Islamabad says Iran to prioritize Pakistani rice, mango and meat exports under ‘landmark’ understanding

Islamabad says Iran to prioritize Pakistani rice, mango and meat exports under ‘landmark’ understanding
In this picture taken on March 31, 2021 workers fill a sack with rice at the Al-Barkat Rice Mills on the outskirts of Lahore. (AFP/ file)
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Updated 18 August 2025

Islamabad says Iran to prioritize Pakistani rice, mango and meat exports under ‘landmark’ understanding

Islamabad says Iran to prioritize Pakistani rice, mango and meat exports under ‘landmark’ understanding
  • The development comes more than a week after Pakistan and Iran signed agreements aimed at raising bilateral trade to $10 billion
  • The two countries have attempted to forge closer economic and investment ties through border markets and trade links in recent years

ISLAMABAD: Iran will prioritize Pakistan’s rice, meat, mango and other exports as part of a “landmark” trade understanding reached between the two countries in Tehran, the Pakistani government said on Monday.

The statement came after a high-level ministerial meeting between both sides on food security and agricultural cooperation. National Food Security Minister Rana Tanveer Hussain led the Pakistani side. The meeting was co-chaired by his Iranian counterpart, Mr. Gholamreza Nourozi, and attended by senior representatives of key ministries, research institutions, and trade authorities from both countries.

Both sides reached an agreement for Iran to source a major portion of its rice imports from Pakistan for both government and private sector procurement, while the Iranian side assured of addressing longstanding challenges faced by Pakistani fruit exporters, particularly delays in issuance of import permits and foreign exchange allocations in Iran, according to Pakistan’s Press Information Department (PID).

“With these measures in place, exports of Pakistani mangoes to Iran are set to rise substantially,” the PID said, adding that the discussion also focused on Pakistan’s livestock and meat sector. “Iran agreed to focus on Pakistan as a principal supplier and to ensure that around 60 percent of its meat procurements are sourced from Pakistan.”

Similarly, Iran agreed to import large volumes of maize from Pakistan, with a commitment to resolve technical and procedural issues on priority and within the shortest possible time, according to the PID.

Recognizing the need for science-driven solutions in agriculture, both sides agreed to enhance cooperation between the Pakistan Agricultural Research Council (PARC) and Iranian research institutions.

“This collaboration will cover key areas of mutual advantage, including crop research, livestock breeding, water management, and innovation for farmers’ benefit,” the PID said.

Both sides reached a consensus on a wide range of facilitation measures aimed at easing agricultural trade, including faster customs clearance, establishment of warehouses and cold chain systems, and improvements in border

infrastructure to ensure perishable commodities reach markets efficiently and in prime quality.

“To ensure that these historic decisions are implemented effectively, a Joint Committee on Agricultural Cooperation was formally established,” the PID said. “The Committee will meet every six months to review progress, resolve emerging issues, and maintain the momentum of cooperation.”

The development comes more than a week after Pakistan and Iran signed agreements in the fields of politics, economy, culture and other vital sectors during Iranian President Dr. Masoud Pezeshkian’s visit to Pakistan, aimed at raising their bilateral trade to $10 billion.

Pakistan and Iran, which have remained at odds over instability along their porous border, have attempted to forge closer economic and investment ties through border markets and trade links in recent years.

“My deep belief is that we can easily, in a short time, increase the volume of our trade relations from the current $3 billion to the projected goal of $10 billion,” Pezeshkian told reporters during a joint press conference with Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif and high-level delegations from both countries in attendance.

Both countries also discussed militancy along their shared border and exchanged 12 agreements and memorandums of understanding (MoUs) for cooperation in science, technology and innovation, cooperation in information and communications technology, exchange programs for culture, art, tourism, youth, mass media and exports, cooperation in meteorology, climatology, tourism cooperation and other fields.


Pakistan to launch national campaign against river encroachments as rain death toll rises to 788

Pakistan to launch national campaign against river encroachments as rain death toll rises to 788
Updated 20 sec ago

Pakistan to launch national campaign against river encroachments as rain death toll rises to 788

Pakistan to launch national campaign against river encroachments as rain death toll rises to 788
  • Experts warn unregulated construction in natural flood channels weaken ecosystems, intensify impact of heavy rains
  • Heavy monsoon rains and deadly floods have killed at least 475 people across Pakistan since Aug. 15, injured 278

ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif this week announced that his government would launch a national campaign against construction around rivers, water courses and streams, state-run media reported, as the death toll from deadly floods and rains since Jun. 26 surged to 788. 

