Pakistan invites Cambodian businesses to invest in agriculture, tourism, textile sectors

Pakistan’s commerce minister Jam Kamal Khan (center) speaks during the inaugural session of the Pakistan-Cambodia Joint Trade Committee in Phnom Penh, Cambodia, on January 21, 2025. (Commerce Ministry)
Short Url
Updated 21 January 2025
Follow

Pakistan invites Cambodian businesses to invest in agriculture, tourism, textile sectors

  • Commerce Minister Jam Kamal attends inaugural Pakistan-Cambodia Joint Trade Committee in Phnom Penh
  • Pakistan and Cambodia’s bilateral trade of goods and services valued at $45.5 million, says commerce ministry

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s Commerce Minister Jam Kamal Khan on Tuesday invited Cambodian businesses to explore investment opportunities in the country’s agriculture, textiles, pharmaceuticals and tourism sectors, his ministry said, as Islamabad eyes foreign investment to ward off a prolonged economic crisis. 

The development took place as both sides took part in the inaugural session of the Pakistan-Cambodia Joint Trade Committee (JTC) in Phnom Penh. 

Khan arrived in Cambodia on Jan. 19 for a three-day official visit to the country to engage in bilateral trade talks amid Islamabad’s push to seek closer trade ties as it targets sustainable economic growth. 

“Pakistan’s Minister for Commerce highlighted Pakistan’s strategic location, growing economy and investment-friendly policies, inviting Cambodian businesses to explore opportunities in agriculture, textiles, pharmaceuticals and tourism,” Pakistan’s Commerce Ministry said. 

The minister stressed Pakistan’s efforts to improve ease of doing business and its potential as a gateway to key markets in South Asia, Central Asia and the Middle East.

The ministry further said Khan and Cambodian Commerce Minister Cham Nimul discussed mutual interests such as trade, health, banking, agriculture, aviation and customs. 

She appreciated the first JTC meeting between the two sides and expressed interest in visiting Pakistan for the second JTC meeting after Khan extended her a formal invitation. 

Nimul called for exploring joint ventures to leverage regional opportunities, highlighting Cambodia’s market access within the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) region, Pakistan’s commerce ministry said. 

“Both countries also expressed interest in MoUs for aviation, banking, and customs cooperation,” the statement said. 

“With bilateral trade currently valued at $45.5 million, both sides acknowledged significant untapped potential and committed to building stronger ties.”

The ministry said both sides will appoint focal persons to expedite negotiations for signing MoUs aimed at enhancing cooperation. 

Additionally, Pakistan and Cambodia also agreed to share trade-related information, organize trade delegations and facilitate their respective business communities.


Pakistan’s new federal force sparks fears of political repression ahead of Khan party protests

Updated 4 sec ago
Follow

Pakistan’s new federal force sparks fears of political repression ahead of Khan party protests

  • The Pakistani government says new force should not be mistaken for federal police, calls the move an ‘administrative necessity’
  • Analyst says it remains to be seen how the new force will operate nationwide, given that law and order became a provincial subject

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s transformation of the Frontier Constabulary (FC) border paramilitary force into a federal force ahead of planned protests by jailed former prime minister Imran Khan’s party this week sparked fears of political repression in the country, with opposition members and analysts saying the new nationwide force could be used as a “tool to suppress political opponents.”

Pakistan’s President Asif Ali Zardari allowed the government to turn Frontier Constabulary into the national security force, called Federal Constabulary, through an ordinance on Monday in order to support law enforcement agencies and to address evolving security challenges across the South Asian country.

The paramilitary force was initially formed to uphold law and order in border and frontier regions, according to the ordinance. However, the evolving conditions, marked by frequent emergencies, natural disasters, civil disturbances and other emerging risks, created the need for a more flexible and capable force to effectively respond to these challenges.

The move has raised concerns among opposition parties, particularly Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI), which fears that the new force could be used as a means of political repression amid its 90-day anti-government protest movement, announced on July 13.

“From the looks of it, it’s a safe assumption that such laws are being inflicted, just ahead of political movement announced by PTI, as a tool to suppress political opponents,” Syed Zulfiqar Bukhari, a close Khan aide, told Arab News.

