Pakistan PM condemns Balochistan blast killing three, seeks swift justice for perpetrators

Pakistan PM condemns Balochistan blast killing three, seeks swift justice for perpetrators
In this handout photo, taken and shared with Arab News by Balochistan Police, people gather at the site of a bomb blast near the Deputy Commissioner Complex in Pishin on August 24, 2024. (Handout/AN)
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Updated 25 August 2024
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Pakistan PM condemns Balochistan blast killing three, seeks swift justice for perpetrators

Pakistan PM condemns Balochistan blast killing three, seeks swift justice for perpetrators
  • Explosion took place near the deputy commissioner’s office in Pishin, injuring 13 people
  • Two children and one woman lost their lives in the deadly attack targeting traffic police

QUETTA: Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif on Saturday condemned an explosion in Pakistan’s southwestern Balochistan province that killed at least three people and injured 13 others, instructing authorities to bring the perpetrators to justice.
An improvised explosive device (IED) targeted traffic police near the Deputy Commissioner Complex in Pishin, a city located about 55 kilometers from the provincial capital of Quetta, according to police officials, who said two children were among those who lost their lives.
No group has claimed responsibility for the attack so far.
A statement released by the PM Office said Sharif expressed deep sorrow and grief over the death of young children.
“The perpetrators of the incident should be identified and brought to justice,” the prime minister was quoted as saying.
“These cowardly terrorists who attacked young children are not worthy of being called humans,” he added.
The prime minister also prayed for the recovery of police personnel and other individuals injured in the attack and expressed sympathy with the families of those who lost their lives.
Earlier, a police spokesman shared the details of the attack while speaking to Arab News.
“An IED fitted inside a motorbike targeted the traffic police soldiers standing at the Surkhab Chowk near Deputy Commissioner Complex on Saturday morning,” Mujeeb-ur-Rehman Kakar, in-charge of the Pishin police station, said. “Two children were killed and 14 others, including two policemen, were injured in the attack.”
Wakeel Sherani, medical superintendent at the Pishin district headquarters hospital, confirmed receiving bodies of a boy and a girl, and said five of the injured, including a woman and two policemen, were referred to Quetta for better medical care.
However, the injured woman died during treatment at the Civil Hospital in Quetta, according to Dr. Ishaq Panezai, medical superintendent of the medical facility.
“A 25-year-old woman succumbed to injuries while being treated in the Trauma Center,” he told Arab News. “Four other critically injured persons are undergoing surgeries.”
Balochistan, which borders Iran and Afghanistan, has been the site of a low-level separatist insurgency for the last two decades. The ethnic Baloch insurgents say they are fighting what they see as the unfair exploitation of the province’s mineral wealth by the federation. The Pakistani government says it is working for the uplift of the impoverished province.
The province has also witnessed some deadliest attacks by religiously motivated groups like the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan, which has claimed a number of attacks in Pishin and nearby areas in the past.
Shahid Rind, a provincial government spokesman, condemned the attack and directed health officials to ensure best treatment of the injured persons.
“Terrorists have been targeting innocent citizens of Pakistan to achieve their vicious agenda,” he said in a statement. “Enemies of the state will not be spared.”


No wi-Fi, only conversations: Karachi café offers visitors a digital detox

No wi-Fi, only conversations: Karachi café offers visitors a digital detox
Updated 1 min 9 sec ago
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No wi-Fi, only conversations: Karachi café offers visitors a digital detox

No wi-Fi, only conversations: Karachi café offers visitors a digital detox
  • Mazi Cafe, set up in backyard of an old house in Karachi, is haven for people eager to reduce screen time, establish real-life contact
  • There is no Internet connectivity, visitors are encouraged to have conversations over coffee or tea, read books from cafe’s collection

KARACHI: A sign hanging on a tree reads: “We do not have Wi-Fi. Talk to each other. Pretend it’s 1995.”

