Pakistani, Saudi investors to set up $5 million edible oil refinery in Kingdom — Pakistan trade official

This picture taken on January 11, 2020 shows a general view of Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. (AFP/File)
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Updated 29 May 2024
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Pakistani, Saudi investors to set up $5 million edible oil refinery in Kingdom — Pakistan trade official

  • Official says the joint venture is expected to be signed in next six months and it will allow export of 50 percent edible oil
  • Saudi authorities are offering land and other facilities to investors to encourage investment in the Kingdom, he adds

KARACHI: Pakistani and Saudi investors are establishing a $5 million edible oil refinery in Saudi Arabia through a joint venture (JV), a senior Pakistani trade official said on Tuesday, following recent business-to-business interactions between the two countries.

The development comes weeks after a 50-member, high-level delegation, led by the Kingdom’s Assistant Minister of Investment Ibrahim Al-Mubarak, arrived in Pakistan to explore investment opportunities in the South Asian country.

Pakistan and Saudi Arabia have been working closely in recent weeks to increase bilateral trade and investment deals, with Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman last month reaffirming the Kingdom’s commitment to expedite an investment package of $5 billion.

“We are putting up an edible oil refinery in Saudi Arabia with the local partners. We have shared the feasibility with each other, and we will sign [an agreement] very soon,” Atif Ikram Sheikh, president of the Federation of Pakistan Chambers of Commerce & Industry (FPCCI), told Arab News on Tuesday. “There will be a joint venture.”

Ikram, who runs edible oil refineries and other businesses in Pakistan, informed that the project cost would be equally shared by investment partners, including himself.

“The project cost will be $5 million and we will share the cost together and this would be materialized within six months,” he said, adding the Saudi authorities were offering land and other facilities for the refinery. 

Saudi Arabia is currently consolidating its economy on modern lines under Vision 2030, a strategic development framework intended to cut the Kingdom’s reliance on oil. Under the framework, the Kingdom is also encouraging investment in diversified sectors to increase its export base.

“Their [Saudi authorities] condition is to maximize oil export up to 50 percent, while the rest you can sell in the local market,” Sheikh said.

The FPCCI chief said Saudi Arabia’s interest in Pakistan’s diversified sectors was “constantly increasing” and both sides had made tangible progress, including Saudi investment inflows in oil, agriculture and other sectors. 

In December last year, Aramco, one of the world’s leading integrated energy and chemicals companies, signed an agreement to acquire a 40 percent equity stake in Gas & Oil Pakistan that followed the signing of an agreement in November 2023 by Shell Pakistan (SPL) with Saudi Arabia’s Wafi Energy to sell its domestic operations after Shell Petroleum Company announced its exit from Pakistan with the sale of 77 percent shareholding in the local business.

Pakistani traders also expect further inflow of investment from the Gulf countries.

The FPCCI president said Pakistan’s Special Investment Facilitation Council (SIFC), a body consisting of Pakistani civilian and military leaders and specially tasked to promote foreign investment in Pakistan, is playing a crucial role in boosting investment in the South Asian country. 

The council, established in June last year, is focusing on investments in energy, agriculture, mining, information technology and aviation sectors, specifically targeting the Gulf nations.


Pakistan Judicial Commission nominates first woman chief justice of Lahore High Court

Updated 02 July 2024
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Pakistan Judicial Commission nominates first woman chief justice of Lahore High Court

  • Post fell vacant after previous Lahore High Court chief justice was elevated to Supreme Court on June 7
  • Justice Neelum will officially be appointed as chief justice after parliamentary committee approves her nomination

ISLAMABAD: The Judicial Commission of Pakistan (JCP) on Tuesday nominated Justice Aalia Neelum as the new chief justice of the Lahore High Court (LHC), making her the first woman to be nominated for the post, local media widely reported. 

The office of the LHC’s chief justice became vacant after Justice Malik Shahzad Ahmad Khan was elevated to the Supreme Court on June 7.

Justice Shujaat Ali Khan is the senior most puisne judge of the LHC with Justice Neelum coming in at number three. Although it is not a constitutional requirement to nominate the senior puisne judge of a high court as chief justice, it is very rare that a junior judge is appointed to the post rather than the senior one. 

Her nomination to the post was decided unanimously after a meeting of the JCP chaired by Chief Justice Qazi Faez Isa was held earlier on Tuesday, local media reported. 

