Pakistani PM orders cooperation with Interpol against suspects running human trafficking schemes abroad

Pakistani PM orders cooperation with Interpol against suspects running human trafficking schemes abroad
Pakistan Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif (center) chairs a meeting regarding measures taken against human trafficking in Islamabad on January 15, 2025. (PID)
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Updated 15 January 2025
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Pakistani PM orders cooperation with Interpol against suspects running human trafficking schemes abroad

Pakistani PM orders cooperation with Interpol against suspects running human trafficking schemes abroad
  • Illegal immigration in spotlight in Pakistan since last month after five Pakistani nationals killed in boat capsize off Greek coast 
  • In 2023, hundreds, including 262 Pakistani nationals, drowned when an overcrowded vessel sank off Greek coast

ISLAMABAD: Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif on Wednesday called on the Federal Investigation Agency (FIA) to work with international police organization Interpol for the extradition of suspects running the “heinous business of human trafficking abroad.”

The issue of illegal immigration has been in the spotlight in the South Asian nation since last month following the death of five Pakistanis when a migrant boat capsized off the southern Greek island of Gavdos. 

The tragedy, which occurred on Dec. 14, underscored the perilous journeys many migrants undertake due to military or political conflicts in their home countries or in search of better financial prospects. 

On Wednesday, Sharif presided over a review meeting to discuss progress on actions taken against human trafficking.

“Prime Minister instructed the FIA ​​to seek cooperation from Interpol for the extradition of the most wanted smugglers running the heinous business of human trafficking abroad,” the PM’s office said in a statement. 

“Ministry of Information and Broadcasting should run an effective awareness campaign about illegal foreign travel and human trafficking.”

Authorities told Sharif dozens of traffickers had been arrested in 2024 and several government officials who were found to be facilitating them had been dismissed and several more were facing disciplinary action.

“Punitive measures are being taken against government officials involved in human trafficking,” the statement added. “Assets worth over Rs 500 million of human traffickers have been seized and the process of confiscating more is underway rapidly … Special prosecutors have been appointed to prosecute human traffickers.”

In 2023, hundreds of migrants, including 262 Pakistanis, drowned when an overcrowded vessel traveling from Libya capsized and sank in international waters off the southwestern Greek coastal town of Pylos.


Pakistani finance minister to attend funeral of Aga Khan IV in Lisbon tomorrow

Pakistani finance minister to attend funeral of Aga Khan IV in Lisbon tomorrow
Updated 42 sec ago
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Pakistani finance minister to attend funeral of Aga Khan IV in Lisbon tomorrow

Pakistani finance minister to attend funeral of Aga Khan IV in Lisbon tomorrow
  • Prince Karim died on Tuesday after nearly seven decades as the spiritual leader of the global Ismaili Muslim community
  • After a funeral ceremony in Lisbon on Saturday, Aga Khan IV will be laid to rest at a private burial ceremony in Aswan, Egypt 

ISLAMABAD: Finance Minister Muhammad Aurangzeb will represent Pakistan at the funeral tomorrow, Saturday, of the late Prince Karim Al-Hussaini Aga Khan IV who died this week after nearly seven decades as the spiritual leader of the global Ismaili Muslim community, state-owned Pakistan Television reported on Friday.

After a funeral ceremony at the Ismaili Center in the Portuguese capital on Saturday — to be attended by leaders of the community, Portuguese government members and foreign dignitaries — Aga Khan IV will be laid to rest at a private burial ceremony in Aswan, Egypt on Sunday, according to the Ismaili Imamat.

Prince Rahim Al-Hussaini was named the 50th hereditary Imam, or spiritual leader, of Ismaili Muslims on Wednesday after the will of his late father was unsealed, the Aga Khan Development Network (AKDN) said.

“Aurangzeb will represent Pakistan during the last rites of Prince Aga Khan, who passed away at the age of 88,” PTV reported. “He will also participate in the prayer congregation for the departed soul in Lisbon.”

The government of Pakistan has announced a day of national mourning on Saturday for the funeral of Aga Khan IV. The national flag will fly at half-mast throughout the country that day.

Known for his wealth and development work around the world through the Aga Khan Development Network, Prince Karim died in Lisbon, the seat of the Ismaili Imamat. As Aga Khan — derived from Turkish and Persian words to mean commanding chief — he is believed by Ismailis to be a direct descendant of Prophet Muhammad (pbuh) through his cousin and son-in-law, Ali, the first Imam, and his wife Fatima, the prophet’s daughter.

The world’s Ismaili community, a branch of Shiite Islam, comprises around 15 million people who live in Central Asia, the Middle East, South Asia, sub-Saharan Africa, Europe and North America.

Set up in 1967, the AKDN group of international development agencies employs 80,000 people helping to build schools and hospitals and providing electricity for millions of people in the poorest parts of Africa and Asia. 

Aga Khan IV also kept up his family’s long tradition of thoroughbred racing and breeding. His stables and riders, wearing his emerald-green silk livery, enjoyed great successes at the top international derbies.

