Pakistan to host Saudi performers for the first time at World Culture Festival in Karachi

Pakistan to host Saudi performers for the first time at World Culture Festival in Karachi
Artists take part in a satirical sci-fi theatre performance "V-Gen - Error 404: Not Found" by a Pakistani director Bazelah Mustafa, at the World Culture Festival in Karachi, Pakistan October 3, 2024. (Reuters/File)
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Updated 15 October 2025
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Pakistan to host Saudi performers for the first time at World Culture Festival in Karachi

Pakistan to host Saudi performers for the first time at World Culture Festival in Karachi
  • ‘Biggest festival in the world’ to run from Oct. 31 to Dec. 7, featuring artists from 141 countries
  • Israeli filmmakers also approached the Arts Council of Pakistan to participate in the festival

KARACHI: Cultural groups from Saudi Arabia will participate for the first time in the World Culture Festival hosted by Pakistan from Oct. 31 to Dec. 7, the president of the Arts Council of Pakistan said on Wednesday, adding that it would be “the biggest festival in the world.”

The event, which will be held in Karachi, will host performers from 141 countries, including 37 from Africa, 41 from Asia, 36 from Europe, 13 from North America, 11 from South America and three from Oceania.

The seven-week festival will feature 45 theater productions, 60 music performances, 25 dance shows, six exhibitions, 25 workshops and 15 talks, with 25 international and 30 national artists taking part.

“This year, cultural groups from across the Middle East are participating in the World Culture Festival,” the council’s president, Muhammad Ahmed Shah, told Arab News. “We are grateful to Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman for his remarkable efforts in promoting art and culture in Saudi Arabia.”

“In the future, we look forward to strengthening cultural collaboration with the Kingdom,” he added.

Shah said during a news conference that the festival aimed to promote peace and intercultural understanding, noting that artists from conflict-affected regions will also be represented.

“When people from around the world come here, they will see how peaceful we are,” he said.

Highlighting the response the festival has received, he said that the council had received more than 2,800 films, adding that this is a number unmatched by any other festival in the world.

Shah mentioned that the council was even approached by filmmakers in India and Israel.

Pakistan has tense relations with India after an intense, four-day military conflict between the two South Asian nuclear-armed neighbors.

Pakistan also does not recognize Israel and has always called for an independent state of Palestine with pre-1967 borders and East Jerusalem as its capital.

Shah also praised the Sindh administration for supporting the event, saying the festival will feature Pakistani films alongside international entries.


Pakistan government widens coalition consultations on sweeping 27th constitutional amendment

Pakistan government widens coalition consultations on sweeping 27th constitutional amendment
Updated 11 sec ago
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Pakistan government widens coalition consultations on sweeping 27th constitutional amendment

Pakistan government widens coalition consultations on sweeping 27th constitutional amendment
  • Amendment could reshape judicial authority and provincial revenue arrangements
  • PPP and MQM reviewing proposals as government seeks two-thirds parliament support

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s government has expanded consultations with coalition partners on the proposed 27th constitutional amendment, the prime minister’s office said on Thursday, as political negotiations intensify ahead of the bill’s expected introduction in parliament.

The amendment is under discussion with key parties in the governing alliance, including the Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP), the Muttahida Qaumi Movement (MQM) and the Pakistan Muslim League-Quaid (PML-Q), in a bid to secure the two-thirds parliamentary majority required for constitutional changes.

According to political leaders privy to the issue, the amendment proposes creating a new constitutional court, restoring executive magistrates, revising the distribution of federal revenue among provinces and making changes to how senior judges and military leadership appointments are structured within the constitution.

Prime Minister Muhammad Shehbaz Sharif’s office said in a statement on Thursday the premier met a four-member delegation of the PML-Q led by Federal Minister for Overseas Pakistanis Chaudhry Salik Hussain.

“The proposed 27th constitutional amendment was discussed and consultations were held in the meeting,” the statement said. 

A delegation from the PML-Q, led by Federal Minister for Overseas Pakistanis and Human Resource Development Chaudhry Salik Hussain, called on Prime Minister Muhammad Shehbaz Sharif in Islamabad on November 6, 2025. (Government of Pakistan)

In a post on X earlier this week, PPP Chairman Bilawal Bhutto-Zardari said the government had also asked his party to support the amendment.

“Proposal includes setting up constitutional court, executive magistrates, transfer of judges, removal of protection of provincial share in NFC, amending Article 243, return of education and population planning to the federation and breaking deadlock on appointment of ECP,” Bhutto-Zardari wrote.

The National Finance Commission (NFC) award determines how federal tax revenue is distributed among Pakistan’s provinces and is considered a core pillar of the country’s federal structure. Executive magistrates previously granted local officials limited judicial powers over minor offenses — a system abolished in 2001 in reforms aimed at separating the judiciary and executive authority.

Article 243 of Pakistan’s constitution defines the command and control of the armed forces and outlines how the military leadership is appointed on the advice of the prime minister. The reference to resolving the “deadlock” in appointing members of the Election Commission of Pakistan (ECP) relates to ongoing disputes over the mechanism for nominating and approving the country’s top electoral officials.

Constitutional amendments in Pakistan have historically been used to reshape the balance of power between the legislature, judiciary and provinces. The proposed 27th amendment follows the 26th amendment passed in October 2024, which gave parliament a role in appointing the chief justice and created a new panel of senior judges to hear constitutional cases — measures critics said weakened judicial independence.

Pakistan’s constitution, adopted in 1973, has been amended more than two dozen times, often reflecting shifts in authority among civilian governments and the military. Provisions governing the NFC award are among the most politically sensitive because they underpin the country’s federal structure and provincial autonomy.

Legal analysts say the amendment could become one of Pakistan’s most consequential constitutional revisions in decades, potentially reshaping judicial oversight, the command structure of the armed forces and the financial autonomy of provinces.

The government has not yet announced when exactly the amendment will be formally tabled in parliament.

Former prime minister Imran Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party, the largest opposition party in the country, has pledged to oppose the amendment and has called for the full draft text to be made public.