Pakistan president calls for more flights, deeper trade ties with Kyrgyzstan

President Zardari shakes hands with Kyrgyz President Sadyr Japarov upon arrival at Issyk-Kul International Airport in Kyrgyzstan on July 6. (PressofPakistan/X)
President Zardari shakes hands with Kyrgyz President Sadyr Japarov upon arrival at Issyk-Kul International Airport in Kyrgyzstan on July 6. (PressofPakistan/X)
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Updated 07 July 2026 13:52
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Pakistan president calls for more flights, deeper trade ties with Kyrgyzstan

Pakistan president calls for more flights, deeper trade ties with Kyrgyzstan
  • Asif Ali Zardari says Pakistan can supply commodities to Kyrgyzstan at favorable rates
  • Visit comes as Islamabad seeks stronger connectivity and trade links with Central Asia

ISLAMABAD: President Asif Ali Zardari on Tuesday called for increased direct flights and deeper trade ties with Kyrgyzstan, saying the two countries should expand cooperation in commerce, industry and technology as Pakistan seeks to strengthen its economic links with Central Asia.

Zardari made the remarks after a meeting with Kyrgyz President Sadyr Zhaparov on the second day of his four-day state visit to the Central Asian country, the first by a Pakistani president in 21 years.

The visit comes as Islamabad looks to expand regional connectivity and diversify trade routes through Central Asia while deepening cooperation in sectors including energy, investment and transport.

“We need to have more relationship, more flights coming from Pakistan to Kyrgyzstan and Kyrgyzstan to Pakistan,” Zardari told a gathering of officials from both countries.

He maintained the two countries should build closer economic ties, adding that Pakistan was prepared to supply goods to Kyrgyzstan on favorable terms while exploring broader industrial cooperation.

“Most commodities Pakistan has ... we would like to supply them to you at a reasonable rate rather than the world rate,” he said.

“And we want to get into other dimensions of industries,” he continued. “We would like to go into all sorts of work where we can work together, we can research together.”

Pakistan has been seeking closer economic integration with the Central Asian republics through improved transport links, trade and energy cooperation.

A key regional project is the CASA-1000 electricity transmission initiative, designed to export surplus summer hydropower from Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan to Pakistan via Afghanistan, though implementation has been delayed by instability in Afghanistan.

Zardari also congratulated Kyrgyzstan on its election as a non-permanent member of the United Nations Security Council for the 2027-28 term and said Pakistan looked forward to working closely with Bishkek to enhance multilateral cooperation.

“Pakistan looks forward to working together with the Kyrgyz Republic in the matter of international peace,” he said.