UAE aviation team reviews security measures at Islamabad airport

UAE aviation team reviews security measures at Islamabad airport
In this photograph taken on April 26, 2018, Pakistani airport staff walk through security at the new Islamabad International Airport ahead of its official opening on the outskirts of Islamabad. (AFP/File)
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Updated 26 June 2024
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UAE aviation team reviews security measures at Islamabad airport

UAE aviation team reviews security measures at Islamabad airport
  • Emirati team assesses security measures at Islamabad airport for UAE-bound flights
  • UAE civil aviation team to provide Islamabad airport’s assessment on Thursday

ISLAMABAD: A team of the UAE’s General Civil Aviation Authority (GCAA) reviewed security measures for Emirates-bound flights at the Islamabad International Airport on Wednesday, Pakistan’s civil aviation authority said. 

The UAE aviation team arrived in Islamabad on Tuesday for a three-day visit to carry out the assessment. The Pakistan Civil Aviation Authority (PCAA) said the team also reviewed security measures for Etihad Airways flights at the airport and visited the Cargo Complex at the airport. 

The PCAA said Air Commodore (retired) Shahid Qadir, the director of aviation security, briefed the UAE team about the airport’s security measures. 

“The Emirati team is reviewing aviation security measures being provided at the Islamabad airport for UAE-bound flights,” the PCAA said. 

“The Emirati team will provide its assessment regarding the airport tomorrow [Thursday[.”

According to the Pakistani English-language newspaper Dawn, the assessment is a continuation of collaborative efforts between GCAA-UAE and PCAA to enhance aviation security standards in Pakistan. 

The UAE-GCAA team’s visit also includes an aviation security assessment of Karachi’s Jinnah International Airport from July 2-5, the newspaper said. 


Pakistan deputy PM to attend today OIC’s extraordinary meeting on Palestine

Pakistan deputy PM to attend today OIC’s extraordinary meeting on Palestine
Updated 7 sec ago
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Pakistan deputy PM to attend today OIC’s extraordinary meeting on Palestine

Pakistan deputy PM to attend today OIC’s extraordinary meeting on Palestine
  • Shortly after assuming office, US President Trump had announced a plan to permanently uproot more than 2 million Palestinian people from Gaza
  • The OIC says its meeting underscores firm rejection of displacement policies, reaffirming the Palestinian cause remains central to the Muslim world

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s deputy prime minister and foreign minister, Ishaq Dar, will be attending an extraordinary meeting of the Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) today, Friday, to discuss the situation in Palestine, according to the Pakistani foreign office.
US President Donald Trump announced a plan to permanently uproot more than 2 million Palestinians from Gaza after assuming office, saying his country would turn the area into an international beach resort.
The plan was widely denounced by majority-Muslim nations and global rights organizations as the US president suggested that the Palestinian population could relocate to neighboring Egypt and Jordan.
Dar will discuss the deteriorating situation in Palestine, the ensuing humanitarian crisis, and the “illegal and immoral” proposals for the displacement of Palestinians at the OIC meeting in Jeddah, according to Pakistan’s foreign office.
“The DPM/FM will reaffirm Pakistan’s unwavering support for the Palestinian people and their just cause,” the foreign office said on X.
In a post on X, the OIC said the meeting underscores the firm rejection of policies of displacement, annexation, aggression and destruction, while reaffirming that the Palestinian cause remains the central issue of the Islamic world.
The meeting comes days after Arab leaders adopted an Egyptian reconstruction plan for Gaza worth $53 billion, which seeks to avoid Palestinian displacement in contrast to Trump’s “Middle East Riviera” vision.
Egyptian President Abdel Fattah El-Sisi said on Tuesday Egypt, in cooperation with Palestinians, had worked on creating an administrative committee of independent, professional Palestinian technocrats to govern Gaza after the Israel-Gaza war ends.
Pakistan Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif welcomed the Arab League’s approval of the Egyptian plan, urging the United Nations to ensure the implementation of its resolutions calling for a two-state solution in the Middle East.
Islamabad does not recognize nor have diplomatic relations with Israel and calls for an independent Palestinian state based on “internationally agreed parameters.”
Pakistani state media reported that Dar would advocate for Israel’s full withdrawal from all occupied territories, including Jerusalem, at the OIC meeting.