“Congratulations to Justice Aalia Neelum for her nomination as new Lahore High Court Chief Justice,” former Pakistani minister Sherry Rehman wrote on social media platform X. 

“She will be the first woman to hold this position.”

Justice Neelum will be appointed officially to the post after the parliamentary committee on judges appointment greenlights the JCP’s nomination. 

PROFILE

Justice Neelum was born on Nov. 12, 1966. She secured her LL.B. degree from the University of Punjab in 1995 and enrolled as an advocate on February 1, 1996. 

She was elevated to the LHC’s bench on April 12, 2013, and has rendered numerous reported judgments on numerous important issues. 

“Her area of practice and consultancy covered Constitutional Law, White-Collar Crime, Civil, Criminal, Anti Terrorism laws, NAB, Banking Offences, Special Central Courts Law, and Banking Laws,” the LHC said on its website. 
Justice Neelum also prepared the standing operating procedures (SOPs) for recording evidence during trials in e-courts in Punjab. These sops are now implemented in trial courts across Punjab, the LHC said. 


Afghan officials meet Pakistani diplomats in Doha amid strained ties

Updated 02 July 2024
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Afghan officials meet Pakistani diplomats in Doha amid strained ties

  • Afghan government spokesperson Zabiullah Mujahid describes meeting as “good,” hopes for positive relations 
  • Tensions escalated last week after Pakistan’s defense minister hinted Islamabad could take out militants in Afghanistan

ISLAMABAD: Afghanistan government spokesperson Zabihullah Mujahid and a Taliban delegation this week met Pakistani officials in Doha amid strained ties, describing the meeting as a “good” one and hoping for relations between the two countries to improve in the future. 

Tensions between the neighbors escalated last week when Pakistan’s Defense Minister Khawaja Asif hinted Islamabad could carry out cross-border attacks into Afghanistan to take out militants. Afghanistan warned Pakistan against taking such a step, warning there would be “consequences.”

Pakistan blames the Taliban-led government for harboring militants on Afghan soil. Islamabad alleges that the Pakistani Taliban or Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) launch attacks in Pakistan from sanctuaries in Afghanistan. Kabul has denied the allegations and said Pakistan’s security lapses are its internal responsibility. 

Delegations from Pakistan and around 30 other countries this week began a third round of United Nations-sponsored talks on integrating Afghanistan into the international community. The Pakistani mission in Qatar, including Pakistan’s Special Representative on Afghanistan Asif Durrani, held a dinner for the Taliban delegation on the sidelines of the conference on Monday. 

“We thank them for their hospitality and hope for good and constructive relations for both countries,” Mujahid wrote on social media platform X on Tuesday. 

“We had dinner and a very good meeting with the special representative of Pakistan Mr. Asif Durrani and the ambassador and consuls of that Pakistan in Doha.”

Tensions between Pakistan and Afghanistan further escalated last year when Islamabad launched a deportation drive, after a spike in suicide bombings which the Pakistan government, without providing evidence, blamed on Afghan nationals. 

Pakistan also says Afghans are involved in smuggling, militant violence and other crimes. 

The world has wrestled with its approach to Afghanistan’s new rulers, the Taliban, who seized power in Kabul in August 2021 after an international coalition of US-led forces pulled out of the country.

The Taliban government has not been officially recognized by any country since it took power. The administration’s strict regulations, primarily against women’s right to education and work, have angered the UN and several foreign countries.

Governments, aid agencies and international organizations have slashed or massively scaled back funding for Afghanistan in response, complicating problems for a country already reeling from internal conflicts and a deepening economic crisis.


Pakistani government commission says 197 new ‘missing persons’ cases reported this year

Updated 02 July 2024
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Pakistani government commission says 197 new ‘missing persons’ cases reported this year

  • Balochistan government spokesperson says missing persons numbers are often exaggerated by families and rights activists
  • Families of alleged victims of enforced disappearances say government underreporting figures, don’t have trust in official process

KARACHI: The Pakistan government’s Commission of Inquiry on Enforced Disappearances (COIOED) has logged 197 new cases of missing people this year, with families of alleged victims saying on Tuesday the low number reflected the people’s lack of trust in the process of reporting cases to authorities. 

