Ƶ

IMF says Pakistan can cut power tariff by one rupee per unit to benefit ‘all consumers’

IMF says Pakistan can cut power tariff by one rupee per unit to benefit ‘all consumers’
A power transmission tower is seen a day after a country-wide power breakdown in Karachi, Pakistan on January 24, 2023. (Reuters/File)
Short Url
Updated 28 March 2025

IMF says Pakistan can cut power tariff by one rupee per unit to benefit ‘all consumers’

IMF says Pakistan can cut power tariff by one rupee per unit to benefit ‘all consumers’
  • IMF’s resident Pakistan representative, Mahir Binici, confirms power tariff reduction to Arab News
  • Binici said authorities can use revenues from captive power plants to cut prices by Rs1 per kilowatt

KARACHI: The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has allowed Pakistan to slash power tariffs by one rupee per kilowatt to provide relief to inflation-hit consumers, the IMF’s resident representative in Pakistan confirmed to Arab News on Friday.

Pakistan can bring down the prices of electricity by using revenue from a Rs791 per unit grid levy the government recently imposed on the usage of gas by captive power plants for in-house power generation, Mahir Binici, the IMF’s resident representative, said. Captive power plants, also known as autoproducers or embedded generation, are electricity generation facilities owned and operated by an industrial or commercial entity solely for their own energy consumption, providing a localized power source.

“The price reduction would benefit all consumers,” Binici said.

Analysts see a modest impact of the one rupee relief over the promised Rs8 per unit cut.

“The benefit is modest, around Rs 200 per month, for the average domestic consumer,” said Muhammad Waqas Ghani, head of research at JS Global Capital Ltd. from Karachi.

Financing the cut through a levy on captive power plants would naturally provide a short-term relief, he said.

“For the government to provide any meaningful relief, it would have to work to address the underlying structural issues in Pakistan’s energy sector,” Ghani said.

The confirmation of the power tariff reduction comes days after IMF staff reached a deal with Pakistan for a new $1.3 billion arrangement and also agreed on the first review of the ongoing 37-month bailout program, the IMF said on Tuesday. Pending board approval, Pakistan can unlock the $1.3 billion under a new climate resilience loan program spanning 28 months. It will also free $1 billion for the South Asian nation under its ongoing $7 billion bailout program, which would bring those disbursements to $2 billion.

The IMF’s board of governors will meet in May and approve its next tranche for Pakistan, Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif’s office said in a statement on Thursday.

The IMF’s nod for a reduction in Pakistan’s power tariffs is just one component of a larger package Sharif will be announcing after Eid, Zafar Yab Khan, a spokesperson at Pakistan’s power division, told Arab News.

“This should not be misunderstood as the only relief that is being considered by the government,” Khan said.

Under a special relief package, Sharif was expected to announce a reduction in the prices of electricity by as much as Rs8 per unit to provide some relief to Pakistanis who have had to face inflated energy and food prices in the last two years. Pakistan’s inflation peaked at 38% in May 2023 before gradually easing to 1.5% in February this year, the lowest in nearly a decade. The government expects it to remain within 1–3% in the coming months.

The debt-ridden country had to make its electricity costly by withdrawing fuel subsidies and increasing energy prices in compliance with conditions set by the IMF under a $3 billion loan that averted a sovereign debt default in 2023 but fueled record-high inflation and triggered protests in many parts of the country.


Pakistan denies UN accusation of detaining Afghan refugees early, violating Sept. 1 deportation agreement

Pakistan denies UN accusation of detaining Afghan refugees early, violating Sept. 1 deportation agreement
Updated 06 August 2025

Pakistan denies UN accusation of detaining Afghan refugees early, violating Sept. 1 deportation agreement

Pakistan denies UN accusation of detaining Afghan refugees early, violating Sept. 1 deportation agreement
  • UNHCR says hundreds of Afghan PoR cardholders arrested from Aug. 1-5 in various parts of Pakistan before Sept. 1 expulsion deadline
  • Pakistan interior ministry official says action will be taken against PoR cardholders from Sept. 1 after their deadline to stay passes

ISLAMABAD: A Pakistani interior ministry official on Wednesday refuted claims by the United Nations Refugee Agency (UNHCR), which said authorities were arresting hundreds of Afghan Proof of Registration (PoR) cardholders and forcing them to leave the country despite agreeing to extend their stay till Sept. 1. 

More than 1.3 million Afghans in Pakistan hold PoR documentation, while 750,000 more have another form of registration known as an Afghan Citizen Card. PoR cards were issued by Pakistan to Afghans who were registered in collaboration with the UNHCR, recognizing them as a legal refugees in Pakistan.

