Saudi businesses eye opportunities with $2 billion in deals amid Pakistan’s economic upturn

Special Saudi businesses eye opportunities with $2 billion in deals amid Pakistan’s economic upturn
1 / 2
In this handout photograph, taken and released by Pakistan’s Press Information Department, Pakistani and Saudi delegations attend meeting to sign multiple agreements during a high-level Saudi delegation visit, headed by Kingdom’s Investment Minister Khalid bin Abdulaziz Al-Falih, in Islamabad on October 10, 2024. (PID)
Special Saudi businesses eye opportunities with $2 billion in deals amid Pakistan’s economic upturn
2 / 2
In this handout photograph, taken and released by Pakistan’s Press Information Department, Pakistani and Saudi delegations attend meeting to sign multiple agreements during a high-level Saudi delegation visit, headed by Kingdom’s Investment Minister Khalid bin Abdulaziz Al-Falih, in Islamabad on October 10, 2024. (PID)
Short Url
Updated 11 October 2024
Follow

Saudi businesses eye opportunities with $2 billion in deals amid Pakistan’s economic upturn

Saudi businesses eye opportunities with $2 billion in deals amid Pakistan’s economic upturn
  • A large Saudi delegation of companies specializing in energy, mining and industry is currently in Pakistan
  • Delegation says economic stability, improved regulations making Pakistan attractive investment destination

ISLAMABAD: Saudi businessmen expressed hope for successful collaborations in Pakistan on Thursday, saying the country’s economic stability and improved regulatory framework had made it an attractive investment destination, following the signing of over two dozen deals between companies from both countries.

The Kingdom’s Investment Minister Khalid bin Abdulaziz Al-Falih is currently in Pakistan on a three-day visit with a large delegation of over 130 members, including representatives from Saudi companies specializing in energy, mining, minerals, agriculture, business, tourism, industry and manpower.

The delegation on Thursday signed 27 agreements and memorandums of understanding (MoUs) worth more than $2 billion with several Pakistani companies.

“We saw much change in [Pakistan’s business] regulations which have become much softer,” Sultan Al Mansour, Chairman of All Care Medical Group, told Arab News, pointing out that Pakistan was gradually moving toward economic stability. “All that positive news is making Pakistan a good spot for investment.”

Last year in June, Pakistan constituted the Special Investment Facilitation Council (SIFC), a hybrid civil-military forum, to facilitate foreign businesses, particularly from Gulf countries.

The Saudi investor hoped for successful collaborations, saying his company had signed two deals with Pakistani businesses developing surgical instruments and operating in the pharmaceutical industry.

“Our [Pakistani] partners will be launching a factory in Saudi Arabia in the foreseeable future,” he informed, adding the South Asian state was rich in human resources and knowledge, and constituted a big market.

Al Mansour said he had collaborated with Hilbro, a Pakistani company that will supply surgical goods to his organization in the kingdom.

Hilbro’s sales and marketing director, Muhammad Bilal Tariq, said his company would initially supply semi-developed products before setting up a manufacturing unit of surgical goods in Saudi Arabia.

“We are planning to build the factory in Riyadh,” he told Arab News.




Pakistan Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif meets Saudi delegation led by Investment Minister Khalid Bin Abdul Aziz Al Falih in Islamabad on October 10, 2024. (PMO)

Mohammad Almadani, Chief Executive Officer of Classera, one of the region’s largest e-learning ed-tech companies operating in over 40 countries, said his organization had supported numerous ministries of education, training institutions and governments globally to transform education and training.

“We have started a big project called eTaleem which aims to transform education using technology across this great nation [of Pakistan],” he said.

He informed that the first phase of operations had already started by partnering with Pakistan Telecommunication Company Ltd. (PTCL), adding it would use technology to transform education more rapidly and benefit the country’s youth.

“We are talking about 60 million students of Pakistan,” he said.

Almadani noted that human capital was a huge asset, pointing out his collaboration in Pakistan would help advance the country.