Pakistan ranks as the second-most affected country by militancy, according to The Global Terrorism Index 2025. Militancy-related deaths surged by 45 percent, rising from 748 in 2023 to 1,081 in 2024, marking one of the steepest global increases. The attacks in Pakistan more than doubled, from 517 in 2023 to 1,099 in 2024.

The new duties of the Federal Constabulary, whose cadres were previously recruited only from tribes in the northwestern KP province, will include internal security, riot control and counter-terrorism.

The government’s move to transform the force came ahead of planned protests by Khan’s PTI on Aug. 5, the second anniversary of his arrest. Several such protests by the party since Khan’s brief arrest in May 2023 have turned violent, in some cases paralyzing the capital Islamabad for days.

In the near future, PTI’s Bukhari said, it would be clear if the law was being introduced to, in fact, address security challenges or to stop any political movement that could endanger the existence of the “current, so-called democracy.”

“The new force should not be used as a gimmick to silence political opponents as has been previously witnessed, when the government applied such laws against a large number of the PTI leadership and supporters,” he added.

Khan’s party has been protesting to secure to secure his release and an audit of the Fed. 2024 general election, which it says was rigged to benefit its opponents. Pakistan’s election authorities deny the allegation, while the government accuses Khan’s party of attempting to disrupt its efforts to achieve sustainable economic growth through violent protests.

Ali Imtiaz Warraich, the PTI parliamentary leader in the Punjab Assembly, said “crushing the public mandate” would never result in stability of the country.

“Federal and Punjab governments’ only focus is PTI and all actions taken are only PTI-centered,” he told Arab News, adding that it had not worked in past, nor would it work in future.

However, Pakistan’s Minister of State for Interior Talal Chaudhry said the Federal Constabulary should not be mistaken for a federal police force.

“It will continue to function as a constabulary as the restructuring and renaming are solely aimed at strengthening internal and national security,” he said this week, adding the overhaul was institutionally essential to enhance coordination, improve compensation and build operational capacity of the force throughout all provinces and territories.

“This is entirely a defense-oriented initiative intended to reinforce national security by supporting law enforcement agencies,” he added.

Chaudhry stated the restructuring was also an administrative necessity as despite its significant contributions, the force had long been overlooked and continued to function with limited salaries and benefits compared to other security forces in Pakistan.

“Its transformation into a federal force is to eliminate existing disparities by upgrading its structure and scope under the new title,” he said, adding the reorganization was aimed at ensuring that FC personnel receive salaries, training and benefits at par with other national security forces.

Under the new federal framework, FC’s jurisdiction would extend across all four provinces as well as Gilgit-Baltistan and Azad Jammu & Kashmir, according to the minister.

“While continuing to perform its duties under this redefined structure, the Federal Constabulary will build on its longstanding role in combating drug trafficking and smuggling and in assisting civil law enforcement during sensitive occasions such as Muharram, general elections and anti-polio campaigns,” he said.

Arab News spoke to some analysts about the government’s move, who voiced concerns about the timing, intent and potential misuse of the new force.

“There is always a risk of such a force being misused in Pakistan,” Ahmed Bilal Mehboob, president of the Islamabad-based think tank Pakistan Institute of Legislative Development and Transparency (PILDAT), told Arab News.

“The Frontier Constabulary was already under federal control, so it’s unclear why this transformation was necessary, especially at a time when the country’s major opposition party has announced a protest movement.”

Ather Kazmi, an analyst and political commentator, said the urgency with which the revamp was carried out through an ordinance had raised many eyebrows.

“Although the government claimed it was an administrative necessity, its timing and urgency have led PTI and others to believe it has political purposes,” he told Arab News.

Kazmi said it remained to be seen how the new force would operate after its jurisdiction was extended nationwide, given that law and order became a provincial subject after the 18th amendment of the Constitution of Pakistan.

“It would not be easy for the government to deploy this force in provinces governed by the opposition, such as KP,” he noted.