Environmental experts have warned that riverbed mining, unregulated logging and construction in natural flood channels weaken ecosystems, block drainage routes, and intensify the impact of heavy rains. In July, Pakistan’s mountainous northern Gilgit-Baltistan (GB) region, which is home to over 13,000 glaciers, banned the construction of new hotels around lakes. 

Deadly rains and floods have swept several parts of Pakistan, including its northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) province, killing at least 788 persons in total since Jun. 26. KP has reported the highest number of deaths, 469, followed by Punjab with 165, Sindh with 54, GB with 45, Balochistan with 24 and Azad Kashmir with 23 casualties while Islamabad has reported eight deaths. 

“A national campaign will be launched to stop construction around rivers, streams and natural water courses,” Sharif was quoted as saying by his office on Saturday. 

The Pakistani premier ordered the National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA) and district administrations to continue rescue operations in the affected areas of Ghizer in GB, where a glacial lake outburst triggered a flood this week. 
“The prime minister directed all concerned authorities to be fully prepared for relief operations in the lower parts of the country in view of the flood situation in the coming days,” the statement said. 
Pakistani authorities have warned that monsoon showers, expected to last until Sept. 10, can trigger floods on the scale of those witnessed by the country in 2010. 
Unusually heavy rains and the melting of glaciers in June 2022 triggered flash floods that at one point inundated one-third of the country, killed over 1,700 people and inflicted losses of over $30 billion, as per government estimates. 
Despite contributing less than 1% to global greenhouse gas emissions, Pakistan is among the world’s most vulnerable nations to climate change.


Pakistan’s relief consignment for Gaza arrives in Egypt amid fears of famine

Pakistan’s relief consignment for Gaza arrives in Egypt amid fears of famine
Updated 50 min 48 sec ago

Pakistan’s relief consignment for Gaza arrives in Egypt amid fears of famine

Pakistan’s relief consignment for Gaza arrives in Egypt amid fears of famine
  • Pakistan’s 100 tons of relief items for Gaza arrives in Egypt’s El Arish International Airport in Cairo
  • Pakistan embassy officials hand over consignment to Egyptian Red Crescent Society for distribution

Islamabad: Pakistan’s latest aid consignment for Gaza arrived this week at the EL Arish International Airport in Egypt, state-run media reported amid fresh fears of famine gripping the densely populated territory. 

The consignment, measuring 100 tons of relief items, was dispatched via a chartered aircraft under Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif’s directives, state broadcaster Radio Pakistan said in a report, by the country’s National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA) in collaboration with charity organization Al-Khidmat Foundation. 

Pakistan has been repeatedly dispatching humanitarian relief items to Gaza, which has been reeling from food shortages and starvation, according to the global hunger monitor Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC). On Friday, the IPC warned that famine is occurring in northern Gaza, and is projected to spread to central and southern areas of the territory by the end of September.

“The total humanitarian assistance provided to Gaza residents by the government and people of Pakistan so far has reached 1,915 tons,” Radio Pakistan said in a report on Saturday. “More consignments are on their way and will be delivered in the coming days to Palestinians inside Gaza.”

It said officials from Pakistan’s embassy in Cairo received the relief consignment and handed it over to the Egyptian Red Crescent Society to dispatch it to Palestinian citizens inside Gaza. 

“The Government and people of Pakistan, with highly commendable contributions from Al-Khidmat Foundation, will continue to provide much-needed humanitarian assistance to their Palestinian brethren,” the report concluded. 

Pakistan does not recognize nor have diplomatic relations with Israel and calls for an independent Palestinian state based on “internationally agreed parameters” and the pre-1967 borders with Al-Quds Al-Sharif as its capital.

Since the beginning of Israel’s war on Gaza in October 2023, Pakistan has repeatedly raised the issue of Palestinian civilian deaths in Gaza at the United Nations, the Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) and other multilateral platforms and demanded international powers and bodies stop Israeli military actions in Gaza.

It has also called on the international community to force Israel to lift a blockade of aid supplies from reaching the population of Gaza. 

Israel’s military offensives have killed more than 62,000 Palestinians in Gaza, most of them civilians, since October 2023 as per figures from the health ministry in Hamas-run Gaza that the United Nations considers reliable.


