Pakistan, Iran agree to improve border infrastructure to boost bilateral trade

Pakistan, Iran agree to improve border infrastructure to boost bilateral trade
Pakistan's Minister for Commerce, Jam Kamal Khan (third-right) in a meeting with Minister of Minerals, Mine and Trade of Iran, Seyyed Mohammad Atabak, in Tehran, Iran on September 15, 2025. (Government of Pakistan)
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Updated 10 min 23 sec ago

Pakistan, Iran agree to improve border infrastructure to boost bilateral trade

Pakistan, Iran agree to improve border infrastructure to boost bilateral trade
  • The statement comes amid Pakistani commerce minister’s visit to Tehran to lead Pakistan-Iran Joint Economic Commission
  • The visit is aimed at giving fresh momentum to Pakistan–Iran economic, commercial ties, Pakistani commerce ministry says

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan and Iran have agreed to improve border infrastructure to improve bilateral trade, the Pakistani commerce ministry said on Monday, ahead of planned trade talks between the two sides in Tehran.

The statement came after Commerce Minister Jam Kamal Khan’s meeting with Ms. Farzaneh Sadegh, Iran’s minister of road and urban development, on the sidelines of the Pakistan–Iran Joint Economic Commission.

Khan arrived on Sunday in Tehran on a three-day visit to attend the Pakistan-Iran Joint Economic Commission (JEC), amid efforts by both countries to forge closer economic, trade and investment relations through border markets and trade links.

The commerce minister appreciated Sadegh for organizing and facilitating the 22nd JEC session and noted that Pakistan attaches “high priority” to expanding partnership with Iran through better connectivity and coordinated institutional support.

“During the meeting, the two sides reviewed progress on key areas of cooperation including road and rail connectivity, facilitation of border markets, customs data sharing, and enhancement of maritime services,” the commerce ministry said.

“They underlined the importance of improving cross-border infrastructure to boost trade and people-to-people linkages.”

Both ministers were accompanied by senior officials and led their respective delegations, according to the ministry. During the visit, Khan will lead the 22nd session of the JEC and co-chair the Pakistan–Iran Joint Business Forum.

Pakistan and Iran, which have remained at odds over instability along their shared border, plan to raise their bilateral trade to $10 billion from the existing around $3 billion.

The two countries exchanged 12 agreements, memorandums of understanding for bilateral cooperation in diverse fields during Iranian President Dr. Masoud Pezeshkian visit to Pakistan in Aug.

The agreements aim to facilitate and promote bilateral ties in commercial, cultural, tourism, transportation and scientific and educational exchanges between the two nations.

Commerce Minister Khan is also scheduled to hold meetings with key Iranian ministers and senior officials during his three-day visit.

“Khan’s visit is aimed at giving fresh momentum to Pakistan–Iran economic and commercial ties,” his ministry said last week.


Pakistan reports two new polio cases as gunmen abduct three vaccinators in northwest

Pakistan reports two new polio cases as gunmen abduct three vaccinators in northwest
Updated 21 min 38 sec ago

Pakistan reports two new polio cases as gunmen abduct three vaccinators in northwest

Pakistan reports two new polio cases as gunmen abduct three vaccinators in northwest
  • The developments came hours after provincial health authorities launched a targeted anti-polio drive in high-risk districts
  • Pakistan’s efforts to eliminate poliovirus have been hampered by parental refusals, vaccine misinformation and repeated attacks

PESHAWAR: Pakistan reported two new cases of polio virus that bring the nationwide tally to 26 this year, the country’s polio program said on Monday, as official said unidentified gunmen had abducted three anti-polio vaccinators in the northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) province.

The kidnapping incident occurred in the jurisdiction of Mulazai police station in the volatile Tank district after armed men intercepted the health team and whisked them into the hills nearby, according to police.

Muhammad Ibrahim, a district police spokesman, told Arab News the abducted officials were identified as Abdullah Kundi, Hikmatullah and District Surveillance Officer Dr. Ihsan.

“A heavy police contingent has been dispatched to the area to launch a search and strike operation to recover kidnapped officials,” Ibrahim said.

Shortly afterwards, Pakistan’s polio program confirmed the virus in two infant girls in KP’s North Waziristan and Lakki Marwat districts.