WFP, GCF launch $9.8 million project to protect flood-prone communities in Pakistan’s north

Updated 15 July 2025
Follow

WFP, GCF launch $9.8 million project to protect flood-prone communities in Pakistan’s north

  • The initiative aims to benefit 1.6 million people through early warning systems, capacity-building of local authorities
  • Pakistan witnessed unprecedented floods in 2022, over 100 people have already been killed by monsoon rains this year

ISLAMABAD: The United Nations (UN) World Food Program and the Green Climate Fund (GCF) have launched a $9.8 million project in Pakistan aimed at protecting flood-prone communities in its northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, Pakistani state media reported on Tuesday.

Titled the “Integrated Climate Risk Management for Strengthened Resilience to Climate” project, the initiative aims to help flood-prone communities cope with extreme weather by installing early warning systems such as weather stations and river-level monitors.

Pakistan is one of the world’s most vulnerable countries to the effects of climate change and its 240 million residents are facing extreme weather events with increasing frequency.

In 2022, unprecedented monsoon floods submerged a third of Pakistan and killed 1,700 people, with some areas still recovering from the damage. This year, more than 110 people have been killed and over 200 injured in rain-related incidents across the country.

“The initiative funded by the GCF with $9.8 million will directly benefit 1.6 million people in Buner and Shangla districts of KP province, two areas highly vulnerable to climate shocks,” the Associated Press of Pakistan (APP) news agency reported on Tuesday.

The project will help improve coordination among government departments and enhance capacity of local authorities and emergency teams through targeted trainings and essential equipment, according to the report.

This will ensure timely and effective responses to climate-related emergencies and faster communication of alerts to communities at risk. People will be trained to interpret warnings issued by the weather systems to evacuate safely and take measures to protect their farms and homes before disasters strike.

“Recurring climate shocks are a driver of hunger and malnutrition, threatening lives, livelihoods and entire food systems,” WFP Pakistan Representative and Country Director Coco Ushiyama was quoted as saying.

“This project represents a multi-layered investment, not only in early warning systems and anticipatory action, but also in local adaptation planning and institutional capacity.”

The initiative supports the UN-backed GCF’s Strategic Plan 2024–2027 by addressing urgent adaptation needs in underserved areas, bridging critical capacity gaps in flood preparedness and strengthening community resilience.


Pakistan to register tour operators to streamline pilgrimages to Iran, Iraq

Updated 15 July 2025
Follow

Pakistan to register tour operators to streamline pilgrimages to Iran, Iraq

  • The development comes after some Pakistani pilgrims were found to be overstaying their visas, working in host countries
  • Official says authorities in Iran, Iraq and Syria raised their concerns, underlining a need for formal, accountable structure

ISLAMABAD: The Pakistani government is introducing a new, centralized system for organizing pilgrimages to holy sites in Iran and Iraq that would require interested parties to register as tour operators, the Pakistani religious affairs minister announced on Tuesday, a day after a trination meeting in Tehran between interior ministers from the three countries.

Islamabad had requested for the tri-nation conference to discuss issues relating to thousands of Pakistani Shiite Muslims, who travel annually to holy sites in Iran, Iraq and Syria.

Pakistan previously had no formal structure for people to travel to Iran and Iraq for religious purposes. Although a system was approved in 2021 to organize these pilgrimages, but little progress was made on its implementation.

Pakistan’s Religious Affairs Minister Sardar Muhammad Yousaf clarified that managing the affairs of Shiite zaireen (pilgrims), like Hajj and Umrah pilgrims, falls under the purview of his ministry.

“The existing, outdated system will soon be phased out and companies interested in organizing pilgrimages [to Iran, Iraq and Syria] must register with the ministry immediately,” he was quoted as saying by the religious affairs ministry.

The announcement follows a statement from Pakistani Interior Minister Mohsin Naqvi, following the tri-nation meeting in Tehran, saying that Pakistani Shiite pilgrims would not be able to individually travel for religious pilgrimages from Jan. 1 next year.

Some Pakistanis traveling individually to these countries were found to be overstaying their visas or working in the host countries, according to the interior minister.

Religious Affairs Minister Yousaf noted that around 40,000 Pakistani pilgrims had remained in Iraq, Syria and Iran in recent years and authorities in the three countries had raised their concerns with Pakistan, underlining the need for a formal and accountable structure.