POLL: Pakistan eyes seventh straight rate cut amid decade low inflation, IMF review

POLL: Pakistan eyes seventh straight rate cut amid decade low inflation, IMF review
Updated 34 min 58 sec ago
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POLL: Pakistan eyes seventh straight rate cut amid decade low inflation, IMF review

POLL: Pakistan eyes seventh straight rate cut amid decade low inflation, IMF review
  • Pakistan follows a six-month series of rate cuts, which brought the key rate down from a record high of 22 percent in June to 12 percent in January
  • As Pakistan undergoes economic reforms mandated under the IMF program, it stands to secure additional funding from the global lender

KARACHI: Most analysts predict a seventh consecutive rate cut by Pakistan’s central bank on Monday, amid the country’s first International Monetary Fund (IMF) review for its $7 billion bailout and near-decade low inflation.
Pakistan’s central bank’s current easing cycle, one of the most aggressive among emerging markets, follows a six-month series of rate cuts totalling 1000 basis points (bps), which brought the key rate down from a record high of 22 percent in June to 12 percent, with the latest 100 bps cut in January.
As Pakistan undergoes economic reforms mandated by the IMF program, it stands to secure additional funding from the global lender, pending the ongoing review.
The cash-strapped South Asian nation could unlock a tranche of funding if the ongoing review is approved, ahead of its annual budget presentation looming in June.
Inflation for the month of February clocked in at a near decade low of 1.5 percent, largely due to a high base a year-ago.
A Reuters survey of 14 analysts suggests that the central bank may further reduce rates, with a median forecast of a 50 bps cut.
Of the 10 analysts who expect a rate cut: three anticipate a 100 bps cut, one a 75 bps cut, and six a 50 bps cut. The remaining four analysts predict no change.
Most analysts predicting a rate cut believe the central bank will stop reductions when rates hit 10.5-11 percent, due to a potential inflation rise and anticipate a moderate rise in inflation from March to May.
Ahmad Mobeen, senior economist of S&P Global predicts inflation will “bottom out” in Q1, then gradually rise.
He anticipates a 6.1 percent average inflation for 2025. Despite the “sharp drop” in the Consumer Price Index (CPI), he notes that urban core inflation, indicative of ongoing price pressures, remains high at 7.8 percent.
“The S&P Global HBL Pakistan Manufacturing PMI also indicates rising input costs, pushing manufacturers to hike prices in February 2025 at the fastest pace since October 2024,” he said.
In the last policy meeting, the bank maintained its forecast of full-year GDP growth at 2.5 percent-3.5 percent and predicted faster growth would help boost the country’s previously struggling foreign exchange reserves.
“While GDP posted 0.9 percent growth in 1QFY25, large-scale manufacturing remains in negative territory, and production has yet to gain momentum. The transmission of lower rates to economic activity is yet to be seen,” said Sana Tawfik, head of research at Arif Habib Limited.
She added that the target is only possible if industrial activity picks up and agricultural output improves.


Pakistan power regulator cuts tariff on account of fuel price adjustment

Pakistan power regulator cuts tariff on account of fuel price adjustment
Updated 39 min 44 sec ago
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Pakistan power regulator cuts tariff on account of fuel price adjustment

Pakistan power regulator cuts tariff on account of fuel price adjustment
  • The National Electric Power Regulatory Authority makes adjustments in power tariff on account of any variations in fuel charges on a monthly basis
  • The South Asian country produces electricity with the help of imported fossil fuels, amid underutilization of domestic resources like hydropower, coal

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s national power regulator has cut the prices of electricity by Rs2.12 per unit on account of fuel adjustment charges, it said on Thursday.
The National Electric Power Regulatory Authority (NEPRA) has to make adjustments in the power tariff on account of any variations in fuel charges on a monthly basis.
The reduction in electricity prices followed a request by the Central Power Purchasing Agency (CPPA), which had worked out the fuel cost for the month of January.
“The authority... has reviewed and assessed a National Average Uniform decrease of (Rs2.1240/kWh) in the applicable tariff for XWDISCOs on account of variations in the fuel charges for January 2025,” NEPRA said in a notification issued late Thursday.
“XWDISCOs (distribution companies) shall reflect the fuel charges adjustment in respect of January 2025 in the billing month of March 2025.”
The development comes more than a week after Pakistan’s Power Minister Awais Leghari announced a reduction in power tariff for households consuming up to 300 units of electricity and those using agricultural tube-wells.
“By waiving these charges for low-usage consumers and agricultural tube-wells, the government aims to ease the financial burden on farmers and households with limited electricity consumption,” Leghari was quoted as saying by the state-run APP news agency.
Pakistan produces expensive electricity due to a combination of factors including high reliance on imported fossil fuels, inefficient energy mix, substantial transmission and distribution losses and chronic issues like circular debt and regulatory inefficiencies.
The country’s outdated infrastructure and inadequate power plants further exacerbate costs, while underutilization of domestic resources such as hydropower and coal add to the problem.
Additionally, fluctuations in foreign exchange rates and complex tariff structures contribute to higher electricity prices. High power cost is one of the key factors that lead to inflation in the country.