“These new detections bring the total number of polio cases in Pakistan in 2025 to 26: 18 from Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, six from Sindh, and one each from Punjab and Gilgit-Baltistan,” it said.

The developments came hours after KP provincial health authorities launched a targeted anti-polio drive in high-risk districts, aiming to immunize around 1.29 million children against the crippling virus.

Pakistan last week said it had inoculated over 19 million children nationwide during a polio vaccination campaign. The drives are part of Islamabad’s efforts to stem the spread of the disease, which can only be prevented through repeated oral vaccination and routine immunization.

Amjad Ali, a provincial spokesman at the polio eradication program, confirmed the kidnapping of the three staffers in Tank.

“We have been told by district authorities regarding the kidnapping of our employees who were monitoring the ongoing polio campaign,” he said.

The anti-polio vaccination campaign in KP will continue till Sept. 18, according to the polio eradication program. The drive will target Bannu, Lakki Marwat, Dera Ismail Khan, Tank, Lower South Waziristan, Upper South Waziristan and Upper Dir districts.

“Polio drops will also be administered in selected areas of Bajaur and Swat districts,” Ali said in an earlier statement. “For this phase of the campaign, 8,928 trained polio worker teams have been formed.”

He said nearly 11,000 security personnel had been deployed to ensure safety of polio teams.

Pakistan’s efforts to eliminate poliovirus have been hampered by parental refusals, widespread misinformation and repeated attacks on polio workers by militant groups. In remote and volatile areas, vaccination teams often operate under police protection, though security personnel themselves have also been targeted in attacks.

Pakistan and Afghanistan remain the only two countries where the disease remains an endemic. Pakistan recorded 74 cases in 2024, a sharp rise from six in 2023 and just one in 2021.

Pakistan’s KP province, which borders Afghanistan, has seen a rise in militant attacks since November 2022, when the state’s truce with the Pakistani Taliban or Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) broke down. The TTP has carried out some of the deadliest attacks against law enforcers and security forces in Pakistan.

Lakki Marwat, Bannu, Waziristan and Dir districts have seen some of the deadliest attacks by militants in recent months.


Pakistani forces kill 31 militants in overnight raids in restive northwest, military says

Pakistani forces kill 31 militants in overnight raids in restive northwest, military says
Updated 15 September 2025

Pakistani forces kill 31 militants in overnight raids in restive northwest, military says

Pakistani forces kill 31 militants in overnight raids in restive northwest, military says
  • The raids come two days after military said 12 Pakistani soldiers, 35 militants were killed in clashes near Pakistan’s border with Afghanistan
  • Pakistan has frequently blamed a surge in militancy in its northwest on Afghanistan and India, an allegation denied by both Kabul and New Delhi

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan security forces killed 31 militants in two raids in the country’s northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) province, the military said on Monday.

Security forces conducted an intelligence-based raid in KP’s Lakki Marwat district on reported presence of Pakistani Taliban militants, according to the Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR).

The ensuing exchange of fire killed 14 “Indian-sponsored” militants. Another 17 Pakistani Taliban militants were killed during a raid in the Bannu district.

“Sanitization operations are being conducted to eliminate any other Indian sponsored kharji (Pakistani Taliban militant) found in the area,” the ISPR said in a statement.

There was no immediate comment from New Delhi in response to the Pakistani military statement.

The raids come two days after the military said 12 Pakistani soldiers and 35 militants were killed in clashes last week near the country’s border with Afghanistan in KP’s Bajaur and South Waziristan districts.

The Pakistani Taliban and other militant groups have frequently targeted security forces convoys and check-posts, besides targeted killings and kidnappings of law enforcers and government officials in recent months.

Islamabad has frequently accused Afghanistan of allowing the use of its soil and India of backing militant groups for attacks against Pakistan. Kabul and New Delhi both deny the allegation.


’Dogs of Barkistan’: WhatsApp-born pet group grows into grassroots movement in Pakistan’s capital

’Dogs of Barkistan’: WhatsApp-born pet group grows into grassroots movement in Pakistan’s capital
Updated 15 September 2025

’Dogs of Barkistan’: WhatsApp-born pet group grows into grassroots movement in Pakistan’s capital

’Dogs of Barkistan’: WhatsApp-born pet group grows into grassroots movement in Pakistan’s capital
  • Casual meetups in Islamabad bring together dog lovers, rescuers and first-time seekers
  • Event organizers aim to evolve the initiative into adoption drives, animal shelter fundraisers

ISLAMABAD: On a bright Sunday afternoon this month, the courtyard of Coffeemistry, a cozy café in Islamabad’s upscale F-8 neighborhood, filled with wagging tails and cheerful barks as dog lovers gathered for a meet-up.

