Pakistani experts stress transforming Pak-Saudi ties into stronger economic partnership

Pakistani experts stress transforming Pak-Saudi ties into stronger economic partnership
In this handout photograph, released by Pakistan’s Press Information Department on December 3, 2024, Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif (left) meets Saudi Arabia’s Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman on the sidelines of the One Water Summit in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. (PID)
Short Url
Updated 05 December 2024
Follow

Pakistani experts stress transforming Pak-Saudi ties into stronger economic partnership

Pakistani experts stress transforming Pak-Saudi ties into stronger economic partnership
  • Pakistan PM met Saudi crown prince this week in Riyadh for fifth time in six months to discuss bilateral trade, investment
  • Pakistani mission in Riyadh says IT exports to Kingdom increased from $31.67 million in FY23 to $47.09 million in FY 2024

ISLAMABAD: Pakistani business leaders, experts and officials this week hailed Islamabad’s growing economic partnership with Saudi Arabia, saying it was high time the two countries transformed their close ties into a robust and mutually rewarding economic partnership. 

Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif on Wednesday concluded a two-day visit to Saudi Arabia where he met Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman on the sidelines of the One Water Summit in Riyadh. During the visit, Sharif met the crown prince for the fifth time in six months, during which both sides agreed to bring about a qualitative change in bilateral ties and expressed satisfaction over the pace of implementation of $2.8 billion agreements signed between the two countries. 

Pakistan has pushed in recent months to strengthen trade and investment ties with friendly nations, particularly the Kingdom, which has promised a $5 billion investment package that cash-strapped Islamabad desperately needs to shore up foreign reserves and fight a chronic balance of payment crisis.

The Prime Minister’s Office (PMO) said in a statement this week that seven out of 34 MoUs valued at $2.8 billion and signed earlier this year with Saudi Arabia have been converted into agreements worth $560 million.

“This is high time to transform the Pakistan-Saudi relationship into a stronger economic partnership, especially following the recent increase in high-level leadership contacts and exchanges of business delegations,” Fahad Barlas, chairman of the Pakistan Association of Exhibition Industry, told Arab News on Wednesday. 

Barlas organized the second Pakistan Investment Summit in Jeddah on Nov. 30 under the Pakistan Association of Exhibition Industry. The event featured 31 Pakistani companies from various sectors and was attended by prominent traders, investors, and community figures.

“We brought together 31 Pakistani companies, all of which received promising leads, with around 20 of them expected to convert into tangible collaborations and deals worth over $25 million,” he disclosed.

He said five MoUs were signed at the event, adding that the major companies that signed deals included real estate developers such as Exotica, ParkView City, and the Defense Housing Authority. 

Pakistan and Saudi Arabia’s growing closeness and business ties have translated into higher trade between the two countries. 
“In FY 2024, Pakistan’s trade volume with Saudi Arabia reached $5203.19 million marking an increase from $5010.47 million in FY 2023,” the Pakistani mission in Riyadh told Arab News.

It said that from July to October during the current financial year, Pakistan’s trade volume with Saudi Arabia has already reached $1,577.85 million. Meanwhile, Pakistan’s total exports to Saudi Arabia were recorded at $710.29 million for FY 2024, up from $503.85 million in FY 2023.

“Pakistan’s exports to Saudi Arabia for the period from July to October current FY 2025 amounted to $245.56 million, compared to $214.98 million during the same period in FY 2024, reflecting a notable increase,” the embassy added.

The mission said Pakistan’s IT exports registered a “significant growth” of over 48 percent in FY24, increasing from $31.67 million in FY 2023 to $47.09 million. Pakistan’s services exports to the Kingdom increased by 20 percent, rising from $346.88 million in FY 2023 to $417.94 million in FY 2024. 

“Pakistan’s services exports to Saudi Arabia for the period from July to October FY 2025 reached $151.21 million, compared to $132.54 million during the same period in FY 2024, reflecting a growth in exports,” it added. 

The mission said Pakistan’s main exports to Saudi Arabia included cereals, meat and beef, textiles, knitted garments, cotton fabrics, beverages, spices, fruits and vegetables, fish and fish products, light engineering goods, leather products, towels and organic chemicals.

