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Another Pakistani killed in UAE after missile debris falls during interception

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This is not the first such case involving Pakistanis caught in the fallout from the widening conflict

Smoke billows from Zayed port after an Iranian attack, following United States and Israel strikes on Iran, in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates, March 1, 2026. Picture taken with phone. PHOTO: REUTERS

A Pakistani national has been killed in the United Arab Emirates after debris from an intercepted missile fell in Abu Dhabi, according to Al Jazeera. The death comes as the war triggered by US and Israeli strikes on Iran continues to spill across the Gulf, placing civilians far beyond the main battlefield at risk.

The victim was identified as a Pakistani national by the Abu Dhabi Media Office, Al Jazeera reported on Tuesday, adding that the person was killed by falling debris from an intercepted missile in Abu Dhabi’s Bani Yas area.

This is not the first such case involving Pakistanis caught in the fallout from the widening conflict. On February 28, a Pakistani citizen died in the United Arab Emirates (UAE) during the interception of an Iranian missile after joint US and Israeli strikes on Iran prompted retaliatory attacks.

Read: Trump slams allies over rejection of Hormuz request, as Iran and Israel trade airstrikes

A second Pakistani was later killed in Dubai’s Al Barsha area on March 8 when debris from an aerial interception fell onto a vehicle. Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif also mourned the deaths of two Pakistanis in Dubai and directed authorities to help repatriate their bodies.

Another Pakistani death occurred the same day, when a fisherman from Gwadar was killed in Iranian waters after debris from an Israeli missile, intercepted by Iranian air defences, struck his boat. Local officials identified the victim as Muhammad Tayyab, a resident of Gwadar district in Balochistan.

On March 6, falling debris in Abu Dhabi injured six Pakistani and Nepalese nationals because of an intercepted drone and wider missile activity over the UAE.

The broader regional conflict began on February 28, when the US and Israel launched coordinated strikes on Iran. Since then, Iranian missile and drone attacks have targeted Israel as well as US-linked and strategic sites across several Gulf states, widening the danger zone for expatriate workers, including large Pakistani communities in the UAE and elsewhere in the region.

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