Majid Asgaripour/WANA (West Asia News Agency) via Reuters
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Iranians Look at Pakistan Talks with Mixture of Skepticism, Outright Fear

People walk past an anti-US mural on a street in Tehran, Iran, April 10, 2026. Majid Asgaripour/WANA (West Asia News Agency) via Reuters
People walk past an anti-US mural on a street in Tehran, Iran, April 10, 2026. Majid Asgaripour/WANA (West Asia News Agency) via Reuters

Everyday Iranians are awaiting planned negotiations between Washington and Tehran with a mixture of skepticism and outright fear, caught between a government they say does not understand peace and an American president who has threatened to destroy a “whole civilization.”

Talks between the US and Iran and hosted by Pakistan were hanging in the balance on Friday, but if they go ahead they could transform a temporary ceasefire in the US-Israeli campaign against the Iranian republic into a lasting peace.

Residents of Tehran contacted by AFP from Paris – who withheld their surnames out of concern for their safety – have mixed views on that prospect and are far from optimistic, with feelings ranging from anger, to anxiety, to deep disillusionment.

Amir, a 40-year-old artist, said he did not “think this temporary agreement and negotiation will last even a week.”

Iran’s repressive apparatus is seen as having been strengthened by the war that broke out on Feb 28, making a deal all the more unlikely, according to Amir.

“The propaganda machine has delivered them such lies that they really believe they have won the war,” he said. “They cannot last in peace because they don’t understand peace.”

For Sheida, 38, the uncertainty around the talks has generated a sense of anxiety.

“We’ve got so much hardship dumped on us that we don’t even know what to worry about first,” she said. “Now that the ceasefire has started, everyone’s scrambling to settle debts and sort out financial stuff.”

A choice between the return of terrifying US-Israeli airstrikes and the preservation of the Iranian republic’s long-standing system is no choice at all, according to Sheida.

“I am scared of the war starting again, and at the same time I’m scared of the regime staying,” she said, adding that “the people in power have become even more aggressive.”

Amir said if the talks do result in an agreement, he continued, it would likely do little to serve the Iranian people.

He pointed to anti-government protests just before the war that were met with a deadly crackdown, saying he and other like-minded Iranians would keep up their opposition, adding: “We will not forgive our murderers.”

Trump’s Shifting Goals

Tehran resident Amin, 30, said it was difficult to determine what US President Donald Trump hoped to accomplish in the talks.

“I guess you shouldn’t take Trump so serious,” Amin said. “He wants to erase a civilization and he makes a ceasefire built on nothing 12 hours later.”

“Most of what he says is just pure noise,” he continued.

Sheida, meanwhile, questioned Trump’s sense of strategy, saying he must be “either crazy or inexperienced.”

“Did the US president really not realize they could get stuck if the Strait of Hormuz was closed?” she said.

Homemaker Shahrzad, 39, said she had been both terrified and disillusioned by Trump’s threat – issued before the ceasefire – that “a whole civilization will die” if Iran did not reopen the strategic Strait of Hormuz.

“I had hoped for the fall of the Islamic regime and accepted the hardships of war, but now I realize this man is playing the whole world and has no sense of humanity.”

Sara, a 44-year-old graphic designer, said Iran’s “government is an ideological one, and it’s not going to collapse easily”.

“Its mindset exists all the way down to the lowest levels, so it’s really not simple to change,” she added.

Amir said he believed the country’s surviving leaders would continue fighting. “They are prepared to destroy everything just to prevail,” he added.

 


US, Iran Teams in Pakistan ahead of 'Make-or-Break' Talks

A man rides his motorbike past a billboard installed alongside a road as Pakistan prepares to host the US and Iran for peace talks, in Islamabad, Pakistan, April 10, 2026. REUTERS/Waseem Khan
A man rides his motorbike past a billboard installed alongside a road as Pakistan prepares to host the US and Iran for peace talks, in Islamabad, Pakistan, April 10, 2026. REUTERS/Waseem Khan
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US, Iran Teams in Pakistan ahead of 'Make-or-Break' Talks

A man rides his motorbike past a billboard installed alongside a road as Pakistan prepares to host the US and Iran for peace talks, in Islamabad, Pakistan, April 10, 2026. REUTERS/Waseem Khan
A man rides his motorbike past a billboard installed alongside a road as Pakistan prepares to host the US and Iran for peace talks, in Islamabad, Pakistan, April 10, 2026. REUTERS/Waseem Khan

Senior US and Iranian leaders were in the Pakistani capital Islamabad on Saturday for negotiations to end their six-week-old war, although Tehran threw the talks into doubt by saying they could not begin without commitments on Lebanon and sanctions. 

The US delegation, led by Vice President JD Vance and including President Donald Trump's special envoy Steve Witkoff and son-in-law Jared Kushner, landed in two US air force planes at an air base in Islamabad on Saturday morning, Pakistani sources said. 

The Iranian delegation, led by parliamentary Speaker Mohammad Baqer Qalibaf and Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi, arrived on Friday, said Reuters. 

These will be the highest-level US-Iran talks since the Iranian Revolution of 1979 and the first official face-to-face negotiations between the two sides since 2015, when the two sides reached a deal on Iran's nuclear program. 

Trump scrapped the nuclear deal in 2018 during his first term in office. That same year, Iran's then-Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, who was killed at the start of the war six weeks ago, banned further direct talks between US and Iranian officials. 

IRAN HAS 'NO CARDS', TRUMP SAYS 

Qalibaf said on X that Washington had previously agreed to unblock Iranian assets and to a ceasefire in Lebanon, where Israeli attacks on Iran-backed Hezbollah militants have killed nearly 2,000 people since the start of the fighting in March. He said talks would not start until those pledges were fulfilled. 