KINGDOM ‘MAJOR INVESTOR’ IN PAKISTAN

Khaqan Najeeb, former adviser to the finance ministry, said Pakistan’s relationship with Saudi Arabia was now emerging in investment and trade, particularly focused on science, technology, IT, mining sector and agriculture areas. 

“It would be important to say that at the time when Pakistan needed the required gross external financing needs to be fulfilled, Saudi Arabia was a key player to ensure its deposits in Pakistan,” he told Arab News.

Najeeb said it was good to see agreements worth $560 million signed with Saudi Arabia were now being implemented, signaling a positive progress in bilateral business relations.

“The recent interaction will boost the confidence of the Saudi government and hope to see the crown prince visiting Pakistan to conclude some of the ongoing talks around the mines and mineral sector in Pakistan,” he said. 

Javed Hafeez, a former Pakistani diplomat, said the impact of the increased Pakistan-Saudi Arabia leadership-level contacts on investment and trade would be “positive.”

“The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia is a major investor in Special Investment Facilitation Center (SIFC) and its related projects, especially in agriculture and in mining,” he told Arab News.

Pakistan formed the Special Investment Facilitation Council (SIFC), a hybrid civil and military body, in 2023 to fast-track decisions related to foreign investment in its key economic sectors such as agriculture, mining, minerals, tourism and others.

He said that the five meetings between Sharif and the Saudi crown prince in six months highlighted both sides’ mutual desire for frequent consultations, especially as the region undergoes turbulence.

“In terms of peace and security, Saudi Arabia and Pakistan, as close allies, regularly consult each other at key junctures, given their shared responsibility for peace in the Middle East,” Hafeez said.


Baloch rights group says top leader arrested in police raid in southwestern Pakistan

Baloch rights group says top leader arrested in police raid in southwestern Pakistan
Updated 12 sec ago
Follow

Baloch rights group says top leader arrested in police raid in southwestern Pakistan

Baloch rights group says top leader arrested in police raid in southwestern Pakistan
  • Baloch Yakjehti Committee says Dr. Mahrang Baloch was arrested amid a province-wide wheel-jam strike
  • The top BYC leader has long claimed the ethnic Baloch community is subjected to extrajudicial harassment

QUETTA: A leading Baloch ethnic rights group announced on Saturday its top leader was arrested along with several of her colleagues in southwestern Balochistan after police raided their protest camp at dawn in the provincial capital of Quetta.
Dr. Mahrang Baloch has long campaigned for the rights of the ethnic Baloch community, which claims to be subjected to extrajudicial harassment, arrests and killings by security forces in the province.
The Pakistani state, however, denies the allegation, saying its forces are combating separatist militants who target armed forces personnel and foreign nationals in the mineral-rich province that borders Iran and Afghanistan.
The Baloch Yakjehti Committee (BYC) said its leader’s arrest came amid a province-wide wheel-jam strike that followed an alleged police attack on a protest in Quetta that killed three people on Friday evening. According to BYC, Baloch and other supporters began a sit-in with the bodies of the deceased when authorities intervened and detained them.
“At around 5:30 this morning, police and other state agencies attacked the protest sit-in, seized the bodies of the martyrs from the demonstrators, and arrested Baloch Yakjehti Committee’s central leader, Dr. Mahrang Baloch, along with her companions,” Sammi Deen Baloch, a BYC leader, said in a social media post.
“The bodies of the slain youth were also forcibly taken into custody. In addition, a crackdown was carried out against women and children as well,” she added.
Arab News made multiple attempts to contact government and police officials for comment, but did not receive a response.
However, AFP quoted a senior police official, speaking on condition of anonymity, who confirmed the arrests and said that Baloch and 17 others had been taken into custody.
“It is currently being assessed what charges should be filed against them,” the official said.
Previously, the provincial authorities of Balochistan accused the BYC of getting into a confrontation with police after some demonstrators attempted to retrieve the bodies of deceased militants involved in the hijacking of the Jaffar Express train last week.
The Baloch Liberation Army (BLA), a separatist group, had targeted the Peshawar-bound passenger train in the mountainous Bolan region on March 11, taking hundreds of passengers hostage.
The siege that lasted for two days ended after a military operation that killed 33 militants. The attack, which also claimed the lives of more than 30 Pakistanis, was one of the deadliest train assaults in the country’s history.
The government decided to lodge a police case against protesters who allegedly stormed the mortuary at the Civil Hospital Quetta to get the militants’ bodies and booked 12 individuals on Thursday.