Daesh militant’s arrest sign of continuing Pakistan-US counterterror cooperation— analysts

Daesh militant’s arrest sign of continuing Pakistan-US counterterror cooperation— analysts
Updated 07 March 2025
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Daesh militant’s arrest sign of continuing Pakistan-US counterterror cooperation— analysts

Daesh militant’s arrest sign of continuing Pakistan-US counterterror cooperation— analysts
  • US President Donald Trump this week publicly thanked Pakistan for aiding in senior Daesh operative’s arrest
  • Security analysts say development shows counterterrorism cooperation between Pakistan and US never ceased to exist

KARACHI: The recent arrest of a senior Daesh militant via joint collaboration by Washington and Islamabad is not a “historical shift” in bilateral ties between Washington and Islamabad, but a sign of continuing counterterrorism cooperation between the two states, Pakistani security analysts said on Thursday. 
US President Donald Trump on Tuesday publicly thanked Pakistan for helping in the arrest of Mohammad Sharifullah, a Daesh operative implicated in a deadly 2021 Kabul airport bombing that killed at least 170 Afghans and 13 US troops. 
Pakistan’s prime minister appreciated Trump’s support, confirming that Pakistani security forces arrested the militant in the border region with Afghanistan. On Wednesday, US National Security Adviser Michael Waltz called Pakistan’s Deputy Prime Minister Ishaq Dar to discuss counterterrorism cooperation between the two countries. 
Ties between the US and Pakistan, once close allies following the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks in New York, have remained strained over the past few years. American officials have regarded with suspicion Pakistan’s role in the Afghan Taliban’s return to power in Afghanistan, despite Islamabad’s denial it did not shelter and aid their fighters. 
“The intelligence cooperation between both the United States and Pakistan never stopped,” Qamar Cheema, an expert on strategic and political affairs, told Arab News. “It was only the Americans who stopped looking at the region from a new lens.”
He said with the new Trump administration in place, Washington once again wanted to “work with Pakistan” on security and counterterrorism, adding that the US was once again interested in Afghanistan and transnational terror outfits. 
“So, there is a mutual dependence obviously and this mutual dependence will continue,” Cheema noted. 
Fizza Batool, an international relations expert, agreed. She cautioned against viewing Sharifullah’s arrest as a “renewed” partnership, describing it instead as a continuation of America’s Afghanistan-centered relationship with Pakistan. 
“The latest development aligns with this pattern, representing a continuation of the strategic partnership rather than a fundamental shift in bilateral relations,” she told Arab News. 
’BOOTS ON THE GROUND’
Dr. Asma Shakir Khawaja, a defense and strategic studies expert, noted Pakistan’s importance as a country with “boots on the ground” close to Afghanistan. She said the recent arrest highlighted how technological advancement alone cannot defeat a transborder menace such as “terrorism.”
“And this arrest indicates upon the fact that any technological advancement cannot undermine the importance of ‘boots on the ground,’” she said. “A combination of both will lead to success.”
A Washington-based analyst who spoke on the condition of anonymity, however, described Trump’s move to express gratitude for Pakistan as a “significant” development.
“Donald Trump does not give compliments easily, but when he feels it from the heart, he expresses his gratitude,” the analyst said. “Therefore, it will positively impact his relations with Pakistan.”
He said strategically Pakistan-US ties were likely to remain “unchanged” as Islamabad was a close ally of Beijing while Washington was allied with both Islamabad and its arch-rival New Delhi. 
“In any case, engagement with Donald Trump has begun, whereas relations of Pakistan with the previous administration could not have developed,” the analyst said.


In tense relations with India, Pakistani TV dramas break down barriers diplomacy often cannot

In tense relations with India, Pakistani TV dramas break down barriers diplomacy often cannot
Updated 06 March 2025
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In tense relations with India, Pakistani TV dramas break down barriers diplomacy often cannot

In tense relations with India, Pakistani TV dramas break down barriers diplomacy often cannot
  • Pakistani dramas offer millions of Indians a glimpse into life across border into arch-rival country 
  • Pakistani dramas offer simplicity, depth of writing and limited episodes, says actor Khalid Anam

KARACHI: Two Pakistani women sit together on a couch, rehearsing their lines while a director scrutinizes them. Waiting off camera for his scene is the male lead, an actor blessed with “Bachelor” hair and fine bone structure.

Also out of sight: the Islamabad homeowners, who are holed up in a separate room and whose furniture and knick-knacks will be seen by millions of viewers — many from the society that has been their country’s neighbor and uneasy sparring partner for much of the past century.

This is the set of the Pakistani drama “Adhi Bewafai,” or “Half Infidelity” — one of what some in other nations would call “soap operas.” But these dramas, it turns out, are not just for Pakistanis.

Realistic settings, natural dialogue and almost workaday plots about families and marriages make Pakistani dramas a hit with viewers at home and abroad — especially in the neighboring country that split with Pakistan in 1947 and is its nuclear archrival today: India.

Television, it seems, is succeeding where diplomacy sometimes can’t.

