Pakistan invites Meta to collaborate on AI ethics, digital safety and trade

Pakistan invites Meta to collaborate on AI ethics, digital safety and trade
Rafael Frankel, Director for Public Policy (South Asia) at Meta (center), photographed with Pakistan Federal Minister for Commerce Jam Kamal Khan at the Ministry of Commerce in Islamabad on October 29, 2025. (Commerce Ministry)
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Updated 9 min 34 sec ago

Pakistan invites Meta to collaborate on AI ethics, digital safety and trade

Pakistan invites Meta to collaborate on AI ethics, digital safety and trade
  • The development comes during a meeting between the commerce minister and a top Meta official visiting Pakistan
  • Meta expresses interest in expanding collaboration in AI-driven innovation, SME support and digital safety initiatives

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan on Tuesday invited social media giant Meta to collaborate on artificial intelligence (AI) ethics, digital safety and e-commerce standards, said an official statement, as part of the government’s push to expand its digital economy and integrate AI governance into national trade policy.

The invitation came during a meeting between a Meta delegation, led by Rafael Frankel, the company’s Director for Public Policy (South Asia), and Federal Minister for Commerce Jam Kamal Khan in the federal capital.

Meta, the parent company of Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp, has been expanding its footprint in South Asia through programs supporting small businesses and digital literacy.

“Pakistan’s digital economy is among the fastest-growing in South Asia, powered by a youthful population, growing connectivity and a strong IT talent base,” the minister said, according to the statement circulated after the meeting, adding the government was finalizing the National E-Commerce Policy to expand the market to $20 billion by 2030.

“We invite Meta to collaborate through the Ministry’s IT Sectoral Council on areas such as AI ethics, digital safety and e-commerce standards,” he added.

Khan said Pakistan’s IT and IT-enabled services exports rose 18% in the last fiscal year to $3.8 billion and had grown a further 21% year-on-year in the first quarter of FY2026.

He urged Meta to partner with Pakistan in youth-focused AI skilling programs and explore a Meta-Pakistan E-Commerce Accelerator Pilot to promote digital entrepreneurship.

The visiting Meta official commended Pakistan’s progress in digital transformation, according to the statement, saying the company was keen to expand cooperation in “AI-driven innovation, skills development and SME support.”

Both sides agreed to continue working closely to promote innovation, safe online practices and economic empowerment through technology.


Pakistan seizes 25 kilograms of smuggled silver from passenger bus in Karachi

Pakistan seizes 25 kilograms of smuggled silver from passenger bus in Karachi
Updated 9 sec ago

Pakistan seizes 25 kilograms of smuggled silver from passenger bus in Karachi

Pakistan seizes 25 kilograms of smuggled silver from passenger bus in Karachi
  • Passenger detained for interrogation after failing to produce import or purchase documents for the seized silver
  • Smuggling of precious metals in Pakistan is not limited to international borders but extends to inter-city routes

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s Federal Board of Revenue (FBR) on Tuesday announced the seizure of 25 kilograms of silver worth about Rs 12 million ($40,000) from a passenger bus at the Mochko Check Post in Karachi, in an operation aimed at cracking down on precious-metal smuggling.

The consignment was discovered during an inspection at the Mochko Check Post after officers of the Anti-Smuggling Organisation found silver bars hidden in a passenger’s luggage. The suspect failed to produce import or purchase documents, confirming the consignment’s illegal origin, according to the FBR.

The Mochko Check Post, located in Karachi’s Keamari district, is reportedly used by criminal networks to smuggle goods, narcotics and weapons into the city.

“The seized silver has been taken into custody under the Customs Act 1969, and the passenger has been detained,” the FBR said in a post on X. “Further investigation is underway to trace the source, route and intended recipients of the smuggled goods and to identify accomplices involved.”

Rising global silver prices, driven by renewed investor demand and strong industrial use in solar panels and electronics, have made the metal a lucrative target for smugglers in Pakistan.

Such trafficking is not confined to international borders, with smugglers increasingly using passenger buses and inter-provincial routes to move untaxed silver and gold within the country.

The FBR said enforcement operations would “continue with full vigour” to curb smuggling and ensure compliance with customs laws across all entry routes and checkpoints.