Mohammad Al-Hijji, Chairman of the Saudi investment company Engineering Dimension Holding, said it was a good time to join hands with Pakistani businesses due to the government’s investment-friendly policies.

“It is the right time and we are talking about the investment in our partnership with our brethren at Pakistani renewable energy company Welt Konnect, to invest in a 500-megawatt hybrid power project,” he told Arab News.

His Pakistani partner, Habeel Ahmed Khan, termed the collaboration a “great honor.”

“We signed an MoU with our brothers from ED Holding for the 500-megawatt project that we have been developing in the south of Pakistan, almost 45 minutes east of Karachi in the wind corridor of Gharo,” he said.

Sharing details, he said the project would produce about 168 megawatts of wind power and 332 megawatts of solar power.

“It’s going to be one of Pakistan’s first hybrid power projects, which will supply cheap electricity to the national grid,” Khan added.




Saudi Arabia’s Investment Minister Khalid bin Abdulaziz Al-Falih speaks during the inauguration of Pak-Saudi Business Forum 2024 in Islamabad on October 10, 2024. (Photo courtesy: Urdu News)

Ghassan Amodi, Chief Executive Officer of Asyad Holding Group, which is acquiring Shell operations in Pakistan, said the acquisition was part of their strategic plan to expand regionally.

“Our association with Shell is a longstanding relationship, and we look forward to further developing this beyond the borders of Saudi Arabia and now Pakistan. We are also looking for other opportunities,” he said.

Speaking to Arab News, Pakistan’s Petroleum Minister Dr. Musadik Malik said over 130 representatives of around 50 Saudi companies were part of the delegation, adding that many projects and collaborations had been finalized in the energy field during the visit.

“Two Saudi companies have flown into Pakistan, and they will be talking about the upgradation of an old refinery, which is about a billion-and-a-half-dollar project,” he said while informing that Pakistan also expected to finish the study on the greenfield refinery project by December.




Pakistan’s Petroleum Minister Dr. Musadik Malik speaks during the inauguration of Pak-Saudi Business Forum 2024 in Islamabad on October 10, 2024. (PID)

“Then the conversation will begin to move forward on the $7-10 billion project,” he continued.

Malik informed that once the Saudi delegation departs, the government would follow up on an almost weekly or fortnightly basis.

“It will be to see where those contracts are, how those relationships are evolving and if there’s any government-related trouble that we need to troubleshoot and remove,” he explained.


Riyadh calls for enabling private sector investments within existing G2G mechanisms with Pakistan

Riyadh calls for enabling private sector investments within existing G2G mechanisms with Pakistan
Updated 16 sec ago
Follow

Riyadh calls for enabling private sector investments within existing G2G mechanisms with Pakistan

Riyadh calls for enabling private sector investments within existing G2G mechanisms with Pakistan
  • Pakistan and Saudi businesses signed over $2 billion in agreements and memorandums of understanding this week
  • The deals have been signed during a visit to Islamabad by Saudi Investment Minister Khalid bin Abdulaziz Al-Falih

