黑料社区

Pakistan sends delegation to 黑料社区 following PM Sharif鈥檚 high-profile visit

Pakistan sends delegation to 黑料社区 following PM Sharif鈥檚 high-profile visit
Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif (right) chairs the federal cabinet meeting in Islamabad, Pakistan on November 5, 2024 (PTV)
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Updated 05 November 2024

Pakistan sends delegation to 黑料社区 following PM Sharif鈥檚 high-profile visit

Pakistan sends delegation to 黑料社区 following PM Sharif鈥檚 high-profile visit
  • 黑料社区 has pledged to invest $2.8 billion in Pakistan to ensure sustainable economic growth
  • PM urges his team to take maximum benefit from the fruits of Pakistan鈥檚 ongoing economic diplomacy

ISLAMABAD: A Pakistani delegation departed for 黑料社区 after recent high-level talks between the two countries, Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif said on Tuesday, as he highlighted the gains of his administration鈥檚 economic diplomacy during the federal cabinet meeting.

Pakistan has grappled with a prolonged economic crisis in recent years, addressing it through external financing from allies like 黑料社区, the United Arab Emirates and China, along with support from the International Monetary Fund (IMF).

To secure sustainable economic growth, the country has sought trade and investment partnerships, with Sharif visiting 黑料社区 and Qatar earlier this month to discuss collaborative opportunities across multiple sectors.

During these talks, 黑料社区 pledged $2.8 billion through 34 memoranda of understanding (MoUs) and agreements on the sidelines of the Future Investment Initiative conference. Pakistan is now focused on implementing these initiatives, with five projects already underway.

鈥淥ur delegation has left for 黑料社区,鈥 Sharif told cabinet members. 鈥淢y visit and meeting with the crown prince [Mohammed bin Salman] went well, with positive intent for Pakistan.鈥

Sharif highlighted potential collaboration in mines, minerals and solar energy, while noting a demand for Pakistani information technology experts in 黑料社区 and Qatar.

鈥淚 hope the [IT] ministry can prepare a plan [to capitalize on that],鈥 he said.

The prime minister stressed the need to develop a highly skilled workforce to meet global standards while pointing out it was essential to 鈥渞apidly move forward鈥 on MoU implementation with other countries.

He also mentioned $2 billion in MoUs with Azerbaijan, saying Baku had expressed readiness to proceed with these initiatives.

鈥淭hese are good signals, and it鈥檚 up to us now to maximize their benefits,鈥 he added.


Pakistan denies it is acting on behalf of US to engineer regime change in Afghanistan

Pakistan denies it is acting on behalf of US to engineer regime change in Afghanistan
Updated 36 sec ago

Pakistan denies it is acting on behalf of US to engineer regime change in Afghanistan

Pakistan denies it is acting on behalf of US to engineer regime change in Afghanistan
  • Pakistan, Afghanistan reach new understanding in Doha with T眉rkiye and Qatar as guarantors to curb cross-border militancy
  • Asif says Islamabad has 鈥渘o objection鈥 to Kabul鈥檚 ties with India as long as they don鈥檛 threaten Pakistan鈥檚 security

ISLAMABAD: Pakistani Defense Minister Khawaja Asif on Monday dismissed Afghan allegations that Islamabad is acting on behalf of the United States to engineer a regime change in Kabul, describing the claim as 鈥渢otal nonsense.鈥

The remarks come after a week of deadly border clashes 鈥 the worst violence between the two neighbors since the Taliban group seized power in Kabul in 2021 鈥 that left dozens dead and hundreds injured. Both sides agreed to a ceasefire in Doha on Sunday and will meet again on Oct. 25 in Istanbul for further talks. 

The ground fighting between the two nations and Pakistani airstrikes across their contested 2,600-km (1,600-mile) frontier were triggered after Islamabad demanded that Kabul rein in militants who have stepped up attacks in Pakistan, saying they operate from havens in Afghanistan. Kabul denies this.

鈥淚 don鈥檛 want to use any strong word for that, but it鈥檚 total nonsense and nothing else. Why would we? We have enough involvement in Afghan affairs,鈥 Asif told Arab News when asked about claims by the Kabul government that Pakistan was facilitating a US-backed regime change effort in Afghanistan.

鈥淔or the last four or five decades we have had enough. We want to stay away and live like decent neighbors.鈥 

Asif also rejected suggestions that Washington was plotting to topple the Taliban government, saying the movement already maintains cordial relations with the United States.

鈥淚f they think the US is trying to bring regime change over there, in my humble opinion, they have a comfortable relationship with the United States,鈥 he said.