Pakistan’s capital shuts hiking trails amid heavy rain alert

Pakistan’s capital shuts hiking trails amid heavy rain alert
Updated 24 August 2025

Pakistan’s capital shuts hiking trails amid heavy rain alert

Pakistan’s capital shuts hiking trails amid heavy rain alert
  • Last month, hill torrents in Islamabad’s Saidpur Village swept away vehicles after heavy monsoon rain
  • Authorities warn of urban flooding, landslides in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Gilgit-Baltistan and Kashmir

ISLAMABAD: Authorities in the federal capital have decided to close hiking trails for the public today, Sunday, amid a heavy-rainfall warning to ensure the safety of citizens, the district magistrate’s office said in a notification.

The decision touches a cherished weekend hiking culture in a city built at the foot of the Margalla Hills, part of the Himalayan range.

Last month, Saidpur Village on the Margallas witnessed hill torrents after about 150 millimeters of rain, sweeping away vehicles. Since then, authorities have been shutting nearby trails during heavy-rain alerts, as the routes are prone to sudden flooding.

“In view of the heavy to very heavy rainfall forecast for the next 72 hours by the Pakistan Meteorological Department, keeping in view the safety of citizens, including hikers/visitors to the Margalla Hills, it is hereby notified that Trail 2, Trail 3, Trail 4, Trail 5, and Trail behind Saidpur Village shall remain closed on 24th August 2025 for the general public in the Federal Capital,” said the official notification circulated Saturday night.

The warning comes as the nationwide monsoon death toll has reached 788 since June 26, according to the National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA).

Islamabad has recorded eight rain-related fatalities over the same period.

Pakistani authorities have forecast fresh rains and potential flooding across multiple regions until Aug. 30, with the NDMA warning that torrential rains could trigger flash floods in streams across Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) — where deaths have already climbed to 469 — as well as urban flooding in low-lying areas of Islamabad, Rawalpindi, Gujranwala, Lahore, Sialkot, Faisalabad, Sargodha, Peshawar, Nowshera and Mardan.

Landslides are also possible in KP, Gilgit-Baltistan, Murree, Galiyat and Azad Kashmir.

Annual monsoons are vital for agriculture and water supplies but in recent years have unleashed destructive flooding and landslides.

The latest downpours, intensifying since Aug. 15 in districts such as Swat, Shangla, Buner and Swabi, killed hundreds across KP and revived fears of a repeat of the catastrophic 2022 floods that submerged a third of Pakistan and caused $30 billion in damage.


Iran says it killed six ‘terrorists’ linked to Israel in province bordering Pakistan

Iran says it killed six ‘terrorists’ linked to Israel in province bordering Pakistan
Updated 23 August 2025

Iran says it killed six ‘terrorists’ linked to Israel in province bordering Pakistan

Iran says it killed six ‘terrorists’ linked to Israel in province bordering Pakistan
  • Iranian media says the group planned an attack on a ‘vital’ site in eastern Iran, without providing details
  • Authorities say seven ‘non-Iranian’ suspects were involved in the main team, with no nationality disclosed

TEHRAN: Iranian forces have killed six militants in a raid in the restive southeast, state media reported Saturday, saying they were members of a “terrorist” group linked to arch enemy Israel.

“During an intense exchange of fire with terrorists in Sistan-Baluchistan province, six assailants were killed and two others arrested,” official news agency IRNA said, citing a statement from the intelligence services.

The report did not provide an exact location or say when the raid took place.

Sistan-Baluchistan, which borders Pakistan and Afghanistan, has long been a flashpoint for clashes between security forces and armed groups, including drug traffickers and separatists.

IRNA said there were “documents” indicating “the Zionist nature” of the group targeted in the latest raid, adding that its members had planned to attack a “vital” facility in Iran’s east, without elaborating.

The report said that “the main operation team” was composed of “seven non-Iranian terrorists,” but did not specify their nationality.

Two intelligence agents and a police officer were wounded in the gunfight, IRNA said.

Iran regularly reports deadly ambushes in the province targeting police or members of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps.

On Friday, the Sunni jihadist group Jaish Al-Adl (Army of Justice), which Tehran outlaws as a “terrorist” organization, claimed an attack in Sistan-Baluchistan that killed five police officers.

On Sunday, Iranian state media said security forces had killed seven members of another jihadist group, Ansar Al-Furqan, also in Sistan-Baluchistan.