Several thousand people work in Pakistan’s drama industry; the country produces between 80 to 120 shows a year, each one a source of escapism and intrigue. They offer Indians a tantalizing glimpse into life across the border — and manage to break through decades of enmity between the two governments.

Maheen Shafeeq, a research associate at the Institute of Strategic Studies in Islamabad, says there is effectively no relationship between the two governments.

Each government is fixed on a single issue it cannot move past — for India, it’s “terrorism” for Pakistan, the disputed territory of Jammu and Kashmir. 

“The governments are very much opposed to each other,” she says. “They don’t agree what they should talk about.”

Although it’s difficult for Indians to visit Pakistan, where these shows are filmed, they faithfully follow the plot twists and turns through platforms like YouTube, ZEE5, and MX Player.

For those of a certain generation, however, it wasn’t always so easy to keep up.

Kaveri Sharma, a writer in the Indian city of Patna, recalls her mother-in-law and aunt jiggling antennas in the 1980s and 1990s in hopes of catching a signal from Pakistan’s state broadcaster, PTV. 

It’s how Sharma first realized that the country next door was a drama powerhouse. It inspired her to discover the shows for herself years later, even going on to watch them with her own daughter.

“They feel familiar, but they are also a break from our own lives,” Sharma says. “I don’t see any differences between the two countries. Everything is relatable. I see Karachi and think that it could be Lucknow or Patna. What happens on the shows could happen to me or my friends.”

She had heard only negative things about Pakistan since childhood — that it was the enemy that would take everything from India. The TV dramas have added subtlety and detail to this image for her. She would love to visit, but is unlikely to get the opportunity.

 So she explores Pakistan through the locations, malls, offices, streets and restaurants depicted on the small screen. The names of popular Karachi neighborhoods roll off her tongue.

Sharma, like Bibi Hafeez in the southern Indian city of Hyderabad and Punita Kumar in the central Indian city of Raipur, raves about the dramas’ universality of themes, the strong characterization and the emotional range.

“Pakistani characters are not only heroes or villains. They have shades to them, and that is very human,” says Kumar, who chanced upon a Pakistani drama through a chunky videocassette when she was a teenager living in the northern Indian city of Aligarh. It was love at first watch.

“They captivated me. We got a cable connection that offered PTV. Then YouTube came and I realized I could search for whatever drama I wanted. I haven’t taken a stop,” she said. “We get exposure to Pakistani life in the scenes, but the struggles the characters have with their relatives are ones I would have with my own.”

Pakistani TV veteran Khaled Anam is delighted by Indians’ enthusiasm for the country’s serials and the barriers they help erode.

“What Bollywood is to India, dramas are to Pakistan,” says Anam, who is based in Karachi and has worked as an actor since the 1980s. He has appeared in many dramas, including the ratings smash “Humsafar” (“Life Partner”).
India’s productions go big, while Pakistan’s are more low key

India dominates the movie market in South Asia and beyond, with big stars and bigger budgets. Pakistanis have been exposed to Bollywood films for decades, although the prevailing hostile political climate means they can’t watch them in movie theaters. 

The bans are mutual, though. India, like Pakistan, restricts content from across the border in movie theaters and TV channels.

And while India is no slouch when it comes to TV production, it doesn’t offer viewers what Pakistan does, according to Anam: simplicity, depth of writing and a limited number of episodes.

“There are 15-minute flashbacks in Indian serials. (The characters) are decked out and dolled up. It’s a fantasy world. The shows go on forever. Everything is ‘DUN dun dun!’” says Anam, mimicking a dramatic musical riff and shaking his hands.

The actors on the couch in Islamabad are rehearsing lines about a woman who is disrespectful and so, according to one of them, is an unsuitable marriage prospect.

 The delivery and grammar could be heard in virtually any South Asian household.

“Pakistanis are generally emotional people, and that is in their dramas also,” says Islamabad-based director Saife Hassan. “It would take me less than two minutes to explain the plot of the super-duper hit ‘Kabhi Main, Kabhi Tum’ (‘Sometimes Me, Sometimes You’). It’s about the emotions between a husband and wife.”

Hassan, who began his TV career in the 1990s, says Indians frequently comment on his social media pages and send him direct messages about his work. He even recalls Indian viewers praying for the recovery of a character who was in a coma.

Hassan would love to see more homegrown dramas make it onto platforms like Netflix, as some Indian shows have with great success. But he wonders whether international audiences would understand and connect with Pakistani stories or lives: 

“The way we think is different from the West. Our shows are not driven by events. They are driven by emotions.”

There is also a lack of raunch in Pakistani dramas, which are family-friendly with little to no vulgarity, violence, or even action. Indians, therefore, are a natural audience for Pakistani dramas, Hassan says.

“They are our people. They are like us. They eat like us,” he says. “I love India, and I love Indians. They have grown out of this animosity.”