Many Afghans have been settled in Pakistan since the 1980s to escape cycles of war in Afghanistan. However, Pakistan’s government started a repatriation drive in 2023 to expel all those residing in the country illegally, mostly Afghans, after a spate of suicide attacks in the country that Islamabad blamed on Afghan nationals without proof. 

The government agreed to extend the deadline for PoR cardholders to stay till Sept. 1. However, UNHCR Pakistan spokesperson Qaisar Khan Afridi told Arab News hundreds of PoR cardholders in Punjab, Balochistan and Islamabad were arrested from Aug. 1-5. He said dozens were still being held while many have been asked to leave by Aug. 20. 

“No arrest of PoR cardholders so far [has taken place] while action against Afghan Citizen Card [holders] and other illegal Afghans is underway,” Qadir Yar Tiwana, director of media at the interior ministry, told Arab News.

He said authorities will start taking action against PoR cardholders in the country from Sept. 1, when the deadline for their legal stay passes.

“Their [PoR cardholders] extension expired on Jun. 30, while they have been given time till Aug. 31 for voluntary return,” the official said. “Action will start from Sept. 1.”

.Afridi said the UNHCR has conveyed its concerns over reports of PoR holders being arrested before the Sept. 1 deadline. 

“We have expressed serious concern on the forceful deportation and arrest of PoR refugees and urged the Pakistani authorities to stop it,” Afridi told Arab News.

He said the UN agency had urged Pakistan to extend the Sept. 1 deadline further to give Afghan refugees sufficient and reasonable time to return.

“In such a short period, over 1.4 million legal and documented refugees, including women and children, cannot go back,” he said. 

“This action is against the commitment given to the UNHCR and constitutes a breach of Pakistan’s international obligations,” Afridi noted. 

He urged the Pakistani government to stop the alleged deportations and adopt a “humane approach” to ensure the voluntary, gradual and dignified return of Afghan refugees to their country.

Pakistani authorities say all Afghan nationals must leave except those with valid visas, as part of the Illegal Foreigners Repatriation Plan launched in late 2023. More than a million have returned under this plan so far.

Pakistan has often blamed Afghan citizens— the country’s largest migrant group— for militant attacks and crimes, accusations Kabul has rejected.

Afghanistan is also facing a new wave of mass deportations from Iran, raising concerns among aid groups that the influx could further destabilize the country.


Pakistan says evidence of money laundering by top real estate firm, founder found by FIA

Pakistan says evidence of money laundering by top real estate firm, founder found by FIA
Updated 06 August 2025

Pakistan says evidence of money laundering by top real estate firm, founder found by FIA

Pakistan says evidence of money laundering by top real estate firm, founder found by FIA
  • Information minister alleges Bahria Town was running setup at Safari Hospital to transfer billions of money abroad illegally
  • Malik Riaz Hussain has spoken publicly about being pressured due to “political motives,” facing losses from alleged harassment

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s Information Minister Attaullah Tarar announced on Wednesday that the Federal Investigation Agency (FIA) has collected evidence of money laundering, amounting to billions of rupees, by the country’s top real estate firm Bahria Town and its founder Malik Riaz Hussain. 

The development takes place amid a high-profile crackdown against Bahria Town. The National Accountability Bureau (NAB), Pakistan’s anti-graft body, had earlier announced auctioning six Bahria Town properties in August. NAB said the sale aims to recover unpaid amounts from a settlement deal linked to the £190 million case involving Hussain.

Hussain has spoken publicly for months about being pressured due to “political motives” and facing financial losses. 

In a televised message on Wednesday, Tarar said the FIA had conducted a raid on Tuesday at the Begum Akhter Rukhsana Memorial Trust Safari Hospital, during which it recovered evidence of Bahria Town’s money laundering involving Rs1.12 billion [$3.9 million]. He said Bahria Town staff members at the hospital attempted to destroy the documents when the raid was conducted, and that though some records were lost, the majority of the evidence was successfully recovered. 

“The action that has been taken, this setup that they [Bahria Town] were running in the hospital, is clear proof that billions of rupees were being transferred out of the country through illegal means to damage its economy,” Tarar said. 

He said this amount was not sent abroad via official or banking channels, rather through hundi-hawala networks. The minister alleged that the Safari Hospital was being used as a “front” to conceal cash and official records from authorities. 

Tarar alleged that a man named Khalil, who oversaw Bahria Town’s operations, is currently in custody. Similarly, the minister said individuals named Imran and Qaiser were found to be operating a hundi-hawala network, with connections to Bahria Town’s chief financial officer and director of finance.

The information minister said the hospital’s ambulance was employed to transport documents and money. He said the FIA is investigating the case, saying that the locations of several individuals who have absconded have already been identified.

