Food lovers relish international flavors, global cuisines at Karachi Eat 2025

Special Food lovers relish international flavors, global cuisines at Karachi Eat 2025
Visitors attend Karachi Eat festival in Karachi, Pakistan, on January 11, 2025. (AN photo)
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Updated 12 January 2025
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Food lovers relish international flavors, global cuisines at Karachi Eat 2025

Food lovers relish international flavors, global cuisines at Karachi Eat 2025
  • Three-day annual Karachi Eat festival features cuisines from Middle East, Turkiye and Italy
  • Food stall owners say festival helps them bring global cuisines to Pakistani audiences 

KARACHI: The air at Beach View Park in Pakistan’s southern port city of Karachi was filled with the enticing aroma of Sicilian slow-cooked beef, Arabic Paratha, beefy Chapli Kebabs from Peshawar and mouthwatering Chicken Tikka. 

Welcome to Karachi Eat 2025, Pakistan’s biggest annual food festival. The three-day festival has been taking place in the ‘City of Lights’ every year in January since 2014. This year’s festival, set to conclude today, Sunday, also features hundreds of eateries and offers a variety of cuisines to visitors.

According to Ticket Wala, a platform that sells tickets for entertainment events, chefs from Indonesia, Singapore, Turkiye, Romania, Malaysia, France and other countries visited Karachi for the festival. 

Sarah Aziz, a food stall owner passionately selling Sicilian cuisine, told Arab News she wanted to bring international cuisine to Pakistanis who could not travel to countries around the world. 

“We want to bring the flavors out there for everyone who can’t go to Sicily, Portugal, or Malta,” she said. “We want to bring the food here, so they can also cherish and enjoy it.”

Aziz said she wanted to “convert” her cuisine, which was for a niche market, so that many people in Pakistan can enjoy and develop a taste for it. 

“So, the menu is basically based on slow-cooked beef with lamb fat,” she said. “We are doing handmade pesto with garlic paste.”

For others like Muhammad Ismail, 28, the festival provided an opportunity for him to indulge in his love for Arabic cuisine. 

“I just had Arabic Paratha here,” Ismail, a banker by profession, told Arab News. “I have it there [Saudi Arabia] too but this one tastes exactly like the authentic one you get in Saudi Arabia, and it’s absolutely amazing,” he said. 




Visitors gather around "Arabi's" food stall at the Karachi Eat festival in Karachi, Pakistan, on January 11, 2025. (AN photo)

Shaikh Ameen, the owner of Arabi’s, a restaurant in Karachi that offers Arabic cuisine, said there was a growing appreciation for Middle Eastern cuisine in Pakistan. 

“We offer authentic shawarma, mutabbaq and kunafa, so we’re serving these authentic dishes here,” Ameen said. 

“There are quite a few people from the Middle East, especially families, who are familiar with this food, and they really enjoy it. Moreover, people’s tastes have evolved, and they really like these flavors now.”

Kashaf Noman, a textile designer in her 20s, expressed her enthusiasm for the festival. 

“I am loving it, it’s very really organized and I have many more options here than at other festivals, so it’s really nice, I’m having fun,” she said. 

Noman said she had relished fish gyozas, waffles and a Mexican drink.

CHAPLI KEBABS AND BOHRA CUISINES

While the festival featured a plethora of international flavors, it also celebrated local specialties like the Chapli Kebab, Bohra cuisines and dishes from Pakistan’s northern mountainous regions.

Bohra cuisine comprises of food items made famous by the Bohra community, a Shiite Muslim sect. 




Visitors gather around "Bohra Delights" food stall at the Karachi Eat festival in Karachi, Pakistan, on January 11, 2025. (AN photo)

The festival also provided a platform for lesser-known regional cuisines to showcase their items. Zaeem Ud Din, 25, a student and stall owner, introduced the traditional Chapshoro dish from the northern Gilgit-Baltistan region. 

“Our Chapshoro is not spicy; people’s taste buds aren’t the same but we still wanted to bring a tradition with us,” he said. 

“We aimed to introduce something unique from Gilgit-Baltistan as not everyone can travel there.”

There were also some outlets from Pakistan’s second-largest city Lahore, which enjoys a food rivalry with Karachi. 

Despite the general perception that Lahore’s food is inferior to that of Karachi in terms of taste, Lahore-based food stalls attracted a significant crowd at the festival.

“If someone says you can’t find anything like Karachi in Lahore, they should definitely try Arif Chatkhara,” Mirza Zaidan Baig, owner of the popular Lahore eatery “Arif Chatkhara,” told Arab News. 

And for those who did not like Arif Chatkhara’s sumptuous items, Baig had a generous offer. 

