Leading Pakistani meat company says has resumed exporting fresh chilled meat via sea to UAE 

This photograph taken on April 9, 2015, shows Pakistani health inspectors as they certify meat by placing stamps at a government slaughterhouse in Lahore, Pakistan. (AFP)
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Updated 18 October 2023
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Leading Pakistani meat company says has resumed exporting fresh chilled meat via sea to UAE 

  • Last month, UAE announced it was banning fresh chilled meat imports via sea from Pakistan from Oct. 10 
  • Leading meat processor says Pakistan’s footprint for frozen meat products in Saudi Arabia, UAE increasing 

KARACHI: A leading Pakistani meat processing and exporting company has resumed exporting chilled fresh meat to the United Arab Emirates (UAE) by sea, a senior official of the company confirmed on Wednesday, saying it had improved its products’ packaging to comply with the standards imposed by UAE authorities. 

Last month, the UAE said it would stop importing chilled fresh meat from Pakistan via sea from October 10 as an unnamed company had supplied “sub-quality” products to its markets. Pakistan exports meat worth around $144 million per year to the UAE.

However, no restriction was placed on exports via air transportation, with the condition that the meat was vacuum-or-modified atmosphere-packed and had a shelf life of 60 to 120 days from the date of slaughter. Pakistani meat exporters feared the volume of meat exported in total would go down by two-third after the ban, as Pakistan would only be able to export meat via air, which is comparatively expensive and has its own limitations. 

Faisal Hussain, the chief executive officer of the Karachi-based Organic Meat Company Limited (TOMCL), a leading meat processor and exporter, said his company’s shipments to the UAE have resumed. “Regarding fresh shipments via sea which were halted by the UAE, I can confirm that we have continued with our exports and at current speed, we’ll be back on the same level hopefully in the next 8-10 days,” Hussain told Arab News. 

Hussain said sample productions of the meat were dispatched and had been approved by the UAE authorities, after which regular shipments started to leave for the country last week. 

“So there are no issues with GCC, and UAE exports will continue,” he said. 

Hussain said UAE authorities had asked Pakistani meat companies to improve their packaging standards to ensure their products have an enhanced shelf life. The TOMCL CEO said his company was equipped to comply with the UAE’s packaging standards. Hussain said his company was also helping industry players learn new processes to comply with the UAE’s packaging standards. 

“I’m helping my entire industry, especially people from Karachi because exports to the UAE were being done from here,” he said. “I am helping all the slaughterhouses. “In fact, I have trained people in those slaughterhouses also on how to conduct the process or packaging, and where they can get the packaging done, and where to get the machines from,” he added. 

Hussain hoped the efforts would bear fruit and that Pakistan’s meat industry would return to the level it was at a month ago, before the ban was announced. 

Pakistan is one of the largest meat producers in the world. Over the past decade, the country has become one of the fastest-growing meat exporters, capitalizing on its competitive advantage to supply meat to the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries, as per the Trade Development Authority of Pakistan (TDAP). TDAP is the export arm of the Pakistani government. 

“The GCC market is good,” Hussain said. “We have two main markets: one is the UAE and the second is Saudi Arabia, where we are also having a much larger footprint for frozen products as compared to the past and it continues to increase in both markets.” 

Hussain said his company has received an order of 2,000 metric tons of frozen boneless beef from the UAE and also received authorization to export “red and white offal,” both frozen and fresh vacuum-packed. 

“So, we are hoping that this product will have an impact in the market as it is a new thing that has started [being exported] from Pakistan,” Hussain said. 

Hussain said the market share of frozen boneless meat was increasing in Saudi Arabia. 

“Saudi work is increasing again in frozen boneless meat, in private labeling month-on-month,” he said. “So, we are also having a much larger footprint in the Saudi market for frozen products as compared to the past.”

The company announced earlier this month that it became Pakistan’s first and only company to secure approvals from GACC (General Administration of Customs of the People’s Republic of China) to export “cooked/heat treated frozen beef” to China. According to TOMCL’s annual report, it increased its export revenues by 36.35 percent, on net basis whereas its export volumes increased by 0.57 percent. 

The exports of meat and meat by-products from Pakistan increased by over 25 percent to $427 million during the last fiscal year, while these exports increased by 20 percent to $113 million during the first three months of the current fiscal year, according to official data. 