ISLAMABAD: Saudi Investment Minister Khalid bin Abdulaziz Al-Falih said on Friday Riyadh and Islamabad needed to enable private sector investments within existing government-to-government mechanisms like the Saudi-Pakistan Supreme Coordination Council (SPSCC) and Saudi Arabia’s Permanent Coordination Committee for the Development of the Contracting Sector. 
Islamabad and Riyadh signed an agreement to establish the SPSCC in 2021 to institutionalize and fast-track decision-making and implementation on political, security, economic and cultural areas of collaboration. The body aims to streamline bilateral cooperation between the two countries, particularly to remove hurdles in investment deals. Separately, Saudi Arabia’s Permanent Coordination Committee for the Development of the Contracting Sector was created in 2022 to work to upgrade the construction sector and tackle project delays and hurdles. 
On Thursday, Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif and Al-Falih, who is on a three-day visit to Islamabad, oversaw the signing of over $2 billion in agreements and memorandums of understanding (MoUs) between Saudi and Pakistani businesses.
In comments televised on Pakistan’s state APP news agency on Friday, Al-Falih said Pakistan and Saudi Arabia needed to activate work under existing G2G frameworks such as the Permanent Coordination Committee, which is being led by Mohammad Bin Mazyad Al-Tuwaijri, a Saudi politician and minister-ranked adviser at the Royal Court, with Petroleum Minister Dr. Musadik Malik as his Pakistani counterpart. 
“And he [Al-Tuwaijri] has elected to place the Pakistan portfolio within the Royal Court team because he wants to personally have his finger on the pulse of how we are managing [Pakistani investments],” Al-Falih said.
“Within the scope of the G2G, his excellency Al-Tuwaijri and his team have asked MISA [Ministry of Investment for Saudi Arabia] to take the lead on everything about investment, everything about channeling private sector funding, everything about risk mitigation, everything about investment protection, everything about privatization, everything about funding.
“Ultimately what we need to do is enable the private sector.”
The Saudi minister is in Pakistan with a delegation of over 130 businesspeople representing various sectors, including energy, mining, agriculture, tourism, construction, IT and industry. The visit comes as Islamabad seeks closer economic cooperation with friendly countries and regional allies, with the aim to attract foreign investment and shore up its $350 billion economy, beset by a prolonged economic crisis that has drained foreign exchange reserves and weakened the national currency.
Pakistan and Saudi Arabia in particular have been working closely in recent months to increase bilateral trade and investment, with Crown Prince Mohamed bin Salman reaffirming the Kingdom’s commitment earlier this year to expedite a $5 billion investment package for the South Asian country.


Two suspected Pakistani militants behind 2021 attack on Chinese killed in shootout

Two suspected Pakistani militants behind 2021 attack on Chinese killed in shootout
Updated 11 October 2024
Follow

Two suspected Pakistani militants behind 2021 attack on Chinese killed in shootout

Two suspected Pakistani militants behind 2021 attack on Chinese killed in shootout
  • Officials said the militants who had been sentenced to life imprisonment were being moved out of a prison due to a threat when some men attacked the police van
  • The deceased militants were masterminds of the attack that had killed a total of 13 people, including the nine Chinese engineers, near Dasu in northwest Pakistan

LAHORE: Two militants involved in the 2021 attack that killed nine Chinese engineers were shot and killed in a shootout in a central Pakistani district on Friday, counter-terrorism officials said.
They said the militants who had been convicted and sentenced to life imprisonment were being moved out of a prison in Sahiwal district due to a threat when some men attacked the police van they were in.
Two of the five militants in the van were killed in cross-fire between police and the attackers, it said.
Those two were masterminds of the attack that had killed a total of 13 people, including the nine Chinese engineers, near a hydropwer plant in Dasu in northern Pakistan in July 2021.
Pakistan’s main cities, especially Islamabad, are on a high alert ahead of the Shanghai Cooperation Conference (SCO) which is scheduled to be held in the capital on Oct 15-16.
Pakistan is seeking to curb all movements of Chinese nationals during the summit because of the risk that they could be attacked.
The shootout came within hours of an attack that killed over 20 miners in southwestern Balochistan province, the hotbed for separatist militants, including the Baloch Liberation Army (BLA), which has been attacking Chinese nationals and their interests in the region.