This is Mazi Cafe, set up in the backyard of an old house in Pakistan’s commercial capital of Karachi as a haven for people eager to spend more time off the digital world, reduce screen time and establish real-life contact. There is no Internet connectivity and visitors are encouraged to have conversations over a cup of coffee or tea, or to read books from the cafe’s collection. 

The setting is also quite serene and adds to the cafe’s nostalgic charm: trees towering over a dimly lit backyard in an old house built five decades ago by the family of the owners, Asif Jalil, a doctor, and his wife Aqsa, who opened the cafe in October last year. 

The Jalils say the cafe, whose name means ‘the past’ in the Urdu language, is more than a cafe but has evolved into a community hub for people of all age groups seeking to disconnect briefly from the commotion of Karachi, Pakistan’s largest city, with a population exceeding 20 million.

“The idea was generated by both of us because we both, as a couple, loved coffee,” Aqsa told Arab News. “When we would sit in this backyard of ours, we thought why not create a place where we cannot use mobile phones and instead of that, we can talk to each other and we can always sit in a peaceful and calm environment and just look at the trees and hear the noise of the birds chirping.”

Aqsa said it really bothered her that people always took pictures of their meals to share with others on social media, which inspired her to create a space where people could put their phones away as they enjoyed coffee and chatted. 

“They automatically just put their mobile phones in their bags or in their pockets, and they just talk to each other when they are here,” she said.

“We have customers of all age groups at our cafe and surprisingly the younger generation are more interested to not use mobile phones than the older generation.”

The coffee is also great, said Jalil, who sources beans from Redberry Roasters, a high-end coffee bean and equipment supplier in the eastern city of Lahore.

“We have probably one of the best machines, one of the best grinders, and one of the best baristas in Pakistan,” he said. “I just happen to be lucky that I have a combination of all these three.”

There is also a collection of books to read if you happen to come alone. 

“If someone doesn’t have a companion, we have company for them, which is a bunch of books,” Jalil added. “So we have fiction, non-fiction, politics, biography, pretty much everything.”

The response has been surprisingly positive, with patrons describing the cafe as a much-needed relief from an ever-connected life full of notifications.

Arham Lodhi, a 21-year-old computer science student, described Mazi Café as a “refreshing departure” from conventional coffee shops.

“This café is different from others in the sense that its ambiance is quite natural. If you look at other cafés, they don’t have this kind of atmosphere, most of them are renovated and modern these days,” he said. 

“But this place has an aesthetic that brings back old memories.”


IFC chief says it is doubling down on Pakistan, eyeing large infrastructure financing

IFC chief says it is doubling down on Pakistan, eyeing large infrastructure financing
Updated 34 min 56 sec ago
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IFC chief says it is doubling down on Pakistan, eyeing large infrastructure financing

IFC chief says it is doubling down on Pakistan, eyeing large infrastructure financing
  • The IFC had exposure of $2.1 billion in Pakistan during fiscal year 2024, ending in June
  • It marked the IFC’s record investment in the South Asian country’s $350 billion economy