He urged those suspects to present themselves before the law, noting that comprehensive evidence has been collected against them.

Tarar assured the residents of Bahria Town that their rights will remain protected during the course of the investigation. 

“This action over money laundering is against Malik Riaz and his officials and his family members who are involved in this,” he said. 

Riaz or Bahria Town has so far not responded to the allegations. 

HUSSAIN, AL-QADIR TRUST CASE

While Hussain has not explicitly named who was pressuring him or why, media and analysts widely speculate the crackdown relates to the Al-Qadir Trust case, which involves accusations former prime minister Imran Khan and his wife, during his premiership from 2018-2022, were given land by Hussain as a bribe in exchange for illegal favors.

In January, a court sentenced Khan to 14 years imprisonment in the Al-Qadir Trust case.

In 2019, Britain’s National Crime Agency (NCA) said Hussain had agreed to hand over £190 million held in Britain to settle a UK investigation into whether the money was from the proceeds of crime.

The agency said the assets would be passed to the government of Pakistan and the settlement with Hussain was “a civil matter, and does not represent a finding of guilt.”

The case made against Hussain and ex-PM Khan was that instead of putting the tycoon’s settlement money in Pakistan’s treasury, Khan’s government used the money to pay fines levied by a court against Hussain for illegal acquisition of government lands at below-market value for development in Karachi.

Hussain, who hasn’t appeared before an anti-graft agency to submit his reply to summons issued to him, has denied any wrongdoing. Khan and his wife have also pleaded innocence.

The latest development marks another escalation in the legal troubles facing Hussain, widely regarded for years as Pakistan’s most influential businessman, known for close ties with political, media and military elites.

On Tuesday, Hussain said in a statement on social media platform X his property empire was on the brink of collapse due to what he termed a politically motivated crackdown. He claimed Bahria Town’s bank accounts had been frozen, vehicles seized and dozens of employees arrested, forcing a near shutdown of operations.

“The situation has reached a point where we are being forced to completely shut down all Bahria Town activities across Pakistan,” Hussain said. “We apologize to the residents and stakeholders of Bahria Town.”

Earlier this year in January, NAB put out a public notice cautioning people against investing in Hussain’s new real estate venture to build luxury apartments in Dubai. 


Pakistan blames ‘Indian-sponsored terrorists’ for attack killing 3 paramilitary forces personnel

Pakistan blames ‘Indian-sponsored terrorists’ for attack killing 3 paramilitary forces personnel
Updated 06 August 2025

Pakistan blames ‘Indian-sponsored terrorists’ for attack killing 3 paramilitary forces personnel

Pakistan blames ‘Indian-sponsored terrorists’ for attack killing 3 paramilitary forces personnel
  • Militants kill 3 Frontier Constabulary personnel, driver of their vehicle in northwestern Karak city, reports state TV
  • Islamabad has seen rising attacks in KP province since November 2022 after its truce with Pakistani Taliban collapsed

ISLAMABAD: Interior Minister Mohsin Naqvi on Wednesday blamed “Indian-sponsored terrorists” for an attack targeting the paramilitary Frontier Constabulary (FC) force in northwestern Pakistan that killed three personnel, state media said. 

According to the state-owned broadcaster Pakistan Television News, FC’s Lance Naik Mehmood Shah, sepoys Shahid and Rauf were killed when militants attacked their vehicle in Pakistan’s northwestern Karak city on Wednesday. The driver of their vehicle, Shahpur, was also killed in the attack. 

Local news channel Geo News quoted Karak District Police Officer Shehbaz Elahi as saying that the FC personnel were targeted while carrying out routine patrolling duties in Karak’s Garagri area.

“Federal Interior Minister Mohsin Naqvi has strongly condemned the terrorist attack by Indian-sponsored terrorists on a vehicle carrying FC personnel in Karak,” PTV News reported. 

Naqvi extended condolences to the families of the FC personnel and the driver killed, saluting their sacrifices for the nation. 

“Mohsin Naqvi emphasized that the sacrifices of these martyrs further strengthen our resolve in the fight against terrorism,” PTV News said.

Pakistan has witnessed an uptick in violence in its northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) province since a fragile truce between the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) and the state broke down in November 2022. 

Pakistan’s security forces have been battling TTP fighters in KP, especially its tribal areas, which border Afghanistan. Islamabad has repeatedly blamed Kabul for not taking action against TTP and other militant groups that it alleges operate from sanctuaries on Afghan soil. Kabul denies the allegations. 

Islamabad also blames New Delhi for arming and training the TTP and insurgents in Balochistan, alleging they carry out subversive activities in Pakistan. India rejects the allegations and accuses Pakistan of exporting “terrorists” across the border into its country. 