 


Depleted South Africa thump sloppy Pakistan in first T20I

Depleted South Africa thump sloppy Pakistan in first T20I
Updated 33 min 46 sec ago

Depleted South Africa thump sloppy Pakistan in first T20I

Depleted South Africa thump sloppy Pakistan in first T20I
  • Reeza Hendricks hit a 40-ball 60 as South Africa posted 194-9 before bowling out Pakistan for 139
  • Corbin Bosch took 4-14 and George Linde 3-31 to hand the visitors a 55-run victory in Rawalpindi

RAWALPINDI: Under-strength South Africa proved too strong for Pakistan in a convincing 55-run win in the first Twenty20 international in Rawalpindi on Tuesday.

Without seven frontline players, either rested or injured, the Proteas reached 194-9 with opener Reeza Hendricks hitting a 40-ball 60.

Pacer Corbin Bosch (4-14) and spinner George Linde (3-31) then led a disciplined bowling as Pakistan never looked like hunting down the target, folding for 139 in 18.1 overs.

The win gives tourists a 1-0 lead in the three-match series with the remaining matches on Friday and Saturday, both in Lahore.

Opener Saim Ayub hit four sixes and a four in his 28-ball 37. Down the order Mohammad Nawaz knocked 20-ball 36 with two sixes and four boundaries.

A packed 16,000 crowd at Rawalpindi stadium were left disappointed when their favourite Babar Azam failed to cap a T20I comeback after ten months, falling for a second-ball duck.

South African captain Donovan Ferreira praised a team effort.

"I am very proud of the collective effort," said Ferreira. "We had a good powerplay batting effort and Linde finished it well."

Pakistan skipper Salman Agha rued poor batting.

"We didn't start well with the ball but we pulled things back," said Agha. "With the batting, we are losing wickets quickly and we need to have a quick turnaround."

Earlier, South Africa had a blazing start of 74 runs in the power-play and knocked 100 in just nine overs.

Hendricks put on 44 in just 3.5 overs with Quinton de Kock (23) after the tourists were put in to bat.

Hendricks's knock was studded with a six and five fours while De Kock smashed five fours in his 13-ball knock.

Hendricks continued to build up the innings, adding 49 for the second wicket with debutant Tony de Zorzi who scored a brisk 16-ball 33 with a six and five fours.

Left-arm spinner Mohammad Nawaz, who took 3-26, stopped the flow of runs by dismissing De Zorzi, Dewald Brevis (nine) and Ferreira (ten).

Hendricks finally fell in the 18th over after scoring his 18th T20I half century.

Linde gave the final touches to the innings with a rapid 22-ball 36 with a six and four fours.

Pakistan players wore pink kits to spread breast-cancer awareness while South Africans wore pink ribbons.

 


Pakistan says decision on joining Gaza peace force ‘still under process’

Pakistan says decision on joining Gaza peace force ‘still under process’
Updated 29 October 2025

Pakistan says decision on joining Gaza peace force ‘still under process’

Pakistan says decision on joining Gaza peace force ‘still under process’
  • Defense Minister Khawaja Asif says joining Gaza peace force would be a ‘matter of pride’ for Pakistan
  • Proposed International Stabilization Force aims to monitor ceasefires, restore order in war-torn Gaza

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s Defense Minister Khawaja Asif said on Tuesday that a decision by the Islamic world on deploying Pakistani troops as part of a Gaza peace force was “still under process,” adding it would be a “matter of pride” for the country to play a role in protecting Palestinians.

The clarification comes after a report published last week by the US-based news outlet Politico, which cited a current and a former US defense official saying that Pakistan, Indonesia and Azerbaijan were the leading contenders to contribute troops to the International Stabilization Force (ISF).

The ISF is a proposed international security mission aimed at stabilizing the Gaza Strip by protecting civilians, monitoring ceasefires and preventing further escalation.

"If the Islamic world takes such a decision and Pakistan wishes or needs to participate in it, then I believe it would be a matter of pride for us to play a role in protecting and ensuring the well-being of our brothers," Asif told a private Pakistani news channel.

"This matter is still under process and yet to be finalized," he added. "I think this is an opportunity that Pakistan should avail if it becomes available to us, you know."

Responding to a question, he said the government would take parliament into confidence along with all the relevant institutions over the issue.

Asif's statement comes when Chief of Army Staff Field Marshal Asim Munir recently visited Jordan and Egypt. The visits fueled speculation among international and local media over whether Pakistan was asked to provide troops for the Gaza peace force.

Earlier this week on Monday, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Israel would decide which foreign forces it would allow as part of the planned international force in Gaza to help secure a ceasefire under US President Donald Trump's plan.

Pakistan has a long history of involvement in UN peacekeeping operations since it first started participating in 1960.

As one of the largest contributors of troops, Pakistani military personnel have served in missions in Sierra Leone, Somalia, Liberia, Sudan, Côte d’Ivoire, Yemen and Lebanon, among other places.