ISLAMABAD: The World Bank’s private investment arm is increasing equity investments and eyeing large-scale infrastructure financing in Pakistan, in an investment plan that could unlock $2 billion annually over a decade, the institution’s chief told Reuters on Friday.
International Finance Corporation chief Makhtar Diop’s maiden visit to Pakistan follows the World Bank’s plans to allocate up to $20 billion for Pakistan under a Country Partnership Framework announced in January, with the IFC also slotted to invest the same amount.
“Between now and maybe October we will be able to progress enough on a couple of transactions that will signal that this is a country ready to receive large-scale financing for critical and important infrastructure,” said Makhtar Diop, the corporation’s managing director.
Diop said a $2 billion annual investment “is not a large number” for Pakistan, which needs infrastructure development in international airports, energy, water and ports.
Cash-strapped Pakistan is currently under a $7 billion International Monetary Fund bailout program and navigating a tricky path to recovery.
The South Asian nation narrowly averted a sovereign debt default, with reserves not sufficient enough to meet a month’s worth of controlled imports.
The IFC had an exposure of $2.1 billion in Pakistan during the fiscal year 2024, ending in June, marking its record investment in the South Asian country’s $350 billion economy.
Pakistan’s economy grew by a meagre 0.92 percent in the first quarter of the fiscal year.
Diop said the IFC is looking into agriculture, infrastructure, the “very important” financial sector, and the digital sector.
Pakistan is looking to generate revenue by speeding up a privatization push, but efforts to privatise the national flag carrier, Pakistan International Airlines, and outsource the capital’s airport have fallen flat.
In line with the IFC’s global push, Diop said equity-based transactions were to be expected in Pakistan too.
“Debt will still be a very important part in our business, but our equity will increase in the world, but also in Pakistan. It means we are believing really in Pakistan because we can take equity for a long, long time,” he said.


Pakistan’s deputy PM to attend Security Council meeting on multiculturalism next week

Pakistan’s deputy PM to attend Security Council meeting on multiculturalism next week
Updated 41 min 22 sec ago
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Pakistan’s deputy PM to attend Security Council meeting on multiculturalism next week

Pakistan’s deputy PM to attend Security Council meeting on multiculturalism next week
  • Ishaq Dar will travel to New York to participate in the gathering convened by China
  • Dar will hold meetings with foreign ministers from other states as well as UN officials

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s Deputy Prime Minister Ishaq Dar will travel to New York to attend a United Nations Security Council (UNSC) meeting on global governance and multilateralism next week, the foreign office announced on Friday.
The meeting will be chaired by Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi, as China holds the council’s rotating presidency for the month. The deliberations come at a time of growing concerns about multilateralism, particularly after United States President Donald Trump’s return to the White House.
During his previous term, Trump withdrew the US from key international agreements, challenged traditional alliances and took a more unilateral approach to foreign policy. His new administration’s stance on global governance and international institutions remains under close watch by world leaders.
“The Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister of Pakistan, Senator Mohammad Ishaq Dar, will travel to New York to participate in the high-level meeting of the United Nations Security Council (UNSC) on ‘Practicing Multilateralism: Reforming and Improving Global Governance,’ scheduled to be held from 18th February 2025,” foreign office spokesperson Shafqat Ali Khan said on Friday.
“The meeting has been convened by China under its rotating presidency of the Security Council for the month of February 2025. It will be chaired by H.E. Wang Yi, the Foreign Minister of China,” he added.
Dar is also expected to hold bilateral meetings with foreign ministers from other states as well as senior UN officials on the sidelines of the event.
While it is customary for Pakistan’s top leadership, particularly its prime ministers, to attend the UN General Assembly session in New York every September, visits to participate in other meetings at the world body are relatively rare.
Pakistan was elected as a non-permanent member of the UNSC for the 2025-2026 term in June 2024 with 182 out of 193 votes.
It officially began its two-year tenure on January 1, 2025.


Pakistan PM receives high-level IFC delegation, urges increased investment in key sectors

Pakistan PM receives high-level IFC delegation, urges increased investment in key sectors
Updated 14 February 2025
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Pakistan PM receives high-level IFC delegation, urges increased investment in key sectors

Pakistan PM receives high-level IFC delegation, urges increased investment in key sectors
  • IFC visit comes weeks after the World Bank pledged $40 billion in assistance to the South Asian country
  • Shehbaz Sharif stresses the importance of maximizing private sector participation in development process