Pakistan Railways reduces train fares for travel on Eid Al-Fitr

Pakistan Railways reduces train fares for travel on Eid Al-Fitr
Updated 22 March 2025
Follow

Pakistan Railways reduces train fares for travel on Eid Al-Fitr

Pakistan Railways reduces train fares for travel on Eid Al-Fitr
  • Hundreds of thousands of Pakistanis travel via airplanes, trains, buses to their hometowns to celebrate Eid with family and friends
  • This week, Pakistan’s government announced a three-day holiday from Mar. 31 to Apr. 2 on account of the Muslim festival of Eid Al-Fitr

KARACHI: Pakistan Railways has reduced fares for passenger for travel during Eid Al-Fitr holidays, it announced on Saturday.
Eid Al-Fitr marks the end of the fasting month of Ramadan for Muslims worldwide. Ramadan began in Pakistan on Mar. 2, a day after most other Muslims nations, and the Eid Al-Fitr festival at end of the holy month is expected to fall on Mar. 31.
Pakistan’s government this week announced a three-day holiday from Mar. 31 to Apr. 2 on account of the Muslim festival of Eid Al-Fitr.
“The competent authority has been pleased to grant 20 percent concession in fares of all mail and express, intercity and passenger trains in all classes (managed by PR only) on account of the auspicious occasion of Eid Al-Fitr,” the railways department said in a notification.
“This concession will be allowed on current booking only on 1st, 2nd and 3rd days of Eid Al-Fitr.”
Eid Al-Fitr is one of two major Muslim festivals, the other being Eid Al-Adha, which is marked by the slaughtering of animals such as sheep and goats whose meat is shared among family and friends and donated to the poor. This year, Eid Al-Adha is expected to fall on June 6 or 7, marking the culmination of the Hajj pilgrimage.
Hundreds of thousands of Pakistanis travel via airplanes, trains, buses to their hometowns from far-flung cities and abroad to celebrate the joyous occasions with families and friends each year.
Pakistan Railways also runs special trains on both Eids to facilitate passengers.
“No person or party will be allowed to avail two or more concessions at one time,” the notification read. “Concessional fares shall not be applicable to the Eid special trains.”


On World Water Day, PM calls for steps to preserve glaciers for Pakistan’s secure future

On World Water Day, PM calls for steps to preserve glaciers for Pakistan’s secure future
Updated 22 March 2025
Follow

On World Water Day, PM calls for steps to preserve glaciers for Pakistan’s secure future

On World Water Day, PM calls for steps to preserve glaciers for Pakistan’s secure future
  • Pakistan has around 13,000 glaciers, of which nearly 10,000 are receding and expected to cause significant water disruptions
  • PM Shehbaz Sharif says Pakistan’s wetlands are disappearing three times faster than its forests and demand immediate action

ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif has urged Pakistanis to take steps to preserve water resources, including glaciers, for a water-secure future of the country, his office said on Saturday, on the World Water Day.
The World Water Day is an annual United Nations (UN) observance held on March 22 each year that highlights the importance of freshwater. The day is used to advocate for sustainable management of freshwater resources across the globe.
In his message, Sharif said the day, being observed under the theme of “Glacier Preservation” this year, reminds them of the critical role glaciers play in sustaining the planet’s freshwater supplies and of the grave challenges in protecting this essential resource.
“Nearly half of the global population experiences water scarcity for at least part of the year. Billions remain without access to clean drinking water, while water pollution continues to rise at alarming levels. Our wetlands are disappearing three times faster than our forests. This is no longer a distant threat. It is a global crisis that demands immediate and collective action,” Sharif was quoted as saying by his office.
“On this World Water Day, let us reaffirm our resolve to preserve our glaciers, protect our water resources, and work together for a resilient, water-secure future— for our people, our region, and our planet.”
There are a total of 13,000 glaciers in Pakistan and nearly 10,000 of them are receding and expected to cause significant water disruptions, according to Pakistani authorities.
The melting of these glaciers at a fast pace and heavy untimely rains due to climate change put the South Asian country at risk of frequent floods, while at the same time, droughts pose an equally serious threat, with nearly 80 percent of Pakistan’s land categorized as arid or semi-arid and 30 percent of population directly affected by drought-like conditions.
Melting glaciers contribute to rising sea levels, another cause of coastal erosion. The sea level at Karachi rose almost 8 inches (almost 20 centimeters) between 1916 and 2016, according to data from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. It’s projected to rise another half-inch (about 1.3 centimeters) by 2040.
In areas near the southwestern coastal city of Gwadar, like Pishukan and Ganz, waves have swallowed up mosques, schools, and settlements. There are gashes in the cliffs at the popular picnic spot of Sunset Park and rocks have cascaded onto the shore, while beaches run flat for dozens of kilometers because no structures remain on it.
“Pakistan is among the ten countries most vulnerable to climate change. Our average temperatures are projected to rise faster than the global average,” Sharif said.
“Over three-quarters of our water resources originate outside our borders. That is why Pakistan attaches great importance to transboundary water cooperation.”
He said his government was working to mitigate climate-induced flood risks and reduce drought impacts through ecosystem-based adaptation, and implementing 25 priority interventions from promoting nature-based agriculture and restoring the Indus delta to curbing industrial pollution and investing in green infrastructure.