Leach leads England’s rout of Pakistan in first Test

Leach leads England’s rout of Pakistan in first Test
Updated 11 October 2024
Follow

Leach leads England’s rout of Pakistan in first Test

Leach leads England’s rout of Pakistan in first Test
  • England’s attack made short work of the last four Pakistan batters on Day 5, dismissing the hosts for 200
  • The win is England’s fourth consecutive Test triumph on Pakistan soil, after a 3-0 whitewash two years ago

MULTAN: England’s bowlers, led by spinner Jack Leach, tore through the Pakistan line-up to secure victory in the first Test in Multan on Friday after a record partnership between Harry Brook and Joe Root turned the match on its head.
England’s attack made short work of the last four Pakistan batters on Day 5, dismissing the hosts for 200 to win by an innings and 47 runs and draw first blood in the three-match series.
The win is England’s fourth consecutive Test triumph on Pakistan soil, after a 3-0 whitewash two years ago. England had only won two away Tests against Pakistan in the previous 61 years.
Leach marshalled England’s attack with 4-30, and provided the first breakthrough on the fifth day when he dislodged Salman Agha for a fighting 63.
It ended Pakistan’s only meaningful partnership.
Pakistan were in danger of losing the match a day early when Salman and Aamer Jamal came together with the score on 82-6.
But the duo saw out the remainder of play and made England wait another 12 overs on the final day — adding 109 — before Leach struck to open the floodgates.
Leach then took a smart return catch to get Shaheen Shah Afridi for ten and then had Naseem Shah stumped for six, wrapping up Pakistan’s second innings.
Last man Abrar Ahmed was unable to bat after being taken to hospital with a high fever.
Ollie Pope, standing in for injured skipper Ben Stokes, was full of praise for Brook and Root’s heroics.
“Credit to them for the skills and determination to put the team in a winning position,” he said.
Brook smashed 317 and Root a record-setting 262 in England’s mammoth 823-7 declared, giving the visitors a 267-run lead.
Their 454, England’s highest-ever partnership for any wicket in Test cricket, gave the visitors an improbable advantage after Pakistan’s impressive 556 first-innings total.
But by close of play on the fourth day on a lifeless pitch, England had posted the fourth-highest Test innings total of 823-7 and taken total control of the match with the hosts teetering at 152-6.
Along the way, Root became the highest run scorer for England in Test history.
Pope was also pleased by the grit shown by England’s inexperienced attack.
“Our bowlers got the odd ball to reverse and spin,” he said of Gus Atkinson who took 2-46 and debutant Brydon Carse who finished with 2-66.
The loss continues a painful losing stretch for Pakistan and will compound the pressure on captain Shan Masood.
His tenure has begun with six consecutive defeats, including three in Australia and two at home at the hands of Bangladesh.
“It can’t be more disappointing than this,” said Masood. “Harsh reality is that England found a way to win after two days under the sun and 556 behind.
“Then they batted big and when they came back with the ball they had a plan and created a window of opportunity in the second innings so the harsh reality in Test cricket is no matter what the pitch quality side finds a way to win.”
Pakistan’s collapse marked a quick turnaround to the match after a flat Multan stadium pitch saw 1,379 runs scored for the loss of just 17 wickets.
The hosts have gone 11 Tests without a win on home grounds, their last win against South Africa came in February 2021.
The second Test starts at the same venue from Tuesday while the third is in Rawalpindi from October 24.


Pakistani weightlifter Nooh Butt wins gold in Commonwealth powerlifting event debut

Pakistani weightlifter Nooh Butt wins gold in Commonwealth powerlifting event debut
Updated 11 October 2024
Follow

Pakistani weightlifter Nooh Butt wins gold in Commonwealth powerlifting event debut

Pakistani weightlifter Nooh Butt wins gold in Commonwealth powerlifting event debut
  • Butt lifted 370kg in his maiden powerlifting competition
  • This year’s event is taking place in Sun City from Oct. 4-13

ISLAMABAD: Pakistani weightlifter Nooh Dastgir Butt has made a brilliant debut by winning a gold medal in the squat competition of the Commonwealth Powerlifting Classic and Equipped Championships held in South Africa, Pakistani state media reported on Thursday, with Butt etching his name in history as the country’s first powerlifting gold medalist.
The Commonwealth Powerlifting Classic and Equipped Championships is a premier powerlifting competition that brings together top athletes from across the Commonwealth nations. The event is organized by the Commonwealth Powerlifting Federation (CPF), which aims to promote drug-free powerlifting at the international level.
This year’s championships are taking place in Sun City, South Africa from October 4 till October 13, featuring classic and equipped powerlifting categories.
“It is a historic moment for Pakistan, as Nooh won the gold medal in his very first participation,” the state-run APP news agency reported.
Butt lifted an impressive 370kg in his maiden powerlifting competition, according to the report.
The competition includes various weight classes and age groups, with athletes competing in squat, bench press and deadlift events.
But is set to compete in the bench press and deadlift categories, where he is one of the favorites in the 120kg+ category.