Israel and the US have said ‌the Lebanon campaign is ‌not part of the Iran-US ceasefire while Tehran insists it is. 

Qalibaf said separately that Iran was ready to reach ‌a deal if ⁠Washington offered what ⁠he described as a genuine agreement and granted Iran its rights, Iranian state media reported. 

The White House did not immediately comment on the Iranian demands, but Trump posted on social media that the only reason the Iranians were alive was to negotiate a deal. 

"The Iranians don't seem to realize they have no cards, other than a short term extortion of the World by using International Waterways. The only reason they are alive today is to negotiate!" he said. 

Vance, speaking as he headed to Pakistan, said he expected a positive outcome but added: "If they're going to try to play us, then they're going to find the negotiating team is not that receptive." 

Preliminary discussions have been separately held by Pakistani officials with advance teams from both sides, sources in Islamabad said. 

Iran's semi-official Tasnim news agency said these included 70 members from Tehran, including technical specialists in economic, security and political fields as well as media personnel and support staff. About 100 members ⁠of an advance US team were in the city, a Pakistani government source said. 

"We're very positive," said another Pakistani source ‌close to the discussions. 

Asked if talks would end on Saturday, the source said: "Too early to say. They have instructions ‌to close a deal or walk away. Hence not in a rush. These talks are not on the clock." 

Islamabad was under an unprecedented lockdown ahead of the talks with thousands of paramilitary ‌personnel and army troops on the streets. 

"We have deployed multi-layer security for this event, which is based on coordination, intelligence and constant monitoring for zero disruption and full ‌control," Pakistan's junior interior minister, Talal Chaudhry, told Reuters. 

Trump announced a two-week ceasefire in the war on Tuesday, which has halted US and Israeli airstrikes on Iran. 

But it has not ended Iran's blockade of the Strait of Hormuz, which has caused the biggest-ever disruption to global energy supplies, or calmed the parallel war between Israel and Iran-backed Hezbollah in Lebanon. 

FIGHTING CONTINUES IN LEBANON 

The Israeli ambassador to the US, Yechiel Leiter, and his Lebanese counterpart, Nada Hamadeh Moawad, will hold talks in Washington on Tuesday, Israeli and Lebanese officials said, amid the conflicting accounts on what those talks would cover. 

Lebanon's presidency ‌said the two had held a phone call on Friday and agreed to discuss announcing a ceasefire and setting a start date for bilateral talks under US mediation. But Israel's embassy in Washington said the talks would constitute the start of "formal ⁠peace negotiations" and that Israel had refused to ⁠discuss a ceasefire with Hezbollah. 

Israeli attacks continued across southern Lebanon on Friday. One strike on a government building in the city of Nabatieh killed 13 members of Lebanon's state security forces, President Joseph Aoun said in a statement. 

Hezbollah said in a statement on its Telegram channel that it fired rocket salvos at northern Israeli towns in response. 

Tehran's agenda at the Islamabad talks also includes demands for major new concessions, including the end of sanctions that crippled its economy for years, and acknowledgment of its authority over the Strait of Hormuz, where it aims to collect transit fees and control access in what would amount to a huge shift in regional power. 

Iran's ships were sailing through the strait unimpeded on Friday, while those of other countries remained hemmed inside. 

Disruption to energy supplies has fed inflation and slowed the global economy, with an impact expected to last for months even if negotiators succeed in reopening the strait. 

The hard line taken by Iran's leaders ahead of the negotiations followed a defiant message from its new Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei on Thursday. 

Khamenei, yet to be seen in public since taking over from his father, said Iran would demand compensation for all wartime damage. "We will certainly not leave unpunished the criminal aggressors who attacked our country," he said. 

Although Trump has declared victory and degraded Iran's military capabilities, the war has not achieved many of the aims he set out at the start: to deprive Iran of the ability to strike its neighbors, dismantle its nuclear program, and make it easier for its people to overthrow their government. 

Iran still possesses missiles and drones capable of hitting its neighbors and a stockpile of more than 400 kg (900 pounds) of uranium enriched near the level needed to make a bomb. Its clerical rulers, who faced a popular uprising just months ago, withstood the war with no sign of organized opposition. 

 

 

 

 


Trump Warns of Fresh Strikes if Iran Talks Fail

 President Donald Trump speaks with reporters during the White House Easter Egg Roll on the South Lawn of the White House, Monday, April 6, 2026, in Washington. (AP)
President Donald Trump speaks with reporters during the White House Easter Egg Roll on the South Lawn of the White House, Monday, April 6, 2026, in Washington. (AP)
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Trump Warns of Fresh Strikes if Iran Talks Fail

 President Donald Trump speaks with reporters during the White House Easter Egg Roll on the South Lawn of the White House, Monday, April 6, 2026, in Washington. (AP)
President Donald Trump speaks with reporters during the White House Easter Egg Roll on the South Lawn of the White House, Monday, April 6, 2026, in Washington. (AP)

President Donald Trump said Friday that US warships are being reloaded with weaponry to strike Iran if talks in Pakistan fail to produce a deal, in an interview with the New York Post.

"We have a reset going. We're loading up the ships with the best ammunition, the best weapons ever made -- even better than what we did previously and we blew them apart," the Post quoted Trump as saying.

"And if we don't have a deal, we will be using them, and we will be using them very effectively."

In a brief and cryptic message on his Truth Social network earlier, Trump had spoken of the "WORLD'S MOST POWERFUL RESET!!!"

Vice President JD Vance headed to Islamabad on Friday to lead the US delegation in this weekend's talks with Iran, with a warning to Tehran not to "play" Washington.