Islamabad has long said that India, its longstanding adversary, is working with Afghanistan to support the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), which is commonly known as the Pakistani Taliban, and other militants against Pakistan. New Delhi denies the claim. 

The latest clashes between Pakistan and India broke out as Afghan Foreign Minister Amir Khan Muttaqi was on a multi-day trip to India, during which New Delhi upgraded relations between the two nations, raising further concerns in Pakistan.

Asif said Pakistan has no objections to Afghanistan鈥檚 relations with other nations, including India, as long as they do not threaten Pakistan鈥檚 security.

鈥淭hey can have a relationship with India or any other country, we have no business with that,鈥 the minister said. 鈥淲hatever they do in their own territory, it doesn鈥檛 become our business as long as it doesn鈥檛 spill over to our side.鈥

He added:

鈥淭hey can have an alliance with India. They can have treaty with them. They can trade with them whatever they want to do. That鈥檚 their business. It鈥檚 not our business.鈥

Responding to a question about Pakistan鈥檚 recent dialogue with the Taliban in Doha, Asif said a new understanding had been reached under which T眉rkiye and Qatar would act as guarantors to ensure that the banned TTP no longer operates from Afghan soil.

鈥淭hey [Kabul] know very well that TTP is operating from their territory and off the record they admit it. In the past, they have even discussed relocating them somewhere else far from our border,鈥 he revealed.

鈥淓verything hinges on this agreement, and the most important clause is that TTP should not be allowed to operate from their territory,鈥 he said, adding that both sides will meet in Istanbul to finalize a monitoring mechanism for the arrangement.

Asif said the Taliban鈥檚 only request during the Doha talks was that Afghan refugees鈥 repatriation be carried out with dignity and honor.

鈥淭hey just politely asked that the repatriation of Afghan refugees should be in an honorable manner,鈥 Asif said. 鈥淭hey did not say don鈥檛 repatriate them, it鈥檚 part of the agreement, and we will facilitate it with dignity.鈥

He was referring to Pakistan鈥檚 deportation campaign against illegal aliens that has intensified over the past year, with authorities repatriating more than 800,000 Afghans since 2023 as part of a nationwide drive against undocumented foreigners.

鈥淭hey were our guests or whatever you can call them for many, many years. If they are going home, we wish them luck,鈥 Asif said. 

鈥淭hat is their soil. We wish them, we pray for them that they have good life under the present regime over there and that Afghanistan has stability and economic well-being.鈥
 


鈥楶eople can breathe鈥: Hope for peace on Afghan-Pakistan border

鈥楶eople can breathe鈥: Hope for peace on Afghan-Pakistan border
Updated 2 min 2 sec ago

鈥楶eople can breathe鈥: Hope for peace on Afghan-Pakistan border

鈥楶eople can breathe鈥: Hope for peace on Afghan-Pakistan border
  • Weeklong border clashes disrupted trade and stranded hundreds of trucks at key crossings
  • Residents and traders urge both sides to safeguard livelihoods, prevent renewed violence after truce

Spin Boldak, Afghanistan: After a week of violence, residents on the frontier between Afghanistan and Pakistan are hoping a new ceasefire deal will end the clashes and revive crucial cross-border trade.

While the crossings remain closed, life has regained a semblance of normality, with bakers kneading bread, fruit and vegetable sellers wheeling out their carts, and customers frequenting shops.

"People can breathe and feel relieved. (But) before that, gunfire damaged a few houses in our village," said Sadiq Shah, 56, a shopkeeper from Baizai on the Pakistani side.

Fighting between Afghanistan and Pakistan broke out after explosions in Kabul on October 9.

The Taliban government blamed the blasts on its neighbour and launched a retaliatory border offensive, prompting Islamabad to vow a strong response.

After further clashes left soldiers and civilians dead, the two sides declared an initial 48-hour ceasefire on Wednesday.

New Pakistani strikes hit Afghanistan on Friday, with Islamabad saying it was targeting armed groups that the Taliban harbours and allows to launch attacks on Pakistani territory -- a claim that Kabul denies.

The two sides approved a second ceasefire on Sunday, to the relief of many along the border.

"It's incredible: both sides are Muslim, (ethnic) Pashtuns, so why fight?" said Shah.

"Previously, trade with Afghanistan went through here, and now we're shooting at each other. What country does that?"

'Losing money'

The border only opened temporarily this week to admit Afghan migrants expelled by Pakistan under a campaign that it launched back in 2023.

In the Pakistani town of Torkham, a normally busy crossing point into the Afghan province of Nangarhar, stranded drivers bought tea from a vendor as they waited in colourful trucks.