Pakistan warns Indian suspension of Indus Waters Treaty could set precedent for China

Updated 25 April 2025
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Pakistan warns Indian suspension of Indus Waters Treaty could set precedent for China

  • New Delhi suspended the river-sharing agreement after a militant attack in Indian-administered Kashmir
  • PM Sharif’s aide says Pakistan is discussing the situation with friendly countries and the United Nations

ISLAMABAD: India’s suspension of the Indus Waters Treaty (IWT) could set a precedent for China to block the Brahmaputra River, a senior aide to Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif warned on Friday, potentially putting New Delhi in a difficult position.
India relies on rivers that originate in China, particularly from the Tibetan Plateau, where major waterways like the Brahmaputra and Sutlej rivers begin.
China’s dam-building activities and lack of a formal water-sharing agreement have raised concerns in India about future water security during floods or droughts. The absence of binding treaties leaves India vulnerable to upstream decisions made by Beijing.
In 2016, China blocked the flow of the Xiabuqu River, which feeds the Brahmaputra, as part of a hydropower project in Tibet after a militant attack in Indian-administered Kashmir.
“If India does something like this that they stop the flow [of rivers] to Pakistan, then China can also do the same thing,” Rana Ihsaan Afzal said while speaking to Geo News. “But if things like this happen then the entire world will be in a war.”
The IWT is a landmark water-sharing agreement signed in 1960 between India and Pakistan, brokered by the World Bank, to manage the use of rivers flowing through both countries from the Himalayas. Under the treaty, India was granted control over the three eastern rivers — Ravi, Beas and Sutlej — while Pakistan received rights over the three western rivers — Indus, Jhelum and Chenab.
Despite multiple wars and ongoing tensions, the treaty has largely held as a rare example of sustained cooperation.
However, India on Wednesday suspended the six-decade-old river-sharing treaty with Pakistan as part of a series of measures following a deadly militant attack in Indian-administered Kashmir, for which it holds Islamabad responsible.
Pakistan has denied any involvement in the attack, in which gunmen killed 26 people at a tourist site in Pahalgam, a scenic town in Anantnag district, marking the deadliest assault on civilians in the country in nearly two decades.
Highlighting that India’s actions threatened the food security of 250 million people, Afzal said under international water laws, upper riparian countries cannot “stop” water but may only “regulate” it.
He added that upper and lower riparian countries coexist peacefully across the world and warned that India’s threat could undermine the entire system of peaceful water-sharing mechanisms, potentially escalating tensions toward conflict.
“This will not be easy at all,” he said. “The United Nations and lower riparian countries throughout the world will raise their voice against it.”
Afzal confirmed that Pakistan was engaging friendly countries through diplomatic channels and was also in contact with the UN.


Pakistan PM hails negative SPI inflation, says economic indicators improving

Updated 25 April 2025
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Pakistan PM hails negative SPI inflation, says economic indicators improving

  • SPI focuses on short-term price movements that affect low- and middle-income households most directly
  • Shehbaz Sharif says the government wants to pass on the benefits of improving economy to the public

ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif on Friday expressed satisfaction over the annual decline in Pakistan’s Sensitive Price Index (SPI), which he said had fallen to -3.52% in April 2025, compared to 26.94% in the same month last year.
The SPI measures weekly changes in the prices of essential items such as food, fuel and utilities across various consumption groups. Unlike the broader Consumer Price Index (CPI), which captures overall inflation, the SPI focuses on short-term price movements that affect low- and middle-income households most directly.
“The [SPI] rate stood at 26.94% in the same month last year, whereas in April 2025, it has been recorded at minus 3.52%,” the prime minister said in a statement issued by his office.
“The country’s economic indicators are improving with each passing day,” he added. “The government is making every effort to ensure that the benefits of these improving economic indicators reach the public.”
Sharif also commended his economic team for their efforts in stabilizing the economy and curbing inflation.​
In May 2023, Pakistan experienced its highest recorded inflation, with the CPI reaching 38% year-on-year, driven by surging food and energy prices.
The recent decline in the SPI indicates potential relief for consumers,​ though the government continues to face challenges in managing the economy, including meeting fiscal targets and securing external financing.


VISA to triple Pakistan office size, partner with 1-Link, PayPak — finance minister

Updated 25 April 2025
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VISA to triple Pakistan office size, partner with 1-Link, PayPak — finance minister

  • Muhammad Aurangzeb hails company’s role in advancing digital payments and financial inclusion
  • The finance minister also assures the US financial services company of the government’s full support

ISLAMABAD: Finance Minister Muhammad Aurangzeb said on Thursday US financial services company Visa will triple the size of its office in Pakistan and collaborate with the country’s first-ever domestic payment card scheme, 1Link and PayPak.
Visa Inc. is a global payments technology company that operates one of the world’s largest electronic payment networks, enabling consumers and businesses to make payments using Visa-branded credit, debit and prepaid cards.
Visa doesn’t issue cards itself but partners with banks and financial institutions to do so. 1Link and PayPak is similar in concept to Visa or Mastercard but is designed specifically for local use within Pakistan.
The Pakistani minister, currently in Washington, appreciated Visa’s role in the digitalization of his country’s economy during a meeting with the company’s regional vice president, Andrew Torre.
“He [Aurangzeb] noted that Visa’s decision to triple the size of its office in Pakistan and its collaboration with 1Link and PayPak would contribute significantly to promoting financial inclusion, e-commerce, transaction security, and payment gateways in Pakistan, as well as facilitate remittances,” the finance ministry said in a statement issued after the meeting.
It added the finance minister also assured the company of the government’s full support in resolving any issues faced by them.
Aurangzeb’s meeting with Torre came as the country works toward a more inclusive and digitally empowered economy, with government backing and private sector innovation aligned.