Enforced disappearances is an enduring issue in Pakistan where relatives, politicians and rights activists say many people who have gone missing, especially in Pakistan’s southwestern Balochistan province, have been abducted by Pakistani security forces on the pretext of fighting militancy. The Pakistani state denies involvement in enforced disappearances.

The COIOED was set up in 2011 to trace missing persons and hold individuals or organizations to account for their disappearance. In a report released on Monday, the commission said around 10,285 cases had been registered with the body since January 2018, of which 4,514 individuals had returned home, 1,002 were in internment centers, 671 in prisons, and the dead bodies of 277 had been recovered. Additionally, 1,551 cases were closed for various reasons.

The commission said 47 cases had been reported in June. Twenty-eight cases had been disposed of due to people returning home, being in internment camps or jails, being found to be dead or determined to not be cases of enforced disappearances. 

The report said less than 30 percent of the total cases received by the commission over the last seven years were from Balochistan, and that 2,360 cases, or 84.52 percent of the total 2,792 registered cases from Balochistan, had been resolved. Among these, 2,025 people had returned home. 

But many relatives of alleged victims dismiss the figures.

Rights activist Sammi Deen Baloch, who has been advocating for the recovery of her father Dr. Deen Mohammad Baloch since 2011, said she had stopped pursuing the case in 2021 after losing faith in the body. 

“I stopped pursuing my father’s case in 2021 because commission members were rude to families, despite their duty being to provide relief,” Baloch, who is also the general secretary of the Voice of Baloch Missing Persons (VBMP) group, told Arab News.

Baloch said the low number of reported cases from Balochistan indicated that either people were not coming forward or they were publicly showing their lack of trust in the government commission.

She also said it was particularly challenging to document all cases from Balochistan because families often preferred to keep their identities hidden, and because the province, Pakistan’s largest by size, covered a vast and remote area.

Monday’s report said the northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province had the highest number of registered cases since the commission was set up, totaling 3,537 or 34.38 percent. Sindh’s registered cases are 1,823, accounting for 17.72 percent of the total, followed by Punjab with 1,675 cases, or 16.28 percent.

Amina Masood Janjua, who has been campaigning for the recovery of her husband Ahmad Masood Janjua since 2005 and is the chairperson of the Defense of Human Rights group, a network of families of missing persons, noted that KP saw a lot of cases of enforced disappearances during former military ruler Musharraf’s tenure. 

“Another reason is also that it is a border area and a physical War on Terror has been fought in this region,” Janjua said. 

Pakistan’s capital, Islamabad, had 378 cases, 3.67 percent of the total registered while Azad Kashmir had 70 cases, or 0.68 percent of the total. Pakistan’s northern semi-autonomous Gilgit-Baltistan region reported only 10 cases of missing persons.

‘EXAGGERATED’

According to the commission’s data, 1,096 cases were registered from across Pakistan in 2018, followed by 800 in 2019. The next year, the figure dropped to 415 but surged to 1,460 in 2021.
This increased to 860 in 2022 while in 2023, 885 cases of missing persons were registered across the country. This year, only 197 cases were reported across the country during the first six months. 

Janjua agreed that a “lack of trust” in the commission was the main reason for the low number of cases that were logged, particularly from Balochistan, where there is a disconnect between the public and the state and people widely believe the mineral-rich province’s resources are being exploited by the government, a charge it denies. 

The province has also been home to a low-level insurgency by separatist militants for decades.

Shahid Rind, a Balochistan government spokesperson, acknowledged that the missing persons issue was “real” but said figures reported by families and rights groups were “often exaggerated.”

“Different leaders claim figures in the thousands, which lacks substantiation,” Rind told Arab News.

“The state requires specific data and documentation to confirm disappearances, and there is an established mechanism for this purpose,” he explained.

Former Pakistani senator Afrasiab Khattak, who has long championed the cause for missing people, disagreed, saying that the number of missing persons was much higher than that reported by the commission. He said given a lack of trust in the commission, families thus preferred to hold protests and sit-ins to register their grievances.

“They hope mobilizing public opinion may give some results than waiting for the decisions of these already failed forums,” Khattak said.


Dozens rally in Pakistan after Christian man is sentenced to death for blasphemy 

Updated 02 July 2024
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Dozens rally in Pakistan after Christian man is sentenced to death for blasphemy 

  • Pakistani court sentenced Christian man to death this week for sharing “hateful content” against Muslims 
  • Often mere blasphemy accusations can cause riots and incite mobs to violence, lynchings in Pakistan

KARACHI, Pakistan: Dozens of members from Pakistan’s civil society rallied on Tuesday in the southern port city of Karachi against the death sentence handed down to a Christian man on blasphemy charges, nearly a year after one of the worst mob attacks on Christians in the country.