More than 1,500 trucks, trailers and containers carrying cement, medicines, rice and other basic goods are waiting in Torkham, according to a senior Pakistani customs official in nearby Peshawar.

Abdul Rahman Habib, spokesman for the Taliban's economy ministry, said fruit and vegetables were rotting as they awaited export to Pakistan.

"Businessmen are losing money," he said, without giving an estimate of the damages.

Habib warned that if this situation persisted, "it could increase prices and unemployment, and destabilise markets".

"Trade relations should be separate from political issues," he told AFP.

After the peace talks in Doha, Qatar's foreign ministry said the ceasefire deal provides for "the establishment of mechanisms to consolidate lasting peace", but their details have not been disclosed.

Niaz Mohammed Akhund, a 39-year-old car salesman in Spin Boldak, an Afghan town where fighting flared last week, said "people here are very happy with the ceasefire".

"(They) have no farmland or other source of income -- everyone depends on cross-border trade, on both sides," he said.

Nematullah, a 24-year-old vendor, also told AFP he hoped "this problem won't resurface".

Across the road on the Pakistani side, market worker Imran Khan called on the two countries to establish a "mechanism to end these conflicts and to start treating each other like brothers".


Internet sensation 鈥楥haiwala鈥 Arshad Khan confirmed as Pakistani citizen, court told

Internet sensation 鈥楥haiwala鈥 Arshad Khan confirmed as Pakistani citizen, court told
Updated 27 min 19 sec ago

Internet sensation 鈥楥haiwala鈥 Arshad Khan confirmed as Pakistani citizen, court told

Internet sensation 鈥楥haiwala鈥 Arshad Khan confirmed as Pakistani citizen, court told
  • Lawyer tells Arab News Khan鈥檚 national ID restored after NADRA review confirmed citizenship
  • Famed tea seller鈥檚 documents were blocked in 2017 amid rumors he was an Afghan national

KARACHI: Pakistani Internet sensation Arshad Khan, better known as 鈥淐haiwala,鈥 has regained his national identity card after authorities verified his citizenship and informed a court that the document had been restored, his counsel said on Monday.

Khan, who became a global celebrity in 2016 after a photograph of him pouring tea at a street stall went viral, had petitioned the Lahore High Court earlier this year to unblock his passport and national ID over fears of deportation amid Pakistan鈥檚 ongoing drive to repatriate undocumented Afghans. The court took notice of the case in April, prompting a formal review of his records.

Pakistan鈥檚 deportation campaign has intensified over the past year, with authorities repatriating more than 800,000 Afghans since 2023 as part of a nationwide drive against undocumented foreigners. The crackdown has heightened fears among ethnic minorities and cross-border families accused of holding invalid documents, including Khan, whose national ID and passport were blocked in 2017 following a media rumor that he was an Afghan national.

鈥淭oday, we informed the court that the computerized national identity card of Arshad Khan, commonly known as Chaiwala, has been unblocked,鈥 Umer Ijaz Gilani, Khan鈥檚 counsel, told Arab News.

He said the issue was taken up at the highest government level after the court鈥檚 notice in April, and a NADRA verification board reviewed Khan鈥檚 family records, including decades-old identification documents, before confirming his Pakistani citizenship.

Gilani said the board concluded that Khan was a Pakistani citizen and restored his CNIC, noting that the court had 鈥渄isposed of our constitutional petition鈥 after NADRA confirmed the decision.

The lawyer added that his client鈥檚 documents were 鈥渕istakenly blocked鈥 in 2017 following a rumor aired by a television channel claiming Khan was an Afghan national.

A High Court order earlier this year described Khan as 鈥済lobally known as Arshad Khan Chaiwala鈥 and said that 鈥渂ased on a fake rumor telecasted by a news channel, his entire future career and business was now at stake.鈥

Khan now plans to renew his passport and resume international travel for his 鈥淐af茅 Chai Wala鈥 brand, which has branches in Pakistan and the United Kingdom, according to his lawyer.


Pakistan tightens barter trade rules, limits mechanism to Afghanistan, Iran and Russia

Pakistan tightens barter trade rules, limits mechanism to Afghanistan, Iran and Russia
Updated 54 min 18 sec ago

Pakistan tightens barter trade rules, limits mechanism to Afghanistan, Iran and Russia

Pakistan tightens barter trade rules, limits mechanism to Afghanistan, Iran and Russia
  • New order introduces definitions for 鈥渟anctioned entities鈥 and quarterly value reconciliation requirements
  • Move narrows scope of barter trade framework first launched in 2023 to ease dollar shortages

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan has amended its barter trade framework to restrict transactions under the business-to-business (B2B) mechanism to Afghanistan, Iran and Russia, tightening oversight of non-cash trade conducted outside the dollar system, according to a notification issued by the Ministry of Commerce this month.