With inputs from Reuters


Pakistan to renegotiate Qatar LNG deal amid high costs — report

Pakistan to renegotiate Qatar LNG deal amid high costs — report
Updated 22 min 10 sec ago
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Pakistan to renegotiate Qatar LNG deal amid high costs — report

Pakistan to renegotiate Qatar LNG deal amid high costs — report
  • Qatar agreement costly, will negotiate better terms next year, petroleum minister tells parliamentary committee 
  • Economic crisis has slashed power use in Pakistan, which gets more than a third of its electricity from natural gas

KARACHI: Pakistan will renegotiate a liquefied natural gas (LNG) supply pact with Qatar, seeking better terms, The News newspaper said on Friday, citing the petroleum minister.

An economic crisis has slashed power use in Pakistan, which gets more than a third of its electricity from natural gas, saddling it with excess capacity it still needs to pay for, under decade-old contracts with independent power producers.

“The Qatar agreement is costly, and we will negotiate better terms next year,” Musadik Malik told a parliamentary committee on energy, the paper added.

Pakistan deferred for a year a deal to buy liquefied natural gas from Qatar and will now receive the contracted LNG cargoes in 2026 instead of 2025, Malik said in December, citing a surplus in LNG.

At the time he said deferring the deal brought no financial penalties, adding that Pakistan deferred five LNG cargoes from Qatar and was negotiating to defer five more with other markets, without disclosing the names of the sellers.

The petroleum ministry did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment


Imran Khan’s party denied permission for Lahore rally, vows massive gathering in northwest 

Imran Khan’s party denied permission for Lahore rally, vows massive gathering in northwest 
Updated 51 min 1 sec ago
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Imran Khan’s party denied permission for Lahore rally, vows massive gathering in northwest 

Imran Khan’s party denied permission for Lahore rally, vows massive gathering in northwest 
  • Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf had sought permission to hold rally at Minar-e-Pakistan monument on Feb. 8
  • PTI has announced Feb. 8 as a day of protest to mark anniversary of general election it says was rigged 

ISLAMABAD: The deputy commissioner’s office in the eastern Pakistani city of Lahore has denied permission to jailed ex-premier Imran Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) to hold a rally tomorrow, Saturday, to mark the one-year anniversary of a general election the party says was rigged.

Khan last month called on his party’s leaders and supporters to mark Feb. 8 as a “Black Day” and hold protests across the country to protest alleged rigging in polls last year. The PTI also sought permission to hold a main gathering on the grounds of the iconic Minar-e-Pakistan monument in Lahore on Saturday. 

The national polls were marred by a countrywide shutdown of cellphone networks and delayed results, leading to widespread allegations of election manipulation by opposition parties like the PTI and the Jamaat-e-Islami (JI) headed by Hafiz Naeem-ur-Rehman. The caretaker government which oversaw the electoral exercise, and the Election Commission of Pakistan (ECP), deny the charges. The US House of Representatives and several European countries have called on Islamabad to open a probe into the allegations, a move that Pakistan has thus far rejected.

In a notification dated Feb. 6, the Lahore deputy commissioner said he would not grant PTI permission to hold a rally at Minar-e-Pakistan due to, among other reasons, security concerns and in view of important events that were scheduled to take place in Lahore in February, including the ICC Champions Trophy, an eight-team cricket tournament that will be first global competition held in Pakistan in 28 years.

“Deputy commissioner Lahore refused to grant permission to PTI to hold jalsa [rally] at Minar-e-Pakistan Lahore on Feb 8, which is otherwise a democratic right of any political party holding a peaceful rally,” the PTI said in a statement sent to media.

Zulfikar Bukahri, a PTI spokesman, said the denial was “not exactly a surprise.”

“There is no freedom of any sort left in Pakistan,” he told Arab News. 

In a separate text message to journalists, the PTI said it would hold a “massive” rally in Swabi in the northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province where the party is in power, calling on supporters from other parts of Pakistan to gather there. 

The party has held multiple rallies at the huge park surrounding the 70-meter tall monument since 2011. Many political parties in Pakistan’s history have used the Minar-e-Pakistan ground to hold protests and power shows. 

Khan’s PTI candidates contested the Feb. 8 elections as independents after the party was barred from the polls. They won the most seats but fell short of the majority needed to form a government, which was made by a smattering of rival political parties led by Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif. The party, as well as the Jamaat-e-Islami and other opposition outfits, have alleged mass rigging in the polls, which authorities deny.

Khan himself has been jailed in a slew of cases since August 2023 which he says are politically motivated to keep him out of office.


FIFA suspends Pakistan Football Federation

FIFA suspends Pakistan Football Federation
Updated 07 February 2025
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FIFA suspends Pakistan Football Federation

FIFA suspends Pakistan Football Federation
  • Recently elected PFF Congress has rejected constitutional amendments proposed by FIFA
  • This is third time since 2017 Pakistan has been suspended by word soccer’s governing body

ISLAMABAD: FIFA on Thursday suspended the Pakistan Football Federation (PFF) “with immediate effect” after the recently elected PFF Congress rejected constitutional amendments proposed by world soccer’s governing body.