“If they don’t like it, we will send them back with double the amount they paid,” he said. 


India becomes top source of FDI in Dubai with $3 billion investment

India becomes top source of FDI in Dubai with $3 billion investment
Updated 49 sec ago
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India becomes top source of FDI in Dubai with $3 billion investment

India becomes top source of FDI in Dubai with $3 billion investment
  • India was top source country with highest FDI capital into Dubai, accounting for 21.5 percent in 2024
  • Business services, software, IT, and real estate were among top sectors of Indian investment

NEW DELHI: India’s foreign direct investment into Dubai surged to over $3 billion in 2024, making the South Asian nation its top investor, the latest data shows.
Dubai’s Department of Economy and Tourism announced earlier this week that the most populous of the UAE’s seven emirates attracted 52.3 billion dirhams ($14.20 billion) in estimated FDI capital in 2024.
India was “the top source country with the highest total estimated FDI capital into Dubai, accounting for 21.5 percent,” the main authority for the planning, supervision and development of Dubai’s business and tourism sectors said in a statement.
The value amounts to about $3.05 billion and was five times higher than in 2023, when India was Dubai’s fifth largest FDI capital contributor.
In 2024, India was followed by the US at 13.7 percent, France with 11 percent, the UK at 10 percent, and Switzerland with 6.9 percent.
India was also the second-largest player in FDI projects to Dubai, accounting for 15 percent of them, preceded only by the UK at 17 percent.
Business leaders saw the surge of Indian investment not only in Dubai but also in the whole UAE as facilitated by a series of bilateral agreements, especially the 2022 UAE-India Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement, which has eliminated trade barriers, lowered tariffs, and eased business operations, making it easier for companies in both countries to access each other’s markets.
Adeeb Ahamed, managing director of LuLu Financial Holdings and chair at the Middle East Council of the Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce and Industry, said it has enabled “remarkable economic collaboration” and allowed Indians “to take full advantage of this favorable (investment) atmosphere.”
In Dubai, business services, software and IT services, consumer products, food and Beverages, and real estate are currently the top sectors representing Indian FDI, according to the FICCI’s data.
“This diversification reflects Indian businesses’ strategic approach to global expansion. The regulatory environment — the 2022 Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement and 2024 Bilateral Investment Treaty have significantly reduced barriers, while world-class infrastructure and bilateral agreements have created an ecosystem where Indian enterprises can truly flourish,” FICCI director general Jyoti Vij told Arab News on Wednesday.
“This meteoric rise from the fifth to first position as Dubai’s top FDI source demonstrates our growing global ambitions and capabilities.”


Pakistan army takes control of main railway station in southwest amid armed operation after train hijacking

Pakistan army takes control of main railway station in southwest amid armed operation after train hijacking
Updated 12 min 41 sec ago
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Pakistan army takes control of main railway station in southwest amid armed operation after train hijacking

Pakistan army takes control of main railway station in southwest amid armed operation after train hijacking
  • BLA separatist group says holding 214 people hostage including military, police and intelligence officials
  • Security official says 190 passengers freed and armed rescue operation ongoing to take back control of train

QUETTA: The Pakistan army took control of a main railway station in the southwestern Balochistan province where dozens of empty coffins were brought on Wednesday, an eyewitness said, as security forces continued a rescue operation to free hundreds of people taken hostage by separatist militants who hijacked a train a day earlier.
The separatist Balochistan Liberation Army (BLA) bombed part of a railway track and stormed the Quetta-Peshawar-bound Jaffar Express on Tuesday afternoon in Mushkaaf, an area in the mountainous Bolan range of Balochistan. The group said on Tuesday night it was holding 214 people as hostages, including military, police and intelligence officials, while a security official said 190 passengers had been rescued by Wednesday afternoon. 
The province has been the site of a low-level separatist insurgency for decades, with separatist groups accusing the government of stripping the province’s natural resources and leaving its people mired in poverty. They say security forces routinely abduct, torture, and execute ethnic Baloch, allegations echoed by human rights campaigners. Government officials and security forces strongly deny violating human rights and say they are uplifting the province through development projects, including multi-billion-dollar schemes funded by China.

A Pakistan Army soldier stands guard, after the attack on a train by separatist militants in Bolan, at the railway station in Mushkaf, Balochistan, Pakistan on March 12, 2025. (REUTERS)

On Wednesday afternoon, an Arab News eyewitness described seeing dozens of empty coffins being brought to the Quetta Railway Station in the provincial capital. He said the station was overrun with army personnel while dozens of family members of hostages had arrived in search of their loved ones. These included the family of Amjad Yasin, the 50-year-old driver of the Jaffar Express, who officials said on Tuesday had been killed in the assault. 
“We have been contacting railway officials since yesterday, but no one is telling the truth,” Amir Yasin, the driver’s younger brother, told Arab News. 
“There are multiple reports coming about my brother’s death but how can we believe it until we see his body?” 