The café has long been known in the neighborhood for its pet-friendly ethos, complete with cat beds tucked into corners and bowls of food left out for strays. In a city where pets are often barred from parks, Coffeemistry has built a reputation as one of the few welcoming spaces, where waiters recognize regulars by name, neighbors linger over board games or laptops, and even the local cats lounge as honored guests.

It was here that a group of friends, through their Instagram page “Dogs of Barkistan,” launched a meetup last Sunday to bring pet parents, rescuers and curious visitors together to nurture a community built on compassion.

Anza Nadeem, a 30-year-old pilot and the main organizer, said the idea started as a WhatsApp group before becoming an Instagram page that now hosts casual weekend meetups for dog owners to connect and socialize.

“We started off about a month ago. We have done a few meets,” Nadeem, who was accompanied by his Golden Retriever named Tiger, told Arab News.

“We do casual meets. Dog owners meet dog owners. We do barbeques, movie nights.”

The group has held three events so far and hopes the gatherings will grow into weekly meetups, with plans to raise funds for local shelters through small, ticketed entries.

“TEACH EMPATHY”

The latest ‘dawg meetup’ at Coffeemistry featured dogs of several breeds — from Chihuahuas to German Pointers, English Springer Spaniels, Labradors and rescued strays — all tugging at their leashes or flopping under café tables as their owners mingled.

Across Pakistan, pets and strays face a tougher reality. Dogs are routinely culled by municipal authorities, and dedicated shelters are few, leaving rescuers to shoulder much of the burden. Public spaces that welcome animals are rare, making initiatives like Islamabad’s new dog meet-ups stand out in contrast.

Varsha Khan, a stray-dog rescuer and co-organizer, said the ‘Dogs of Barkistan’ group welcomed not just dog owners, but also those hoping to adopt or simply get more comfortable around animals.

“I have rescued over 150 stray dogs over the past five years and placed them in various shelters for adoption,” she told Arab News.

Khan currently cares for 20 strays at her own home and often brings one or two along to each gathering.

“We’re hoping that as the community grows, future doggy meetups will include a small ticket price and the money raised from that can be donated to animal shelters here in Islamabad,” she said.

For attendees like Yumna Omar, who came without a pet but with an open mind, the event offered an entry point.

“I am here to meet the dogs,” she said with a smile. “We just started looking this week to adopt or buy one in Islamabad, but we do not really know where to begin.”

A stay-at-home mother, Omar described the afternoon as “a break from reality” and a step toward building a loving home.

“I have two 8-month-old twins, and I am a tired mama, so, I am just here to relax a bit,” she said.

“But I want my babies to grow up with animals. They would learn empathy that way. So that’s the purpose.”


Pakistan central bank holds rate at 11 percent as floods threaten inflation outlook

Pakistan central bank holds rate at 11 percent as floods threaten inflation outlook
Updated 17 min 7 sec ago

Pakistan central bank holds rate at 11 percent as floods threaten inflation outlook

Pakistan central bank holds rate at 11 percent as floods threaten inflation outlook
  • Floods in breadbasket Punjab risk spiking food prices, widening current account deficit
  • State Bank says economy stronger than in past flood shocks but trims growth outlook

KARACHI: Pakistan’s central bank on Monday left its benchmark interest rate unchanged at 11 percent for a third straight time, a move analysts described as “cautious” amid devastating floods that risk driving up food prices and undermining the country’s fragile recovery.

Floods in Pakistan’s eastern Punjab province, the country’s breadbasket, since late August have inundated thousands of acres of farmland, destroyed standing crops and killed livestock. Economists and traders have cautioned that the flooding, now moving downstream into Sindh, could elevate both food and overall inflation in the coming months due to crop losses and supply chain disruptions.

In its Monetary Policy Statement, the SBP warned that the “temporary yet significant flood-induced supply shock, particularly to the crop sector, may push up headline inflation and the current account deficit” during the current fiscal year. It projected inflation could rise above the 5–7 percent target band for much of FY26 before easing in FY27, while real GDP growth was trimmed to the lower end of the earlier 3.25–4.25 percent range.