“If the government had a proper record, we would know where each pilgrim went,” he said, adding that Naqvi and Religious Affairs Secretary Dr. Syed Ata-ur-Rehman are currently in Iran to integrate the pilgrimage process into a modern, computerized tracking system. 

Last month, Pakistan evacuated over 260 nationals from Iraq and another 450 Pakistanis who had been stranded in Iran during the Tehran-Israeli conflict, according to the country’s foreign ministry. There was no confirmation of the number of evacuees who had traveled legally and those who had been staying in the two countries illegally.

Yousaf said Pakistan’s federal cabinet has approved a new framework for Zaireen Group Organizers (ZGOs), and accordingly, the Ministry of Religious Affairs has issued a public notice for interested parties to register as ZGOs.

Of the 1,400 applicants, 585 companies cleared the security vetting process and have been instructed to complete their online registration through the religious affairs ministry’s website and submit required documents by July 31, according to the minister.

Companies wishing to work as ZGOs can apply for registration till Aug. 10.

“Just as Hajj pilgrims travel through licensed Hajj tour operators, Zaireen will also travel only through registered ZGOs,” Yousaf said, adding that ZGOs will also be required to provide travel cost packages for pilgrims like Hajj tour organizers.


Pakistan mulls over 60 percent cut in solar buyback tariffs to save $15 billion in 10 years

Updated 15 July 2025
Follow

Pakistan mulls over 60 percent cut in solar buyback tariffs to save $15 billion in 10 years

  • Pakistan currently buys back solar-generated electricity from domestic, commercial and industrial producers at Rs27 per kilowatt hour
  • Authorities to present revised policy ‘within a month’ as global energy think-tank ranks solar as Pakistan’s largest power source in 2025

KARACHI: Pakistan’s government plans to more than halve the buyback tariffs for net-metered solar power to save Rs4.3 trillion ($15.1 billion) over the next ten years, according to people privy to the matter.

Authorities at Pakistan’s energy ministry are working on a new solar policy that looks to change the current net-metering regime under which the cash-strapped government is buying back solar-generated electricity from domestic, commercial and industrial producers at Rs27 per kilowatt hour (kWh).

The buyback rates for large scale grid-connected solar plants like Quaid-e-Azam Solar Power (Pvt.) Limited, Pakistan’s first 100-megawatt solar utility set up by Punjab government, ranges between Rs9 and Rs11.

“The government is proposing to remove this anomaly and offer almost a uniform buyback rate for net-metered solar power in line with global standard practice,” said a Pakistani energy ministry official who is privy to the policymaking discussions but cannot share them with media.

He said officials at the ministry’s power division will present a revised solar policy to the federal cabinet “within a month,” proposing to reduce the buyback price for net-metered solar power by more than 60 percent to Rs10 per kWh.

The government plans to link the buyback rates with the national base tariff.

“The government is encouraging these domestic and other distributed solar producers and has allocated a quantum for them in the IGCEP (Indicative Generation Capacity Expansion Plan),” the official said.

“What this new net-metering policy will define is the question that at what rate the government should buy power from these distributed producers. We are working this out.”

The move would help the government save Rs4.3 trillion ($15.1 billion) in the decade to come, he added.

Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif’s government is currently trying to revive Pakistan’s debt-ridden economy by introducing energy and economic reforms, backed by the International Monetary Fund (IMF) that approved a $7 billion loan for the South Asian nation in Sept., last year.

Promoting renewable energy sources like solar and wind has been part of the government’s plan to avoid costly oil imports that shrank five percent to $15 billion from July 2024 till May 2025, according to latest official figures.

The South Asian country has boosted solar electricity generation by over three times the global average so far this year, fueled by a more than fivefold rise in solar capacity imports since 2022, Reuters reported last month, citing data from global energy think tank Ember.

The combination of rapidly rising capacity and generation has propelled solar power from Pakistan’s fifth-largest electricity source in 2023 to its largest in 2025, Reuters said.

However, the country still relies heavily on fossil fuels and generates 56 percent electricity from thermal, 24.4 percent from hydel, 8 percent from nuclear and 12.2 percent from renewable energy sources.

According to Pakistan’s latest economic survey, the nation’s total installed electricity generation capacity stood at 46,605 megawatts from July 2024 till March 2025, showing 2 percent increase from 45,888 megawatts during the same period in the previous year.

