Pakistan’s Finance Division releases Rs17.4 billion to election regulator amid reports of delay in polls

A Pakistani man casts his vote as a soldier stands guard at a polling station during Pakistan's general election in Karachi on July 25, 2018. (AFP/File)
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Updated 05 December 2023
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Pakistan’s Finance Division releases Rs17.4 billion to election regulator amid reports of delay in polls

  • Pakistan’s government allocated Rs42 billion for upcoming general elections in this year’s budget 
  • Election Commission of Pakistan announced in November that polls would be held on February 8 

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s Finance Division said on Tuesday it had released Rs17.4 billion to the country’s election regulator so that it can hold polls in the country, with the development taking place amid reports of a delay in the upcoming national elections scheduled for February 8. 

On Monday, Information Minister Murtaza Solangi said the Election Commission of Pakistan (ECP) had approached the government to release funds worth Rs17.4 billion, adding that there was no “crisis on meeting the financial needs of the ECP.” 

The government allocated Rs42 billion for the upcoming general elections in this year’s budget, but it had only issued Rs.10 billion to the Election Commission of Pakistan in July. Pakistani media widely reported on Monday there had been a delay in the disbursement of the remaining amount, at which the ECP summoned the finance secretary. 

“Finance Division has released Rs. 17.4 billion to the Election Commission of Pakistan in addition to Rs. 10.0 billion released in July 2023 for conduct of general elections in the country,” the Finance Division said in a statement on social media platform X. It said the total amount disbursed to the ECP since July now totaled Rs27.4 billion. 

“Finance Division remains committed to provision of funds as and when required by the Election Commission of Pakistan,” the statement said. 

Pakistan, following more than a year of political turmoil since the ouster of ex-prime minister Imran Khan in Aprill 2022, is finally headed to general elections in February next year, with many analysts expecting the polls to lead to some stability in the South Asian country. 

The ECP last week put to rest rumors of a delay in election and its top official said the regulator would release a schedule in December for the upcoming general election. 

“Count 54 days backwards from February 8,” Chief Election Commissioner Sikandar Sultan Raja said in an informal chat with journalists, which means the announcement could be expected in the third week of December. 

The outgoing Pakistani government had amended the Elections Act to empower the ECP to fix and announce the election date and specifying the timeline for the announcement of election schedule, which needs to be done about 54 days before the polling day. 

On Monday, ECP Secretary Omar Hamid Khan requested the interior ministry for the deployment of armed forces and other law enforcement agencies personnel at polling stations to ensure foolproof security arrangements, citing a shortfall of police personnel across the country as Pakistan heads toward elections. 

“Keeping in view, the deficiency of Police personnel indicated by the Provinces and the Federal Capital, the Election Commission of Pakistan has decided that in view of the clear shortfall of 277,558 personnel, the services of Pakistan Army and Civil Armed Forces (CAFs) shall have to be requisitioned in static mode in terms of Article 220 of the Constitution of the Islamic Republic of Pakistan at the Polling Stations to ensure smooth elections,” Khan wrote in a letter to the interior ministry.

“This is all the more relevant in the context of fragile security cum law-and-order situation prevalent in country.” 

Khan said as per reports from the Inspector Generals of Police (IGPs) of all four provinces and Islamabad, there is a shortfall of around 4,500 police personnel in the capital city, 169,110 in Punjab, 56,717 in KP, 33,462 in Sindh, and 13,769 in Balochistan. 

The regulator said as per Article 220 of Pakistan’s constitution, all executive authorities of the administration and the provinces are bound to assist the ECP in its task of holding free, fair and transparent elections. 

“While the ECP takes all necessary steps to organize an election in accordance with the Constitution and the relevant Election Laws, it also expects the same commitment from the executive authorities and law enforcement agencies to maintain law and order in the area of the constituencies during the conduct of elections,” the letter read. 


Pakistan university, COMSTECH ink MoU for scholarships of Palestinian students

Updated 10 sec ago
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Pakistan university, COMSTECH ink MoU for scholarships of Palestinian students

  • Abbottabad University of Science and Technology will offer 40 scholarships to Palestinian students in various undergraduate programs
  • Program aims to support Palestinian students by covering their tuition and hostel fees, and provide them stipends, says state media

ISLAMABAD: A Pakistani university has signed a memorandum of understanding (MoU) with the Organization of Islamic Cooperation’s (OIC) Standing Committee on Scientific and Technological Cooperation (COMSTECH) to provide scholarships to Palestinian students, state media reported on Monday.

The initiative is part of the “COMSTECH Scholarships and Research Fellowships for Palestinian Nationals” program, which aims to support Palestinian students by covering their tuition and hostel fees. The program also provides them monthly stipends, enabling Palestinian students to pursue higher education in Pakistan. 

