Saudi business delegation holds talks in Islamabad as PM hails Riyadh’s ‘unwavering’ support

Saudi business delegation holds talks in Islamabad as PM hails Riyadh’s ‘unwavering’ support
Pakistan Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif (center) addressing at a luncheon in honor of the Saudi business delegation, in Islamabad on October 8, 2025. (PID)
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Updated 08 October 2025
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Saudi business delegation holds talks in Islamabad as PM hails Riyadh’s ‘unwavering’ support

Saudi business delegation holds talks in Islamabad as PM hails Riyadh’s ‘unwavering’ support
  •  Prime minister hosts Saudi delegation as Saudi-Pakistan Joint Business Council meets in Islamabad
  • Sharif says new defense pact formalizes decades of brotherly cooperation between the two nations

ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif on Wednesday hosted a Saudi business delegation led by Prince Mansour bin Mohammed bin Saad Al Saud, chairman of the Saudi-Pakistan Joint Business Council, as both sides held talks in Islamabad to expand trade and investment ties.

The delegation’s visit under the framework of the Saudi-Pakistan Joint Business Council will guide expanded economic cooperation and follows the Strategic Mutual Defense Agreement signed between the two countries on Sept. 17.

Speaking at a luncheon in honor of the delegation, Sharif praised Saudi Arabia’s “unwavering and eternal” support for Pakistan, saying the recently signed defense pact had formalized decades of strategic partnership between the two nations and opened the door to deeper economic collaboration.

“And the agreement which we have signed, it’s basically a formalization of our brotherly arrangements which were there in an informal fashion for decades and that has been formalized and I think since we are brothers and brothers has always come to help brothers and that is what this agreement all about,” Sharif said.

The prime minister described his recent visit to Riyadh on last month as “exceptional,” saying it reflected a “new level of warmth” from Saudi Crown Prince and Prime Minister Mohammed bin Salman, whose leadership, he said, had transformed the Kingdom’s society and economy.

Sharif said both sides were now ready to translate the defense pact’s spirit of cooperation into joint ventures across trade, agriculture, food security, construction, and research, pledging to personally work with Saudi leaders and investors to deliver results.

The Saudi delegation, comprising prominent business figures, was in Islamabad to follow up on investment and trade opportunities identified during Sharif’s visit to Riyadh last month. Prince Mansour told participants that Saudi Arabia’s government and private sector were keen to invest in Pakistan’s food security, agriculture, meat processing, construction, and pharmaceutical industries.

“We have lots of interest from our government and from our leadership and also for the private sector to be invested in Pakistan,” Prince Mansour said, adding that the visit aimed to “deliver on strategic projects” under the business council’s framework.

The meeting is part of a broader diplomatic and economic reset between Islamabad and Riyadh, which have in recent months expanded cooperation across defense, investment, and labor mobility, as Pakistan seeks to strengthen ties with its largest source of remittances and one of its closest regional allies. 


Pakistan’s Rauf given two-match ban, others sanctioned for Asia Cup behavior

Pakistan’s Rauf given two-match ban, others sanctioned for Asia Cup behavior
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Pakistan’s Rauf given two-match ban, others sanctioned for Asia Cup behavior

Pakistan’s Rauf given two-match ban, others sanctioned for Asia Cup behavior
  • Others whohave been sanctioned include India’s Suryakumar Yadav and Jasprit Bumrah as well as Pakistan’s Sahibzada Farhan
  • Emotions ran high around the matches between the nuclear-armed neighbors, who engaged in a brief military conflict in May

Pakistan fast bowler Haris Rauf has received a two-match suspension for breaching the ICC’s code of conduct during matches against India at the Asia Cup in September, the governing body said on Tuesday.

India’s Suryakumar Yadav and Jasprit Bumrah as well as Pakistan’s Sahibzada Farhan also committed the same offense of breaching article 2.21 of the ICC’s code of conduct, which relates to “conduct that brings the game into disrepute,” the ICC said in a statement.

Emotions ran high around the matches between the nuclear-armed neighbors, who engaged in a brief military conflict in May.

The teams faced each other three times in the eight-team tournament with India prevailing on all three occasions. Defending champions India refused to shake hands with Pakistani players during the matches.

The ICC, cricket’s governing body, did not state the specific nature of the offenses in its statement on Tuesday.

ESPNCricinfo reported in September that Rauf had made numerous gestures to indicate aircraft going down, while Farhan celebrated by holding his bat like a gun.

India captain Yadav made a remark dedicating their win over Pakistan on September 14 to the Indian armed forces, prompting the Pakistan Cricket Board to file a complaint against him to the ICC. Cricinfo reported on Tuesday that Bumrah was cited for a gesture he made during the final.

India, who won the final on September 28, refused to accept the trophy from Asian Cricket Council president and Pakistan’s interior minister Mohsin Naqvi.

Rauf, who received four demerit points for two offenses, misses Pakistan’s One-Day International (ODI) matches against South Africa on Tuesday and Thursday. He was also fined 30 percent of his match fees in two games.

Yadav was also fined 30 percent of his match fees in one match. Bumrah and Farhan were given official warnings.