Pakistan urges halt in Israeli strikes on Gaza for success of Saudi-backed conference on two-state solution

Pakistan urges halt in Israeli strikes on Gaza for success of Saudi-backed conference on two-state solution
Updated 22 March 2025
Follow

Pakistan urges halt in Israeli strikes on Gaza for success of Saudi-backed conference on two-state solution

Pakistan urges halt in Israeli strikes on Gaza for success of Saudi-backed conference on two-state solution
  • Development comes after French President Emmanuel Macron said he spoke with Saudi Arabia’s Crown Prince and they will co-chair a conference on the two-state solution
  • Pakistan does not recognize Israel and has consistently called for an independent Palestinian state based on ‘internationally agreed parameters’ and pre-1967 borders

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan urges the world to halt Israeli strikes on Gaza for the success of a conference in June on the two-state solution to the Palestine issue, Pakistan’s permanent mission to the United Nations (UN) said on Saturday.
The statement came days after French President Emmanuel Macron said he spoke with Saudi Arabia’s Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman and the two leaders condemned the resumption of Israeli strikes on Gaza. Macron said they will co-chair a conference on a two-state solution, aimed at “helping revive a political perspective for both Israelis and Palestinians.”
The Israeli military on Wednesday resumed ground operations in central and southern Gaza, as a second day of airstrikes killed at least 48 Palestinians, according to health authorities. The renewed ground operations came a day after more than 400 Palestinians were killed in airstrikes in one of the deadliest episodes since the beginning of the conflict in October 2023, shattering a ceasefire that has largely held since January.
“If we can halt Israel’s military campaign, sustain a ceasefire and end the humanitarian crisis, it would create conditions conducive to the success of the endeavor for a two-State solution at the Conference, co-chaired by Saudi Arabia and France, next June,” the Pakistani mission quoted the country’s permanent representative, Munir Akram, as saying at the UN.
“This is an outcome that should be desired by the world and should enjoy consensus within the Security Council.”
Palestinian territory – encompassing the Gaza Strip and West Bank, including East Jerusalem – has been occupied by Israel since 1967. Pakistan does not recognize Israel and has consistently called for an independent Palestinian state based on “internationally agreed parameters” and pre-1967 borders.
“The Security Council, and the world community, cannot sit back and watch this on-going ethnic cleansing,” Akram was quoted as saying. “A failure to halt this brutal war will unleash the worst instinct of powerful and predatory states, shred the principles of the UN Charter, designed to prevent aggression and the scourge of war.”
Israel’s war on Gaza, which began after the Oct. 7, 2023 attacks by Hamas, has killed more than 48,000 Palestinians, most of them women and children, and displaced almost all of Gaza’s 2 million population by laying waste to swathes of neighborhoods, schools and hospitals.