Authorities in northwestern Pakistani province allow ‘banned’ Pashtun group to hold grand council

Authorities in northwestern Pakistani province allow ‘banned’ Pashtun group to hold grand council
Updated 11 October 2024
Follow

Authorities in northwestern Pakistani province allow ‘banned’ Pashtun group to hold grand council

Authorities in northwestern Pakistani province allow ‘banned’ Pashtun group to hold grand council
  • Founded in 2014, the Pashtun Tahafuz Movement has long advocated against extrajudicial killings and enforced disappearances of Pashtuns and other ethnic minorities in Pakistan
  • At least three people were killed in clashes between Pakistani police and PTM supporters in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, two days after the federal government banned the PTM

PESHAWAR: The government in Pakistan’s Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) province has allowed the recently banned Pashtun Tahafuz Movement (PTM) to hold a three-day grand council of its political and tribal elders to resolve issues facing the Pashtun communities in the country’s volatile northwest and elsewhere, a KP provincial minister said on Friday.
Founded in 2014, the PTM has long advocated against extrajudicial killings and enforced disappearances of Pashtuns and other ethnic minorities in Pakistan, charges the government and the military deny. The group has been waging a campaign to force the military to leave the former tribal regions in the northwest that border Afghanistan.
On Monday, the Pakistani government banned the PTM and said the group supported the Pakistani Taliban. It also banned PTM rallies in the restive northwest, saying the demonstrations were against the “interests of Pakistan.” Despite the announcement of the ban, the PTM, which denies backing the Pakistani Taliban, said it would go ahead with plans to hold the Pashtun National Jirga on October 11 to discuss peace and security in KP.
A day before the PTM gathering, a separate assembly of political and tribal leaders, held under the patronage of the KP Chief Minister Ali Amin Gandapur in Peshawar, threw its weight behind the CM to resolve the conflict “through dialogue and understanding,” KP government spokesperson Muhammad Ali Saif said, without mentioning how the KP government planned to deal with the PTM’s gathering.
“Peace, development and prosperity is a mutual agenda of all of us,” KP Public Health Minister Pakhtoon Yar Khan told reporters in the Khyber tribal district, where the PTM has summoned its grand jirga.
“The Pashtun National Jirga has been given permission. They will remain within the ambit of law and the constitution, participants will present the demands.”
He said the grand council in Khyber was not an individual’s, but a Pashtun assembly.
“The PTI [the ruling Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf party in KP] does not believe in violence, will solve the problems of Pashtuns peacefully,” Khan added.
On Wednesday, at least three people were killed in clashes between Pakistani police and supporters of the PTM rights group in Khyber’s Jamrood area, two days after the federal government banned the PTM.
In a post on X in the wee hours of Friday, the Pashtun National Jirga said the last few weeks had been “extremely challenging” for Pashtun rights activists working for the October 11 gathering.
“Tonight, Pashtuns are persevering under testing conditions,” it said on the night between Thursday and Friday. “It is a sign of our determination.”
This week, Amnesty International, a global human rights watchdog, called on the Pakistan government to revoke the ban on the PTM.
The “latest arbitrary ban under over-broad powers of the terror law is only the tip of the iceberg,” Babu Ram Pant, Amnesty’s deputy regional director for South Asia, said on Wednesday, accusing the Pakistani authorities of “resorting to unlawful use of force, enforced disappearances, and media bans on the coverage of protests or rallies.”