ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s caretaker prime minister, Anwaar-ul-Haq Kakar, has canceled his three-day visit to Kenya, Pakistani officials said on Sunday, a day before he was scheduled to leave for Nairobi to attend the Africa Climate Summit.
Pakistan’s Foreign Office announced this week PM Kakar would attend the summit on September 4-6. In Nairobi, Kakar was to hold a series of bilateral meetings with his African counterparts and other high-level dignitaries.
Pakistan’s high-level participation in the summit was not only in accordance with its proactive climate diplomacy, but also in line with Islamabad’s outlook for enhanced engagement with African states, the Foreign Office had said.
But on Sunday, Foreign Office spokesperson Mumtaz Zahra Baloch and Information Minister Murtaza Solangi confirmed to Arab News that the prime minister’s visit had been canceled.
“The prime minister is not going to Kenya,” Solangi told Arab News. “The prime minister’s most pressing and unavoidable engagements at home are the main reason for the cancelation of his visit.”
The Africa Climate Summit is an initiative of Kenya and the African Union, and African officials hope the meeting will strengthen the continent’s voice and send a unified message ahead of the COP28 UN climate summit later this year.
More than 20 African heads of state and government and hundreds of delegates from around the world, including UN chief Antonio Guterres, have confirmed their participation in the Sept. 4-6 summit, at which deals worth millions of dollars are expected to be struck, including increasingly popular nature-based investments.
Neither the Foreign Office, nor the information minister informed who else would represent Pakistan at the Nairobi summit.
The development comes at a time when Pakistan is facing widespread public outrage due to inflation and an increase in energy prices.
On Saturday, traders shuttered their businesses in Lahore, Karachi, Peshawar and other cities amid mounting protests that began following a hike in petroleum prices in Karachi on August 17 but spread nationwide due to an increase in power tariff. The South Asian country once again hiked petrol and diesel prices this week, breaching the Rs300 mark for the first time in its history.
The public unrest follows Islamabad’s signing of a badly needed $3 billion deal with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) in June to avert a default due to decades of mismanagement and instability. However, the global lender demanded that popular subsidies cushioning living costs be slashed and imposition of Rs50 petroleum levy on every liter.
Other conditions included generating additional revenues and adopting a market-based currency exchange rate, which have fueled inflation in the South Asian country that persisted at 27.4 percent in August. It peaked to an all-time high of 38 percent in May.