Several Christians also joined the rally which comes a day after a court in Sahiwal in the Punjab province announced the death sentence to Ehsan Shan after finding him guilty of sharing “hateful content” against Muslims on social media.

Shan’s lawyer Khurram Shahzad said on Monday he will appeal the verdict.

He was arrested in August 2023 after groups of Muslim men burned dozens of homes and churches in the city of Jaranwala in Punjab after some residents claimed they saw two Christian men desecrating pages from Islam’s holy book, the Qur’an. 

The two men were later arrested.

Though Shan was not party to the desecration, he was accused of reposting the defaced pages of the Qur’an on his TikTok account.

At Tuesday’s rally in Karachi, a Christian leader Luke Victor, called for Shah’s release.

He also demanded action against those who were involved in burning churches and homes of Christians in Jaranwala.

Blasphemy accusations are common in Pakistan. Under the country’s blasphemy laws, anyone found guilty of insulting Islam or Islamic religious figures can be sentenced to death. 

While authorities have yet to carry out a death sentence for blasphemy, often a mere accusation can cause riots and incite mobs to violence, lynching and killings.


PM Sharif highlights Pakistan’s ‘unlimited potential’ for investment during Tajikistan visit

Updated 02 July 2024
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PM Sharif highlights Pakistan’s ‘unlimited potential’ for investment during Tajikistan visit

  • Both sides sign several agreements in agriculture, health, education and investment
  • Sharif will attend twin summits of Shanghai Cooperation Organization in Kazakhstan later

ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif on Tuesday highlighted the “unlimited potential” for foreign investment in Pakistan’s key economic sectors, a statement from his office said, during his visit to Tajikistan to enhance Islamabad’s regional ties with Central Asian states.

Sharif reached Dushanbe on an official visit to Tajikistan on Tuesday which will be followed by a trip to Kazakhstan for the twin summits of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO). The Pakistani prime minister received a guard of honor upon his arrival, where he was welcomed by Tajikistan Prime Minister Aziz M. Qohir Rasulzoda and other government officials.

His visit comes as Pakistan pushes to enhance its role as a pivotal trade and transit hub connecting the landlocked Central Asian states with the rest of the world, leveraging its strategic geographical position.

In recent weeks, there has been a flurry of visits, investment talks and economic activity between Pakistan and Central Asian states. Last week, Sharif chaired a special meeting attended by senior government ministers on how to enhance relations with the region, particularly in the areas of economy and investment.

“There is unlimited potential for international investment in Pakistan in energy, minerals, industry, agriculture, and other sectors,” the Prime Minister’s Office (PMO) quoted the prime minister as saying during his meeting with the Tajikistan President Emomali Rahmon.

Sharif also extended an invitation to President Rahmon to enhance regional ties and expand social relations between Pakistani and Tajikistan.

The Tajik president stressed on the importance of longstanding fraternal relations between Pakistan and Tajikistan, the PMO said.

Speaking to the media in a joint press conference with Rahmon, the Pakistani prime minister said both countries had signed several memorandum of understanding (MoU) which would be helpful in cementing ties between the two countries. 

“These agreements will go a long way in furthering our brotherly ties and of course, expanding our scope of cooperation in the coming days,” Sharif said. 

Sharif assured Rahmon that he would work with him not only to expand cooperation in the fields of agriculture, education, health and promotion of investment, but also in expanding bilateral trade.

He said the transportation of goods from the port of Pakistan’s Karachi city to Tajikistan via Afghanistan and then from Dushanbe to Karachi port via Afghanistan through a rail-road connectivity project was “an area of huge economic importance” for the two countries. 

The Pakistani prime minister said Islamabad would be keen to be a part of the China, Tajikistan and Afghanistan trade corridor project. 

“It would be another opportunity to broaden the multilateral trade,” he said. 

The prime minister said the two brotherly countries had been the victims of “terrorism,” noting that Pakistan faced this menace for years and paid a huge price in terms of human lives colossal economic losses.

Sharif said the two countries should cooperate in defeating “terrorism,” adding that they could fight this menace collectively wherever it existed.