Passengers rescued by security forces from a passenger train attacked by insurgents comfort each other upon their arrival at a railway station in Quetta, Pakistan on Wednesday, March 12, 2025. (AP)

Ghulam Muhammad Sumroo, a railway official, told Arab News 16 passengers, including two injured Railway Police officers, had reached Mach Railway Station and were being moved to Quetta, the provincial capital.
Muhammad Abid, a railway employee who was on the train and arrived at Mach Station, described the attack as the most “horrific day” of his life.
“We were sitting in one of the compartments of Jaffar Express when a powerful explosion targeted the train and intense firing started,” he told Arab News over the phone. 
“We hid in the washrooms with other passengers, but then armed men came in and off boarded us from the train,” he added. “After checking our identity cards, they asked us to run on the track. My life flashed before my eyes when I saw dozens of armed men standing on the railway track.”
Muhammad Ashraf, a 68-year-old passenger traveling to Hafizabad in Punjab to meet his daughter, said that when the train departed from Paneer Railway Station, he heard an explosion about seven to eight kilometers into the journey, followed by intense gunfire, saying many people had been killed and injured.

A train carrying empty coffins to the siege site, stands at a railway station in Quetta on March 12, 2025. (AFP)

“Armed men boarded the train and asked everyone to leave the train or prepare to die,” he told Arab News, adding that the militants made the passengers walk on the tracks for three and a half hours on foot.
Ashraf said the militants had detained over 200 passengers, in his rough estimate.
One security official with direct knowledge of the ongoing rescue operation to take back control of the train and free hostages said 190 passengers had been freed and at least 30 militants had been killed. 
He said there were suicide bombers aboard the train, who were using women and children as “human shields.”

“Due to the presence of women and children with suicide bombers, extreme caution is being exercised in the operation,” the official said. “Security forces are continuing their operation to eliminate the remaining terrorists.”
The official said the militants were in touch with their “handlers” in Afghanistan, echoing a common accusation by Pakistani security and government officials that a recent spike in militancy was being orchestrated from the neighboring country. The Taliban rulers in Kabul deny they allow Afghan soil to be used by insurgents to plan or carry out terror attacks.
In a statement issued on Wednesday, the BLA, which has demanded a prisoner exchange within 48 hours, said the Pakistan government was not taking its demands seriously and was trying to free hostages through military action.
“BLA warns the enemy that if the Pakistani army commits any further aggression, even if a single bullet is fired, 10 more personnel will be eliminated,” it said.
“If our demands are not met within [the stipulated] time and the state’s stubbornness continues, then 5 hostages will be eliminated for every passing hour after the ultimatum ends.”


How separatist militants hijacked a train in Pakistan

How separatist militants hijacked a train in Pakistan
Updated 20 min 2 sec ago
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How separatist militants hijacked a train in Pakistan

How separatist militants hijacked a train in Pakistan
  • Jaffar Express was heading to Peshawar city from Quetta with 425 people on board
  • Militants blew up railway tracks, fired at train and trapped locomotive inside tunnel

Pakistani security forces are carrying out a rescue operation to free dozens of passengers taken hostage by separatist militants who hijacked their train in the southwest of the country on Tuesday.

Here is a look at what happened, and the current situation.

THE TRAIN
The Jaffar Express was heading to the city of Peshawar in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province from Quetta, the capital of Balochistan province, with 425 people on board when it was attacked.

The passengers included personnel from the Pakistani army and other security forces who were traveling on leave.

THE ATTACK
Militants blew up the railway tracks and opened fire on the train, killing the driver and trapping the locomotive inside a tunnel before taking control of it.

Some of those rescued said they crouched low when the firing started, while others spoke of passengers who had been injured or killed.

RESCUE OPERATION
Security forces have launched a massive operation to free the hostages, deploying special forces and helicopters, and 155 passengers have been rescued so far.

Some 27 militants have also been killed, sources say.

However, attackers wearing suicide bombs, who have been seated next to some of the hostages, have made the rescue efforts tougher.

THE DEMANDS
Ethnic armed group Baloch Liberation Army (BLA), which has claimed responsibility for the attack, has demanded the release of Baloch political prisoners, activists, and missing persons who it says were abducted by the military, within 48 hours.

It has threatened to start executing the hostages if the government does not fulfil the demand.

GOVERNMENT RESPONSE
Pakistan’s prime minister, Shehbaz Sharif, has condemned the attack and said security officials are “repelling” the militants.