PFF has been mired in crisis and controversy since 2015 and this is the third time since 2017 that Pakistan has been suspended.

“The PFF has been suspended with immediate effect due to its failure to adopt a revision of the PFF Constitution that would ensure truly fair and democratic elections and thereby fulfil its obligations as mandated by FIFA as part of the ongoing normalization process of PFF,” FIFA said in a statement.

“The suspension will only be lifted subject to the PFF Congress approving the version of the PFF Constitution presented by FIFA and the AFC [Asian Football Confederation].”

In June 2022, FIFA lifted the suspension of PFF, which had been imposed due to undue third-party interference a year earlier. A group of officials led by Ashfaq Hussain Shah, which was elected by the Supreme Court in 2018 to run the PFF but was not recognized by FIFA, took over the headquarters in March 20121. They had seized control from FIFA’s normalization committee headed by Haroon Malik. The committee had not conducted elections for the body in the 18 months since it took charge.

FIFA suspended the PFF due to the “hostile takeover” but lifted the ban after confirmation the committee had regained full control of the PFF’s premises and was in a position to manage its finances.

Pakistan was also suspended by FIFA for third party interference in 2017.


Pakistan’s progress on structural reform remains key to credit profile — Fitch

Pakistan’s progress on structural reform remains key to credit profile — Fitch
Updated 07 February 2025
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Pakistan’s progress on structural reform remains key to credit profile — Fitch

Pakistan’s progress on structural reform remains key to credit profile — Fitch
  • Rating agency says expects new bilateral capital flows to be increasingly commercial, conditional on reforms
  • Discussions on partial sale of government stake in copper mine to Saudi investor exemplify such commercial flows

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan has continued to make headway restoring economic stability and rebuilding external buffers, global credit rating agency Fitch said this week, but progress on difficult structural reforms would be key to upcoming IMF program reviews and continued financing from other multilateral and bilateral lenders.

In a note released on Thursday, Fitch said the State Bank of Pakistan’s decision to cut policy rates to 12% on Jan. 27 underscored recent progress in taming consumer price inflation, which fell to just over 2% year-on-year in January 2025, down from an average of nearly 24% in the fiscal year ended June 2024 (FY24). Rapid disinflation reflected fading base effects from earlier subsidy reforms and exchange rate stability, underpinned by a tight monetary policy stance, which in turn had subdued domestic demand and external financing needs.

“Economic activity, having absorbed tighter policy settings, is now benefiting from stability and falling interest rates,” Fitch said. “We expect real value added to expand by 3.0% in FY25. Growth in credit to the private sector turned positive in real terms in October 2024 for the first time since June 2022.”

However, the rating agency said it expected new bilateral capital flows to be increasingly commercial, and conditional on reforms. 

“Discussions on the partial sale of the government’s stake in a copper mine to a Saudi investor exemplify such commercial flows. Pakistan and Saudi Arabia also recently agreed on a deferred oil payment facility,” it added. 

Securing sufficient external financing remains a challenge for Pakistan, considering large maturities and lenders’ existing exposures. 

The authorities budgeted for about $6 billion of funding from multilaterals, including the IMF, in FY25, but about $4 billion of this will effectively refinance existing debt. A recently announced $20 billion 10-year framework with the World Bank Group appears broadly in line with this. The group’s current project portfolio is about $17 billion, and its net new yearly lending to Pakistan averaged around $1 billion over the past five years.

Strong remittance inflows, robust agricultural exports and tight policy settings have allowed Pakistan’s current account to move into a surplus of about $1.2 billion (over 0.5% of GDP) in the six months to December 2024, from a similarly sized deficit in FY24, Fitch noted. Foreign exchange market reforms in 2023 also facilitated the shift. 

“When upgrading Pakistan’s rating to ‘CCC+’ in July 2024, we expected a slight widening of the current-account deficit in FY25,” the agency added. 

Foreign reserves are set to outperform targets under Pakistan’s $7 billion IMF Extended Fund Facility (EFF) and Fitch’s earlier forecasts. Gross official reserves reached over $18.3 billion by end-2024, about three months of current external payments, up from around $15.5 billion in June.

Reserves remain low relative to funding needs, however. 

“Over $22 billion of public external debt matures in the whole of FY25. This includes nearly $13 billion in bilateral deposits, which we believe bilateral partners will roll over, as per their promises to the IMF. Saudi Arabia rolled over $3 billion in December, and the UAE $2 billion in January,” Fitch added. 

There has also been progress on fiscal reform, despite some setbacks. The primary fiscal surplus has outperformed IMF targets, although federal tax revenue grew less than required under the IMF’s indicative performance criterion in the first six months of FY25. All provinces have recently legislated higher agricultural income taxes, a key structural condition of the EFF, although delays mean that the program’s January 2025 implementation deadline for the reform was missed.

In July, Fitch noted that positive rating action could be driven by a sustained recovery in reserves and further significant easing of external financing risks, and/or implementation of fiscal consolidation in line with IMF commitments.

Meanwhile, deteriorating external liquidity, for example linked to delays in IMF reviews, could lead to negative action, the rating agency said.