The province, which is home to a large Sunni Muslim Baluch minority, is one of the poorest regions of the Shiite-majority country.


Pakistan’s deputy PM seeks ‘forward-looking’ ties with Bangladesh, urges revival of SAARC forum

Pakistan’s deputy PM seeks ‘forward-looking’ ties with Bangladesh, urges revival of SAARC forum
Updated 24 August 2025

Pakistan’s deputy PM seeks ‘forward-looking’ ties with Bangladesh, urges revival of SAARC forum

Pakistan’s deputy PM seeks ‘forward-looking’ ties with Bangladesh, urges revival of SAARC forum
  • Ishaq Dar’s visit marks the highest-level trip by any Pakistani official to Bangladesh in many years
  • It comes amid thaw after Sheikh Hasina’s ouster, widely seen as pro-India and critical of Pakistan

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Ishaq Dar said on Saturday his country wanted a “forward-looking” relationship with Bangladesh based on what unites the two nations, while calling for the revival of the South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation to help deliver peace and prosperity across the neighborhood.

Dar’s visit follows months of increased official contacts after ties began to ease in the wake of Bangladesh’s former prime minister Sheikh Hasina’s ouster last year in a popular uprising. Hasina, widely viewed as close to India and critical of Pakistan, fled to New Delhi soon after her downfall, straining relations between Dhaka and New Delhi.

The shift also created space for Bangladesh and Pakistan – once a single nation until the bloody 1971 war of independence – to reset relations.

Dar, who arrived in Dhaka earlier today, is on the highest-level trip by a Pakistani official to Bangladesh since Hasina’s ouster.

“Notwithstanding the twists and the turns of history, the people of Pakistan have fraternal sentiments toward the people of Bangladesh and hold them in the highest esteem,” he said, as he addressed a gathering at the Pakistan High Commission. “We recognize and respect the sovereign choices of the Bangladeshi nation, and believe in a future where our relations are defined not by what divides us, but what unites us.”

Pakistan’s Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Ishaq Dar arrives in Dhaka on August 23, 2025, on a two-day official visit to Bangladesh. (Handout/MoFA)

“I wish to underscore the strong desire of the government of Pakistan to forge a cooperative and forward-looking relationship with Bangladesh,” he added.

Dar noted the Pakistan-Bangladesh relations had seen “a number of positive developments” over the past year, citing significant progress across multiple streams of cooperation.

He pointed out that the frequency of high-level exchanges had increased, institutional mechanisms were being revived, economic and commercial ties were gaining momentum and educational and academic collaborations were being explored alongside cultural exchanges, describing the current phase as marked by “new energy and fresh enthusiasm.”

The Pakistani deputy prime minister added both countries shared common ground on several regional and international issues and reiterated support for reviving SAARC, a forum that has largely been dysfunctional since 2016, when India boycotted a planned Islamabad summit amid tensions with Pakistan.

No leaders’ summit has been held since. Pakistan’s push to revive the bloc comes as ties with India are at a low for both Islamabad and Dhaka.

Pakistan’s Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Ishaq Dar arrives in Dhaka on August 23, 2025, on a two-day official visit to Bangladesh. (Handout/MoFA)

“South Asia, home to nearly a quarter of humanity, cannot afford to lag behind in regional cooperation and integration,” the deputy PM said. “We are hopeful that SAARC will be reinvigorated, and our distances will shorten.”

Earlier, Dar met leaders of Bangladesh’s newly formed National Citizen Party (NCP), a student-led movement that spearheaded the protests which unseated Hasina.

The party, formally launched earlier this year, has called for a “second republic” with a new constitution aimed at strengthening democracy and social justice.

Its emergence has reshaped Bangladesh’s political landscape, challenging decades of dominance by traditional parties and giving voice to younger generations.

Dar emphasized the need for greater interaction between the youth of the two countries.

As part of his outreach to political stakeholders, he also met a delegation of the Bangladesh Jamaat-e-Islami party and discussed ways to strengthen bilateral relations between the two nations.

Additionally, he interacted with the Bangladesh Nationalist Party leadership and affirmed his country’s commitment to stronger ties on the basis of mutual respect and benefit.

The Pakistan deputy PM is scheduled to meet Chief Adviser Muhammad Yunus and senior officials including Adviser for Foreign Affairs Md. Touhid Hossain and Adviser for Commerce SK Bashir Uddin during his two-day stay in Dhaka.