Pakistan first introduced the B2B Barter Trade Mechanism through SRO 642 in June 2023, enabling trade in goods such as energy, food and minerals with Afghanistan, Iran and Russia.

The updated order now limits eligible partners, imposes new compliance obligations and integrates sanction-screening requirements aligned with the Foreign Office notifications.

鈥淭his Order shall apply to Afghanistan, Iran and Russia only,鈥 the notification, dated Oct. 17, said.

The amendment also introduced new definitions and responsibilities for traders.

鈥溾楽anctioned entity鈥 means any individual or company that is prohibited from engaging in trade activities due to the enforcement of trade prohibitions by the United Nations (UN) and others, as notified by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs from time to time,鈥 it stated.

Under the revised framework, Pakistani traders must reconcile the value of goods quarterly and within a specified timeframe.

鈥淭he Pakistani trader shall be responsible to net-off value of goods on a quarterly basis, within one hundred and twenty days of the transaction allowed by the concerned regulatory Collectorate of Customs in the authorization,鈥 the document said.

The notification further specifies that all companies forming part of a trading consortium share liability for tax or customs violations.

鈥淚n case of a consortium of traders, all entities who are part of a consortium shall be jointly and severally responsible if found involved in or having committed any offence or failed to pay duties or taxes under the Customs Act, 1969.鈥

The move to operationalize barter trade is seen as a response to Pakistan鈥檚 acute foreign-exchange crunch and the need to bypass traditional dollar-based trade channels.

Key export items under the mechanism include agricultural products, textiles and leather goods, while permitted imports cover crude oil, LNG, fertilizers and industrial machinery.

"Many concerns of business community of both Iran and Pakistan have been taken into account and addressed in the new SRO," Muhammad Mudassir Tipu, Pakistan's ambassador to Iran, wrote on X.

"We hope it will substantially elevate Pakistan-Iran trade & diversify its base. I urge industry and business community of both countries to take full benefit from the new SRO and help expand the bilateral trade. I also urge Pak-Iran Chambers and Trade bodies to share this SRO with their members enabling them to gain mutually-beneficial trade dividends."


Pakistan to fast-track reforms for small industries, launch AI platform for women entrepreneurs

Pakistan to fast-track reforms for small industries, launch AI platform for women entrepreneurs
Updated 20 October 2025

Pakistan to fast-track reforms for small industries, launch AI platform for women entrepreneurs

Pakistan to fast-track reforms for small industries, launch AI platform for women entrepreneurs
  • PM says Pakistan鈥檚 industrial growth depends on development of small and household industries
  • New AI-based 鈥淲omenpreneurship Platform鈥 to guide women on business registration, taxes and skills

ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif on Monday directed authorities to set a clear timeline for implementing reforms for small and medium-sized industries and accelerate work on an AI-driven platform to support women entrepreneurs, his office said.

Small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) in Pakistan constitute over 90 percent of business establishments and are estimated to contribute around 40 percent of the country鈥檚 gross domestic product (GDP) and roughly 25 percent of exports, while employing as much as 78 percent of the non-agricultural labor force.

Access to finance, however, remains a significant barrier in the Pakistani SME sector. According to a recent policy briefing, only 6-7 percent of private-sector credit is extended to SMEs.

Economists say growth in the SME sector is critical for expanding exports, processing agricultural goods and creating jobs in a country facing slow manufacturing expansion and limited credit access for small producers.

鈥淧akistan鈥檚 industrial development depends on the growth of household, small and medium-sized industries,鈥 the prime minister said after he chaired a meeting on SMEs. 鈥淚n developed countries, SMEs provide raw materials to large industries.鈥

Sharif also called for steps to enhance women鈥檚 participation in small and medium-sized industries.

鈥淭o encourage women鈥檚 participation in the SME sector, a Womenpreneurship Platform based on artificial intelligence is being established,鈥 the statement from Sharif鈥檚 office said.

鈥淭his platform will provide comprehensive information to women regarding business sectors, as well as guidance on registration, tax matters, and skill awareness.鈥

A roadmap was also presented to integrate SMEs into the formal economy.

Meanwhile, the prime minister also directed that registration of household industries be encouraged to help them obtain business loans more easily, and instructed officials to ensure the earliest implementation of the Small and Medium Enterprises Development Authority (SMEDA) roadmap.