“The OIC Standing Committee on Scientific and Technological Cooperation (COMSTECH) and Abbottabad University of Science and Technology (AUST) on Sunday signed a MoU to offer scholarships to Palestinian students for the academic year 2025-2026,” the APP said. 

As per the MoU, the Pakistani university would provide tuition to Palestinian students through both online and on-campus learning modes, APP said. 

“The UST Abbottabad will offer 40 scholarships in various undergraduate programs including Doctor of Physiotherapy, Doctor of Pharmacy, BS Medical Laboratory Technology (MLT), BS Microbiology, BS Food Sciences, BS Computer Science and BS Software Engineering,” the report said.

Last year, Pakistan’s University of Lahore offered 5,000 free scholarships, fellowships and short training programs for Palestinian students in collaboration with COMSTECH.

Pakistan has actively tried to help Palestinian students secure higher education in the country after Israel’s military campaign in Gaza, which has killed over 52,000 Palestinians since Oct, 7, 2023, in the densely populated enclave. 

Over 300 Palestinian students were enrolled in Pakistani universities in 2024 while more than 50,000 Palestinian nationals have graduated from educational institutions in Pakistan over the years.


Seven killed in blast at pro-government peace committee’s offices in northwestern Pakistan

Updated 10 min 41 sec ago
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Seven killed in blast at pro-government peace committee’s offices in northwestern Pakistan

  • No group has claimed responsibility for blast but suspicion is likely to fall on Pakistani Taliban militants
  • Such peace committees often comprise local tribal elders who publicly oppose Pakistani Taliban group

PESHAWAR: Seven people were killed and over a dozen injured on Monday when a blast targeted the offices of a pro-government peace committee in Pakistan’s northwest, police said, as rescue teams attempted to reach those trapped under the rubble.

The blast took place in Wana, a city in South Waziristan district in the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) province bordering Afghanistan, and hit the offices of a government-backed peace committee on Monday afternoon, killing seven and injuring at least 16, South Waziristan police spokesperson Habib Islam told Arab News. 

Such committees often comprise local tribal leaders who publicly oppose the Pakistani Taliban militants, also known as the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), a group that has claimed responsibility for some of the deadliest attacks in Pakistan. While no group has claimed responsibility for the latest attack, suspicion is likely to fall on the TTP.

“Details into the casualties are still coming because two offices of the peace committee commander Saifur Rehman collapsed due to the intensity of the blast,” Islam told Arab News. “A number of people are trapped under the rubble.”

He said it was as yet unclear if this was a suicide attack or the explosion was triggered by a remote-controlled device.

Tribal elder Almir Khan Wazir said two commanders of the peace committee, Rehman and Tehsil Wazir, were in critical condition. 

“They were rushed to the District Headquarters Hospital in critical condition,” Wazir said.

The blast took place as Pakistan’s military said 71 militants had been killed in a number of armed operations in the nearby North Waziristan district in the last three days. 

Pakistan blames the Taliban government in Afghanistan for providing sanctuary to TTP militants, threatening cross-border action unless Kabul withdraws its support for militant groups. Afghanistan denies the allegations and has urged Pakistan to resolve its security challenges internally.


Pakistan army says 71 militants killed in three days of operations in northwest

Updated 29 min 20 sec ago
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Pakistan army says 71 militants killed in three days of operations in northwest

  • The 71 deaths reported are an usually high number in Pakistan’s battle against militancy along its border with Afghanistan
  • Latest operations highlight the challenges Pakistani forces face on multiple fronts as tensions with India also rise rapidly

ISLAMABAD: The Pakistan army said on Monday 71 militants had been killed in three days of armed operations in the country’s northwestern regions bordering Afghanistan where the military has been battling a surge in militancy.

On Sunday, the army said it had killed 54 militants trying to infiltrate the country from Afghanistan, highlighting the challenges its forces face on multiple fronts as tensions with India also rise rapidly.

In a fresh statement on Monday, the army said it had carried out a “sanitization operation” in the North Waziristan district in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province on the night of Apr. 27-28 following Sunday’s campaigns. 

“During the conduct of the operation, seventeen more khwarij [militants] who were operating on behest of their foreign masters were hunted down and successfully neutralized,” the army said in a statement.

“The number of khwarij killed in three days operation has risen to seventy one.”

The 71 deaths reported are an usually high number in Pakistan’s battle against militancy and instability along its border with Afghanistan during the nearly four years since the United States withdrew its military support from the country and the Taliban took over Kabul.