At least nine injured as police, ethnic Baloch protesters clash in Pakistan’s southwest

At least nine injured as police, ethnic Baloch protesters clash in Pakistan’s southwest
Updated 22 March 2025
Follow

At least nine injured as police, ethnic Baloch protesters clash in Pakistan’s southwest

At least nine injured as police, ethnic Baloch protesters clash in Pakistan’s southwest
  • The clashes erupted during a protest by the Baloch Yakjehti Committee rights group over the arrest of three of its key members by authorities this week
  • Balochistan, Pakistan’s largest province by land, has been the site of an insurgency for decades and has witnessed a surge in violence in recent months

QUETTA: At least nine people, including policemen, were injured after clashes broke out between police and protesters from an ethnic Baloch rights group, the Baloch Yakjehti Committee, late Friday night in the southwestern Pakistani city of Quetta, officials said.
The BYC accused law enforcement agencies of forcibly arresting its three central committee members on Wednesday and called for a protest on Sariab Road in Quetta, the capital of Balochistan province which has recent witnessed a spike in separatist attacks.
The call for protest followed a clash between protesters and the police after people attempted to take away bodies of deceased militants who were killed after the Jaffar Express train hijacking last week, according to authorities. The provincial government lodged a police case against the protesters who stormed the mortuary at Civil Hospital Quetta and booked 12 protesters on Thursday.
Last week, militants from the Baloch Liberation Army (BLA) separatist group hijacked the Peshawar-bound Jaffar Express passenger train in the rugged, mountainous Bolan region, with more than 400 passengers onboard. The hours-long siege ended after Pakistan launched an operation and killed 33 militants. The deadliest train assault resulted in the killing of over 30 Pakistani security personnel and civilians.
“The Baloch Yakjehti Committee blocked highways in Quetta and the police took legal action against the protesters who were blocking the roads,” Shahid Rind, a spokesman for the Balochistan government, said on Friday.
“The protesters pelted stones at police and tortured policemen, injuring several cops and civilians.”
The BYC was staging a sit-in on Sariab Road with bodies of three protesters, which it alleged were killed by gunfire from the authorities.
Rind said the government was ascertaining whose bodies BYC placed in their protest: “It is impossible to know the causes of death of the bodies unless the bodies were brought to the hospital for medico-legal procedure.”
Dr. Arbab Kamran Kasi, head of Trauma Center Quetta told Arab News, they had received nine injured persons, including policemen.
“Six injured with minor wounds were discharged, two are being treated and one was referred to the Combined Military Hospital,” he shared.
Dr. Mahrang Baloch, a veteran human rights activist who heads the BYC, accused police of killing three protesters by shooting at a peaceful rally in Quetta.
“We called a peaceful sit-in today on the Sariab Road in Quetta but the police attacked our protesters,” she told Arab News. “Now we have camped at Sariab Road with the bodies of three slain protesters and we won’t end the protest until justice has been provided to our slain workers.”
The office of the Quetta commissioner denied reports of firing by authorities.
“No shelling was carried out by the administration during the BYC protest. No firearms or rubber bullets were used,” it said in a statement. “Only water cannons (non-lethal and safe method) were used to disperse the crowd.”
It said the administration respects the right to peaceful protest, however, lawlessness and attacks on state institutions cannot be permitted.
Amnesty International, a global human rights watchdog, voiced alarm over the reports of deaths of three protesters and nearly a dozen injuries following live ammunition fired by authorities against the protesters in Quetta, describing it as “a shocking indictment of the Pakistani authorities’ utter disregard for human life.”
“In blatant violation of the right to protest, the authorities conducted mass arrests and fired tear gas before resorting to unlawful use of lethal weapons against the unarmed protesters. Mobile networks in the city remain suspended, hindering free flow of information,” it said on X.
“Amnesty International urges the Pakistani authorities to immediately stop the reckless crackdown against the peaceful protesters and guarantee the right to freedom of peaceful assembly and expression, in line with Pakistan’s international human rights obligations.”
Balochistan is Pakistan’s largest province by land but its most backward by almost all economic and social indicators. For decades it has been plagued by a low-level insurgency by militants fighting for a greater share of the province’s wealth.
Separatist militants, such as the Baloch Liberation Army (BLA) accuse the central government of denying locals a share of Balochistan’s mineral resources. The federal government and the military strongly deny these accusations, and say they have launched several projects in the province to support its development.
Violence by Baloch separatist factions, primarily the BLA, killed about 300 people last year, according to official statistics, marking an escalation in the decades-long conflict.