In 2022, eight Pakistani UN peacekeepers were awarded UN medals of courage for sacrificing their lives for the cause of peace.

In recent years, Pakistan has also actively promoted the inclusion of female peacekeepers to help empower local women in conflict zones.


Talks collapse as Pakistan blames Afghan Taliban for evading commitments, thriving on ‘war economy’

Talks collapse as Pakistan blames Afghan Taliban for evading commitments, thriving on ‘war economy’
Updated 59 min 2 sec ago

Talks collapse as Pakistan blames Afghan Taliban for evading commitments, thriving on ‘war economy’

Talks collapse as Pakistan blames Afghan Taliban for evading commitments, thriving on ‘war economy’
  • Information Minister Attaullah Tarar says the Taliban want to drag Afghan people into a ‘needless war’
  • Security sources blame the breakdown on rifts within Afghanistan, Kabul’s efforts to ‘monetize’ militancy

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s information minister Attaullah Tarar said on Wednesday that talks with the Afghan Taliban failed to yield a “workable solution” despite multiple meetings in Türkiye, accusing Kabul of evading commitments to curb militants and thriving on a “war economy” that risks dragging Afghans into another conflict.

Pakistan and Afghanistan had been holding peace talks in Istanbul since Saturday after the two countries saw the worst fighting in decades, leaving dozens dead and several wounded earlier this month. Clashes erupted after Pakistan conducted airstrikes near Kabul as it went after Pakistani Taliban militants, which Islamabad says operate from sanctuaries in Afghanistan. The Taliban responded with attacks on Pakistani military posts along the length of the 2,600-km (1,600-mile) contested border.

The two sides had agreed to a ceasefire in Doha on Oct. 19, mediated by Türkiye and Qatar, and met again in Istanbul on Oct. 25 to discuss a lasting truce. Pakistan sought assurances that Afghan territory would not be used by militants, particularly the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), to carry out cross-border attacks, while Kabul demanded that Islamabad respect its sovereignty and refrain from strikes inside its borders.

“Over the last four days of dialogue, the Afghan Taliban delegation repeatedly agreed to Pakistan's logical and legitimate demand for credible and decisive action against these organisations and terrorists,” Tarar said in a post on X, formerly Twitter. “Sufficient and irrefutable evidence was provided by Pakistan which was acknowledged by Afghan Taliban and the hosts.”

“However, regrettably, the Afghan side gave no assurances,” he added. “The Afghan side kept deviating from the core issue, evading the key point upon which the dialogue process was initiated. Instead of accepting any responsibility, the Afghan Taliban resorted to blame game, deflection and ruses. The dialogue thus failed to bring about any workable solution.”

Tarar said Pakistan has repeatedly engaged the Afghan Taliban since their return to power in August 2021, urging them to prevent militant groups from using Afghan soil to attack neighboring countries.

Those efforts, he noted, “proved futile due to Afghan Taliban Regime’s unabated support to anti-Pakistan terrorists.”

“Since the Taliban regime bears no responsibility towards the people of Afghanistan and thrives on war economy, it desires to drag and mire Afghan people into a needless war,” he said, adding that Pakistan had “held countless rounds of talks” in pursuit of peace, but Kabul remained indifferent to its losses.

The Pakistani minister thanked Türkiye and Qatar for facilitating the talks, saying Pakistan’s foremost priority remains the security of its people.

“We will continue to take all possible measures necessary to protect our people from the menace of terrorism,” he said, pledging to “decimate the terrorists, their sanctuaries, their abetters and supporters.”

BREAKDOWN OF TALKS

Pakistani officials said a day earlier the country was making a “last-ditch effort” to convince the Afghan Taliban to take decisive action against militants targeting its civilians and security forces. Explaining the breakdown, one of them attributed the outcome to “internal fractures and backstage power-play inside the Afghan regime.”

“From the very first session it became clear that the Afghan delegation was not negotiating with one voice,” the official said, requesting anonymity. “Three competing blocs — Kandahar, Kabul and Khost — were all feeding separate instructions to the delegates.”

When the talks reached the stage of written guarantees on TTP safe havens, he continued, the Kandahar faction signaled quiet willingness to proceed, but during the break, the Kabul group “staged a manufactured complication.”

“They suddenly insisted that no agreement can be signed unless the United States joins as a formal guarantor,” he said. “This was not part of the agenda, nor had it been raised in previous rounds.”

The official said the demand also caught mediators by surprise and appeared aimed not at security assurances but at “reopening a financial corridor through Washington.”