Pakistan Senate rejects Indian attempt to link it to Kashmir tourist attack

Updated 58 min 17 sec ago
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Pakistan Senate rejects Indian attempt to link it to Kashmir tourist attack

  • Deputy PM Ishaq Dar says India must be held accountable for its acts of ‘terrorism’ in Pakistan
  • He also reaffirms Pakistan’s ‘moral, political and diplomatic’ support to the people of Kashmir

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s Senate on Friday unanimously passed a resolution condemning what it called India’s “frivolous and baseless” attempts to link Islamabad to a deadly shooting in the disputed Himalayan region of Kashmir, rejecting the allegation and accusing New Delhi of using “terrorism” as a political tool.
India has blamed Pakistan for the attack in the scenic town of Pahalgam in Kashmir’s Anantnag district, where gunmen killed 26 civilians on Tuesday in the deadliest assault on non-combatants in nearly two decades.
Pakistan has denied any involvement in the incident, with Deputy Prime Minister Ishaq Dar reading out the resolution in the upper house of parliament that was later adopted by all the lawmakers.
“The Senate of Pakistan condemns terrorism in all its forms and manifestation, emphasizes that killing of innocent civilians is contrary to the values upheld by Pakistan [and] rejects all frivolous and baseless attempts to link Pakistan with the Pahalgam attack of 22nd April 2025 in Indian Illegally Occupied Jammu and Kashmir,” he said.
The resolution denounced India’s suspension of the decades-old Indus Waters Treaty and reaffirmed Pakistan’s support for the Kashmiri people’s right to self-determination.
It also accused India of waging a “mala fide campaign” to malign Pakistan.
“The country’s sovereignty, security and interests demand that India should be held accountable for its involvement in different acts of terrorism and targeted assassinations on the soil of other countries, including Pakistan,” Dar continued.
He also reaffirmed Pakistan’s “unwavering moral, political and diplomatic support for and commitment to the Kashmiri people’s just struggle for realization of their inalienable right to self determination.”


Detained Pakistan rights activist Dr. Mahrang Baloch launches hunger strike

Updated 25 April 2025
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Detained Pakistan rights activist Dr. Mahrang Baloch launches hunger strike

  • Baloch, 32, was arrested last month on charges of terrorism, sedition and murder
  • Dozen UN experts called on Pakistan in March to immediately release Baloch rights defenders

QUETTA: Detained activist Dr. Mahrang Baloch, one of the leading campaigners for Pakistan’s Baloch minority, has launched a hunger strike along with other detainees, her sister told AFP on Friday.
Mahrang Baloch, 32, was arrested last month on charges of terrorism, sedition and murder.
In her native Balochistan, an impoverished province that borders Afghanistan and Iran, security forces are battling a growing insurgency.
Rights groups say the violence has been countered with a severe crackdown that has swept up innocent people. Authorities deny heavyhandedness. 
Mahrang’s hunger strike “is aimed at denouncing the misconduct of the police and the failure of the justice system to protect... prisoners,” her younger sister, Nadia Baloch, said.
Nadia said the hunger strike was launched on Thursday after the attempted “abduction” of one of the Baloch detainees.
Mahrang’s organization, the Baloch Yakjehti Committee (BYC), said the inmate was beaten by security officials and taken from the prison to an unknown location.
A security official said the detainee was moved to another prison and denied any mistreatment.
BYC said four other detained Baloch activists have joined the hunger strike.
“All of them are peaceful political workers, imprisoned for raising their voices... Their only ‘crime’ is organizing peacefully in an environment saturated with state terror and violence,” the group said.
Activists say in the crackdown against militancy in the region authorities have harassed and carried out extrajudicial killings of Baloch civilians.
Pakistani authorities reject the “baseless allegations.”
A dozen UN experts called on Pakistan in March to immediately release Baloch rights defenders, including Mahrang, and to end the repression of their peaceful protests.
UN special rapporteur for human rights defenders Mary Lawlor said she was “disturbed by reports of further mistreatment in prison.”
The judiciary has declined to rule on Mahrang’s detention, effectively halting any appeal and placing the matter solely in the hands of the provincial government.
Insurgents in Balochistan accuse outsiders of plundering the province’s rich natural resources and launched a dramatic train siege in March, during which officials said about 60 people were killed.