The banned group Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan, or TTP, has intensified attacks on Pakistani security forces, straining ties between Pakistan’s leaders and the Taliban in Afghanistan. Pakistan accuses the Afghan Taliban of harboring and supporting TTP fighters, an allegation they deny.

Pakistan is also facing an intensifying separatist insurgency in the southwestern Balochistan province. The possibility of conventional skirmishes with nuclear-armed neighbor India to the east have also risen since last week when 26 tourists were killed in Indian-administered Kashmir. New Delhi has blamed Islamabad, which has denied involvement. 

The Muslim-majority Himalayan region is claimed by both the nuclear states, and has been the site of multiple wars, insurgencies and diplomatic standoffs.


India bans Pakistani channels in social media crackdown

Updated 28 April 2025
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India bans Pakistani channels in social media crackdown

  • Banned platforms include YouTube channels of Pakistani news outlets Dawn, Samaa TV, ARY News, Raftar and Geo News
  • India has accused Pakistan of being involved in attack in Indian-administered Kashmir on Apr. 22 which Islamabad denies

NEW DELHI: India launched a sweeping crackdown on social media on Monday, banning more than a dozen Pakistani YouTube channels for allegedly spreading “provocative” content following an attack in Kashmir.

The banned platforms include the YouTube channels of Pakistani news outlets Dawn, Samaa TV, ARY News, Bol News, Raftar, Geo News and Suno News.

The sites were blocked in India on Monday, with a message reading it was due to an “order from the government related to national security or public order.”

The Press Trust of India news agency, which listed 16 channels, cited a government statement saying they were blocked for “disseminating provocative and communally sensitive content, false and misleading narratives and misinformation against India.”

The ban follows the deadly April 22 shooting that targeted tourists in Pahalgam in Indian-administered Kashmir. Twenty-six men were killed in the attack, the worst on civilians in the contested region for a quarter of a century.

India has accused Pakistan of supporting “cross-border terrorism” but Islamabad has denied any role in the attack.

The information ministry also issued an advisory notice on Saturday calling on journalists and social media users to “exercise utmost responsibility” while reporting on matters “concerning defense and other security related operations.”

The advisory note, which cited previous cases of conflict with Pakistan including fighting in 1999 at Kargil, warned that “premature disclosure of sensitive information may inadvertently assist hostile elements and endanger operational effectiveness.”

Indian social media accounts have also been awash with comments on the killings at Pahalgam, with hashtags including #WarWithPakistan and #FinishPakistan trending on social media platform X.


Pakistan invites Turkmenistan’s energy companies to set up operations amid investment push

Updated 28 April 2025
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Pakistan invites Turkmenistan’s energy companies to set up operations amid investment push

  • Islamabad is actively seeking energy cooperation with Turkmenistan through TAPI gas pipeline project
  • Pakistan faces energy problems due to rising demand, depleting resources and poor management

ISLAMABAD: Planning Minister Ahsan Iqbal has invited Turkmenistan’s energy companies to set up operations in Pakistan, state media reported on Monday, as Islamabad seeks foreign investment to boost the country’s economy and resolve its energy issues. 

Energy-starved Pakistan is actively pursuing energy cooperation with Turkmenistan, particularly through the TAPI (Turkmenistan-Afghanistan-Pakistan-India) gas pipeline project. This initiative aims to transport natural gas from Turkmenistan’s Galkynysh field to Pakistan, passing through Afghanistan and extending to India as well. 

Pakistan has attempted to strengthen cooperation in energy, tourism, mines and minerals as well as other priority sectors in recent months in its bid to attract international investment. It seeks to establish itself as a trade and transit hub that connects landlocked Central Asian states to the global economy.

“Minister for Planning and Development Ahsan Iqbal has invited energy companies of Turkmenistan to establish operations in Pakistan,” Radio Pakistan said in a report, adding that the minister was speaking at an event in Ashgabat. 

Iqbal said the TAPI gas pipeline project would contribute to regional energy security and support Pakistan’s green energy transition, deeming it essential to cope with climate change impacts.

The TAPI project was envisaged in the early 1990s and officially agreed upon in December 2010. It has primarily been delayed due to security concerns, geopolitical tensions, funding challenges and bureaucratic hurdles.

Pakistan faces significant gas and energy problems that have deepened over the years due to a combination of rising demand, depleting domestic resources and poor management.

The country’s natural gas reserves are rapidly declining, while efforts to discover new fields have lagged behind.

Pakistan has increasingly relied on imported liquefied natural gas which strains its foreign exchange reserves and exposes it to global price fluctuations.

Frequent power shortages known as load-shedding disrupt daily life and hurt economic productivity. Outdated infrastructure, inefficiencies in the energy sector, circular debt and policy inconsistencies have made it difficult to develop long-term sustainable solutions.