“Instead of countering TTP, they are trying to monetize TTP’s existence to revive a flow of dollars,” he added. “Until Kabul resolves its internal power struggle and stops trying to convert terrorism into political currency, no progress is possible.”

Pakistan and Afghanistan share a long, porous border that has long been a flashpoint, with both sides accusing each other of harboring militants and violating sovereignty. Relations have sharply deteriorated since the Taliban’s return to power in 2021, with Pakistan reporting a surge in cross-border attacks attributed to the TTP.

While the two sides engaged in talks in Istanbul, tensions remained high along the frontier, with weekend clashes leaving five Pakistani soldiers and 25 militants dead, according to Pakistan’s military.

Pakistan’s Defense Minister Khawaja Asif blamed India for the deadlock in the peace talks a day earlier, saying New Delhi wanted to engage Islamabad in a “low-intensity war” and that the Afghan authorities understood the plan.

“The government right now in Kabul, it has been penetrated by India and India has started a proxy war against Pakistan through Kabul,” he told a private news channel.

Pakistan has long accused India of backing militant groups, including the TTP, to launch attacks from Afghanistan, though New Delhi has consistently denied the allegation.

 


Pakistan minister blames India for Islamabad-Kabul stalemate at Istanbul talks

Pakistan minister blames India for Islamabad-Kabul stalemate at Istanbul talks
Updated 29 October 2025

Pakistan minister blames India for Islamabad-Kabul stalemate at Istanbul talks

Pakistan minister blames India for Islamabad-Kabul stalemate at Istanbul talks
  • Pakistani, Afghan delegations have been holding talks in Istanbul since Saturday after clashes between them killed dozens this month
  • Pakistani Defense Minister Khawaja Asif says India aims to engage Pakistan in a ‘low-intensity war’ and Kabul is ‘realizing that plan’

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s Defense Minister con Tuesday blamed New Delhi for a deadlock in Pakistan-Afghanistan peace talks in Istanbul, which have failed to bear results despite four long rounds of negotiations.

Pakistani and Afghan delegations have been holding talks since Saturday in Istanbul after the two countries engaged in the worst fighting in decades, leaving dozens dead and several wounded this month.

Clashes erupted after Pakistan conducted airstrikes near Kabul as it went after Pakistani Taliban militants, which Islamabad alleges operate from sanctuaries in Afghanistan. Kabul denies the allegation.

Speaking about a deadlock in talks, Asif said Pakistan and Afghan negotiators reached at least five verbal agreements in recent talks, but Kabul intervened each time and the deal was delayed.

“The government right now in Kabul, it has been penetrated by India and India has started a proxy war against Pakistan through Kabul,” he told a private news channel, claiming New Delhi wants to “compensate through Kabul for the humiliation it suffered on its western border” in May.

Asif’s comment was a reference to a four-day Pakistan-India military standoff in May, during which both sides attacked each other with fighter jets, artillery and drones. There was no immediate reaction from New Delhi or Kabul to his statement.

The Pakistani defense minister praised the Taliban representatives for negotiating “very hard” with the Pakistani side but said they expressed their “helplessness” each time they spoke to authorities in Kabul over phone.

“I believe India aims to engage Pakistan in a low-intensity war and Kabul is realizing that plan,” he added.

Pakistan has long accused Kabul of allowing its soil and India of backing militant groups, including the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), for attacks against Pakistan. Kabul and New Delhi have consistently denied this.

Islamabad this month conducted air strikes inside Afghanistan against what it called were militants affiliated with the TTP. The Taliban responded with attacks on Pakistani military posts along the length of the 2,600-km (1,600-mile) contested border.

The two sides agreed to a ceasefire in Doha on Oct. 19, mediated by Türkiye and Qatar, and agreed to hold talks in Istanbul on Oct. 25 to hammer out a lasting truce. Pakistan has sought assurances from Afghanistan that it would not let militants, especially the TTP, operate from its territory and carry out cross-border attacks. Kabul wants Islamabad to respect its territorial sovereignty and refrain from carrying out strikes inside its borders.

A Pakistani security official said on Tuesday that Islamabad is making a “last-ditch effort” to convince the Afghan Taliban to take decisive action against militants targeting Pakistani civilians and security forces.

“Pakistan and the hosts want to resolve these complex issues in a very thoughtful and serious manner,” he said, accusing Kabul of failing the talks in Istanbul.

“A last-ditch effort is still underway, despite the Taliban’s stubbornness, to somehow resolve this issue through logic and talks and the talks are moving toward a final round.”