“The increase can be attributed with the installed capacity of 2,813 MW from net-metering,” the survey said.

Shankar Talreja, head of research at Karachi-based brokerage firm Topline Securities, said Pakistan had been spending billions of dollars on the import of solar panels from China, thus pushing the country’s inflation-hit consumers from grid-based energy to solar photovoltaic plants many of them have now installed at their rooftops to ensure smooth and cheaper supply of electricity.

“The benefit of net-metering was quite attractive, [so] people started installing solar at their rooftops and they were also selling excess electricity to government at a price of over Rs20 per kwh,” Talreja said.

“Pakistan imports over $2 billion of solar [panels] every year and it was increasing at a higher rate, resulting in further reduction in utilization of grid energy.”

Pakistan has so far imported solar panels of 48,000 megawatts capacity, mostly from China, of which, the country is generating close to 6,000 megawatts power due to low efficiency (up to 21 percent) of these panels, according to officials.

“People are installing as many solar plants as possible and selling their surplus power to the government at a higher rate,” the energy ministry official said, adding the government is also considering 8,500 megawatts power generation quota for the distributed net-metering solar electricity that comes from domestic, agriculture, commercial and industrial producers.

“The buyback rate the power division is proposing stands equivalent to the tariff we are using to buy power from large-scale solar plants,” he said, adding that even K-Electric, Pakistan’s largest private utility that powers the country’s commercial capital of Karachi, had agreed to sell its solar power to the government at as much as Rs10 per kilowatt.

Last month, K-Electric signed a memorandum of understanding (MoU) with China’s Huawei Digital Power Pakistan to strategically collaborate for 300 MWh battery energy storage systems and electric vehicles charging infrastructure to accelerate Pakistan’s smart energy transition.

The off-grid solar solution was one of the major reasons for 4 percent decrease in Pakistan’s total electricity consumption that dropped to 80,111 gigawatt hours from July 2024 till March 2025, according to the economic survey.

Talreja said the government, sensing the costly nature of net-metering, has started discouraging and insisting people to stay on the national grid, and proposed to slash and link the buyback tariff with national base tariff, i.e. 33 percent.

“The government is trying its best to increase share of renewables in overall energy mix, however, its implementation gets tougher due to idle capacity of expensive thermal assets,” the economist said.


Pakistan seeks higher 2026 Hajj quota after 455,000 register for pilgrimage

Updated 15 July 2025
Follow

Pakistan seeks higher 2026 Hajj quota after 455,000 register for pilgrimage

  • Islamabad urges Saudi Arabia to raise Hajj quota from 179,210 in 2025 to 230,000 next year
  • Pakistan's current Muslim population is approximately 230 million, according to latest census

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan's religious affairs minister, Sardar Mohammad Yousaf, said on Tuesday the country has requested a higher Hajj quota in proportion to its population for the next year from Saudi Arabia, after early registrations for the pilgrimage reached 455,000 this month.

Pakistan's current Muslim population is approximately 230 million, according to the latest census cited by the minister.

He added the government had urged the Kingdom to raise the country’s Hajj quota from 179,210 to 230,000 in a formal letter, aiming to enable more citizens to perform the annual Islamic pilgrimage.

"A gazette notification has ... been issued regarding the population, so based on that population, our [Hajj] quota should be 230,000," Yousaf said during a news conference.

"For this, we've written to the Saudi government and demanded [an increase], and a letter has been sent [to them] by the Ministry of Religious Affairs," he continued. "We hope they will consider this [request] and adjust our quota in proportion to our population."

Yousaf highlighted that the registration of 455,000 intending pilgrims by the deadline reflected their strong eagerness to perform Hajj.

The government announced the initiation of next year’s Hajj process early, asking aspiring pilgrims to register themselves first.

No fee was required at the registration stage.

All registered applicants will now be able to choose between the government and private Hajj schemes.

A large portion of the private Hajj quota for 2025 remained unutilized due to delays by tour operators in meeting payment and registration deadlines, while the government fulfilled its full allocation of over 88,000 pilgrims.

Private operators attributed the shortfall to technical issues, including payment processing problems and communication breakdowns.