Interior Minister Mohsin Naqvi has called the attackers “enemies” of Pakistan and vowed to foil their conspiracy to destabilize the nation.


Pakistani tennis player Talha Waheed sets Guinness World Record for most serves in a minute

Pakistani tennis player Talha Waheed sets Guinness World Record for most serves in a minute
Updated 28 min 51 sec ago
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Pakistani tennis player Talha Waheed sets Guinness World Record for most serves in a minute

Pakistani tennis player Talha Waheed sets Guinness World Record for most serves in a minute
  • Waheed registered 59 serves in one minute, breaking previous record of 42 serves 
  • Tennis player followed three-month training regimen to set the record last November

ISLAMABAD: Pakistani tennis player Talha Waheed has set a new Guinness World Record for the most number of serves in a minute, 59, breaking the previous record of 42, the Pakistan Tennis Federation (PTF) said on Wednesday.

The PTF described Waheed as a seasoned competitor who was featured in national and international matches with “an impressive record” in the 35+, 40+ and 45+ doubles categories, in addition to winning multiple national titles. Waheed has also attained a career-high International Tennis Federation ranking of 144 in the 40+ doubles category.

The Pakistani tennis player followed a “rigorous three-month training regimen” after which he made his official attempt to set the record on Nov. 8, 2024, in Pakistan’s eastern city of Lahore, the PTF said. Waheed adhered strictly to Guinness World Records guidelines in his attempt, the federation said. 

“On March 10, 2025, Waheed received official confirmation from Guinness World Records, declaring him the new world record holder,” the PTF said. 

The previous record was achieved by American tennis player John Perry in 2019, who registered 42 successful serves in one minute. 

PTF President Aisam-ul-Haq Qureshi and other tennis players congratulated Waheed on this remarkable achievement.

“Talha’s achievement is unique and securing a place in the Guinness Book of World Records is no easy task,” Qureshi said. “This will serve as a great inspiration and a major boost for tennis in Pakistan.”

Pakistan has a modest tennis presence, with Qureshi being the most successful player to reach Grand Slam finals in doubles. Despite limited infrastructure and funding challenges, the PTF continues to promote the sport to increase international representation in a country where cricket dominates.

Tennis has also taken a step back in the country over the past year with the rise of Padel.

This is not the first time a Pakistani has set a Guinness World Record. Previous record holders include Ali Moeen Nawazish who passed 23 A-level subjects, Naseem Hameed who became South Asia’s fastest woman and the city of Karachi which created the largest human-formed national flag.

Martial artist Muhammad Rashid also holds multiple records for smashing objects, showcasing Pakistan’s global excellence and determination.


BIONIKS becomes first startup from Pakistan to win prestigious Zero Project Award 2025

BIONIKS becomes first startup from Pakistan to win prestigious Zero Project Award 2025
Updated 13 min 12 sec ago
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BIONIKS becomes first startup from Pakistan to win prestigious Zero Project Award 2025

BIONIKS becomes first startup from Pakistan to win prestigious Zero Project Award 2025
  • BIONIKS was founded in 2016 and has sold 700 prosthetics that use AI and 3D scanning for custom designs
  • Zero Project Award 2025 is an international award given for innovative solutions that promote rights of persons with disabilities 

ISLAMABAD: BIONIKS, which specializes in orthotics and prosthetics, has become the first startup from Pakistan to win the prestigious Zero Project Award 2025 for helping include people with disabilities in the workforce by using advanced prosthetic technology, a press release said this week.

The Zero Project Award 2025 is an international award given for innovative solutions that promote the rights of persons with disabilities. 

BIONIKS, established in 2016, had sold 700 prosthetics up until last year by leveraging AI tools and 3D scanning for custom designs. 

“BIONIKS Pakistan is among 77 winners from 522 global nominations for the Zero Project Award 2025 recognized at a UN event for its AI-powered prosthetics,” the company said in a post on X. 

The startup was recognized for contributions to advancing the United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities, placing it among the world’s most “impactful and scalable” technology. It is the first Pakistani company to win the Zero Project Award. 

Anas Niaz, BIONIKS CEO, dedicated the award to disabled people who deserved the opportunity to live “independently with dignity.”

“Our mission is to revolutionize the way technology serves the disabled community,” he said in a statement. “Through our devices, we aim to lead the way to zero barriers and provide individuals with the advance prosthetic technology.”

In January, BIONIKS launched a mobile AI-powered limb factory in Gaza to provide customized prosthetic arms and legs to amputees.

The company gained international attention in 2021 when it made a multi-grip bionic arm for four-year-old Mohammed Sideeq, the youngest recipient of such a prosthetic limb.