“The Monetary Policy Committee decided to keep the policy rate unchanged at 11 percent in its meeting held on September 15, 2025,” the SBP said in a statement.

The central bank said the economy remained on a “significantly stronger footing” than during previous major flood events, citing improved foreign exchange reserves of $14.3 billion, projected to rise to $15.5 billion by December 2025, along with fiscal buffers built up over the past two years. 

Still, the bank flagged heightened uncertainty from the disaster, noting inflation expectations had already ticked up in September consumer and business surveys.

“As per market consensus, the SBP is staying cautious amid rising inflation due to flood affected surge in food prices,” Muhammad Saad Ali, head of research at Lucky Investments Ltd., told Arab News. 

He said it was possible for the central bank to slash the key interest rate by around 50–100 basis points but not until the year’s end.

Amreen Soorani, head of research at Al Meezan Investment Management, noted that recurring inflation levels have limited the real interest rate to 2.5 percent, leaving lesser room for monetary easing from here.

“In addition to that, the rising risks of impact from floods on food prices are on the cards as well,” Soorani said.

In its previous decision on July 30, the SBP had also left the policy rate unchanged at 11 percent, surprising analysts who in a Reuters poll had forecast a reduction of 50–100 basis points. At the time, the central bank had pointed to a deteriorating inflation outlook due to rising energy prices.


Pakistan warns of ‘severe’ dengue outbreak in Punjab’s major cities, flood-hit areas

Pakistan warns of ‘severe’ dengue outbreak in Punjab’s major cities, flood-hit areas
Updated 15 September 2025

Pakistan warns of ‘severe’ dengue outbreak in Punjab’s major cities, flood-hit areas

Pakistan warns of ‘severe’ dengue outbreak in Punjab’s major cities, flood-hit areas
  • Flood-related waterlogging, favorable weather have made conditions conducive for dengue onset from Sept. 20, says disaster management authority
  • Authority warns of dengue outbreak in major cities of Lahore, Faisalabad, Sialkot, Rawalpindi and Multan, and flood-affected areas in Punjab province

ISLAMABAD: The Provincial Disaster Management Authority (PDMA) on Monday warned of a “severe” dengue outbreak in major cities of the eastern Punjab province along with those areas affected by floods, urging district administrations, health officials and the public to take pre-emptive measures against the disease. 

Dengue is a viral infection caused by the dengue virus, which is transmitted to humans through the bite of infected mosquitoes. While many dengue infections are asymptomatic or produce only mild illness, the virus can occasionally cause more severe cases, and even death.

Floods in Punjab have killed 104 people since late August, affected over 4.5 million people and displaced more than 2.5 million. Authorities say they have launched the largest search and rescue operation in the province, as floodwaters recede and head toward the southern Sindh region. 

In its latest alert, the PDMA Punjab warned that favorable weather for the virus and flood-related waterlogging have made conditions conducive for the onset of dengue from Sept. 20 onwards. 

“It is predicted that this season poses an unprecedently high-risk of a severe dengue outbreak, particularly in major cities, Lahore, Faisalabad, Sialkot, Rawalpindi and Multan as well as in flood affected areas across the Punjab,” the PDMA alert read.

The PDMA urged district administrations, the public and health officials to take precautionary measures to ward off the infection.

“Take preventive measures to prevent dengue, do not let water accumulate and keep your home clean,” PDMA Director General Irfan Ali Kathia said in a statement. “Ensure cleanliness and drainage of water in the camps of flood victims.”

He directed health agencies to remain on high alert and, use sprays and larvicides to prevent mosquito breeding.

Dengue fever is endemic to Pakistan, which experiences year-round transmission with seasonal peaks. This year’s first dengue-related death was reported in the country’s southern Sindh province on June 3.

Pakistan’s capital city of Islamabad has carried out inspection and prevention measures after 11 dengue cases were reported in a day earlier this month.

The World Health Organization (WHO) had warned Pakistan’s flood-hit Punjab province has been witnessing an increase in vector-borne diseases. 

Punjab authorities have relocated thousands to relief camps across the province, where the WHO says unsafe drinking water and mosquitoes pose the main epidemic risks, making displaced people vulnerable to diarrhea, typhoid, malaria, dengue and skin infections.