ISLAMABAD: Kuwait is going to resume issuing visas for Pakistanis, Interior Minister Sheikh Rashid said on Wednesday.
Kuwait had suspended visas for nationals from Iran, Iraq, Syria, Pakistan and Afghanistan in 2011 over what it said was difficult security conditions in the five countries.
The minister’s announcement came ahead of Kuwait Foreign Minister Sheikh Ahmed Nasser Al-Mohammed Al-Sabah’s arrival in Islamabad on Thursday. Al-Sabah arrived on a two-day visit at the invitation of Pakistani Foreign Minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi.
“I am going to give you good news from (Prime Minister) Imran Khan’s government that Kuwaiti visas are going to be opened again,” Rashid told reporters.
“Visas for Kuwait have been closed since 2011 and now will be reissued,” he said.
In November last year, the Kuwaiti foreign minister met with Qureshi on the sidelines of the 47th Session of Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) Council of Foreign Ministers in Niamey, Niger, in November 2020.
“The two foreign ministers agreed to work closely toward further strengthening and expanding bilateral cooperation in diverse fields,” the Pakistani foreign office said in a statement ahead of Al-Sabah’s visit.
Pakistan has announced it was ready to provide skilled workers to Kuwait’s labor market after a meeting of Islamabad’s ambassador to the Gulf country, Syed Sajjad Haider, and Kuwait’s Public Authority for Manpower director general Ahmad Al-Mousa in January this year.
“Pakistan accords high importance to its fraternal ties with Kuwait, which are firmly rooted in shared faith and values,” the foreign office said. “During the global pandemic, the two countries collaborated closely in the health sector and food security.”
In July last year, Pakistan and Kuwait signed a government-to-government agreement for 600 Pakistani health care professionals to work in Kuwait, upon the request of the Gulf state, where coronavirus infections and fatalities were surging.