KARACHI: Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif on Friday urged the International Finance Corporation (IFC) to enhance its support in key sectors during a high-level delegation visit, weeks after the World Bank pledged $40 billion in assistance to the South Asian country.
The IFC, a member of the World Bank Group, is the largest global development institution focused on the private sector in emerging markets.
The World Bank last month announced a decade-long Country Partnership Framework (CPF) for Pakistan, marking the unprecedented commitment, including $20 billion in sovereign lending through the International Development Association and the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development. The IFC will mobilize an additional $20 billion to spur private sector investments in Pakistan.
“The Prime Minister lauded IFC’s role in fostering private sector investments and expanding its portfolio in Pakistan,” said a statement circulated by Sharif’s office after the meeting with IFC Managing Director Makhtar Diop, who is leading the delegation. “He encouraged IFC to enhance its support under key areas including infrastructure and logistics, outsourcing of large airports, agriculture, information technology, mining, climate resilience, health care, and water & sanitation.”

Pakistan Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif speaks during a meeting with the International Finance Corporation Managing Director Makhtar Diop in Islamabad on February 14, 2025. (PMO)

“He also encouraged IFC to enhance collaboration with the private sector arms of other multilateral institutions for maximizing private sector participation in the development process and achieving greater impact,” the statement added.
The prime minister emphasized the need for export-led growth and called for the digitization of Pakistan’s economic ecosystem. He also highlighted ongoing digitization efforts within the Federal Board of Revenue (FBR) to streamline financial and economic processes.
Diop agreed with Sharif, according to the statement, by stressing the need for increased private sector investment in Pakistan’s road and power sector infrastructure, particularly transmission lines, airport services and wheat storage facilities such as silos to strengthen exports.
He also underscored the importance of private investment in water, health care and sanitation, with necessary social safeguards, to ensure sustainable economic growth.
The IFC official commended Pakistan’s engagement with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and ongoing economic reforms. He noted that the government’s efforts to create an enabling environment for private sector operations had boosted investor confidence. He assured Sharif of the IFC’s continued support, aligned with Pakistan’s development priorities.
Earlier in the day, Diop and his team met with Finance Minister Muhammad Aurangzeb, who briefed them on Pakistan’s macroeconomic stability in terms of both debt and equity, as well as key structural reforms undertaken by the government, according to the finance ministry.
The World Bank’s lending program for Pakistan, set to commence in 2026, will focus on six core outcomes: improving education quality, tackling child stunting, boosting climate resilience, enhancing energy efficiency, fostering inclusive development, and increasing private investment.


Pakistan Air Force demonstrates long-range JF-17 capabilities in Saudi exercise

Pakistan Air Force demonstrates long-range JF-17 capabilities in Saudi exercise
Updated 14 February 2025
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Pakistan Air Force demonstrates long-range JF-17 capabilities in Saudi exercise

Pakistan Air Force demonstrates long-range JF-17 capabilities in Saudi exercise
  • PAF pilots and ground crew participated in Exercise Spears of Victory-2025 at King Abdul Aziz Air Base
  • JF-17 displayed combat performance against advanced fighter jets, showing its operational potential

KARACHI: The Pakistan Air Force (PAF) demonstrated the long-range operational capabilities of its indigenous JF-17 fighter jets during an international exercise in Saudi Arabia, the military’s media wing said on Friday, as the PAF contingent returned home.
The PAF participated in Exercise Spears of Victory-2025, held at King Abdul Aziz Air Base, alongside air forces from Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, France, Greece, Qatar, the United Arab Emirates, the United Kingdom and the United States.
The drills, which began earlier this month, aimed to enhance interoperability through realistic air combat scenarios.
“For this international deployment, PAF fighters executed a non-stop flight from their home base in Pakistan to Saudi Arabia and back, conducting in-flight air-to-air refueling, demonstrating long-range operational capabilities of the JF-17 Block-III aircraft,” the Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR) said in a statement.
The PAF contingent included JF-17 Block-III fighter jets, combat pilots and technical ground crew, who actively participated in the exercise. The JF-17 Block-III displayed its combat performance against advanced fighter jets, earning recognition for its technological strengths and operational potential.
The PAF’s participation highlights its commitment to staying at the forefront of aerial warfare through joint exercises and modern combat training, ISPR added.