Pakistan parliament passes resolution in support of Gaza, condemns Israeli military actions

Pakistan parliament passes resolution in support of Gaza, condemns Israeli military actions
Updated 06 August 2025

Pakistan parliament passes resolution in support of Gaza, condemns Israeli military actions

Pakistan parliament passes resolution in support of Gaza, condemns Israeli military actions
  • Resolution moved by lawmaker Shazia Marri condemns Israel’s reported plans to take full control of Gaza
  • Pakistani lawmakers urge government to highlight plight of Palestinians at UN, OIC and other global platforms

ISLAMABAD: The lower house of Pakistan’s parliament on Wednesday passed a resolution reaffirming support for the people of Palestine, condemning the Israeli military’s actions and Tel Aviv’s reported plans to take complete control of Gaza, state-run media reported.

Israel has killed over 61,000 Palestinians in Gaza since Oct. 7, 2023, in several military operations, drawing condemnations and outrage from nations across the world, including Pakistan.

Mediation between Israel and Palestine’s Hamas has collapsed despite intense international pressure for a ceasefire to ease hunger and appalling conditions in the besieged Palestinian territory.

“The House passed a resolution reaffirming Pakistan’s historic and unwavering support for Palestinian people and their struggle for freedom, dignity and justice,” state broadcaster Radio Pakistan reported.

The state media said the resolution was presented in the National Assembly by lawmaker Shazia Marri, who expressed concerns over the “continuing and escalating Israeli military aggression in Gaza,” which she said has resulted in the killing of civilians and widespread destruction of homes.

Pakistani lawmaker Shazia Marri tables a resolution condemning Israel’s reported plans to take full control of Gaza, at the National Assembly of Pakistan in Islamabad on August 5, 2025. (Handout/National Assembly)

Israeli media reported earlier this week that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu favors a complete military takeover of Gaza for the first time in two decades.

The move would reverse a 2005 decision to pull Israeli settlers and military out of Gaza while retaining control over its borders.

“The resolution strongly condemned the recent statements and actions by Israeli authorities indicating plans for long-term occupation of Gaza, forced displacement of its population and efforts to erase the Palestinian identity of the territory,” the state broadcaster said.

It also condemned the use of starvation, siege and collective punishment as “tools of war,” emphasizing that these acts are war crimes under international law, the state media reported.

The lower house of the parliament urged the United Nations and the international community to fulfill their moral and legal responsibilities by taking immediate and concrete steps to end Israeli military actions in Gaza.

“The resolution urged the government to continue to raise its voice for the Palestinian people at all international forums, including the United Nations and the OIC [Organization of Islamic Cooperation],” Radio Pakistan said.

Pakistan, which does not have diplomatic ties with Israel, has consistently condemned Israel’s occupation of Palestinian land and its war on Gaza, and has called for the uninterrupted flow of humanitarian aid into Palestinian territory.


Pakistan releases agricultural census after 14 years, showing increase in livestock, cultivated areas

Pakistan releases agricultural census after 14 years, showing increase in livestock, cultivated areas
Updated 06 August 2025

Pakistan releases agricultural census after 14 years, showing increase in livestock, cultivated areas

Pakistan releases agricultural census after 14 years, showing increase in livestock, cultivated areas
  • Pakistan’s agriculture farm households increase to 11.7 million households from 8.3 million in 2010
  • Livestock population increased to 251.3 million in 2024 from 143 million in 2006, says census report

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s Planning Minister Ahsan Iqbal launched the findings of the 7th Agricultural Census 2024 on Wednesday, showing a marked increase in the country’s population of livestock, agriculture farm households and cultivated area, state media reported. 

Pakistan conducts its agricultural census every 10 years, with authorities conducting the last one in 2010. The main purpose of the census is to provide information about the agrarian structure of the country for baseline data for food security and better livelihood of the population, and to share estimates for the population of livestock. 

As per the findings of the census launched by Iqbal, Pakistan’s agriculture farm households have risen to 11.7 million households in 2024 from 8.3 million in 2010.

“As per the 7th Agricultural Census 2024 data, livestock increased to 251.3 million in 2024 from 143 million in 2006 with the growth of 3.18 percent per annum,” state broadcaster Radio Pakistan reported. 

The broadcaster said Pakistan’s cultivated area increased from 42.6 million acres in 2010 to 52.8 million acres in 2024, adding that 79 percent of the cultivated area in the country is irrigated by canals and tube wells. 

Speaking at the launching ceremony, Iqbal said agriculture remains the backbone of Pakistan’s economy, noting that it contributes significantly to the country’s GDP, exports and employment. 

“He commended the Pakistan Bureau of Statistics for introducing innovation, transparency, and precision in data collection, which is vital in planning for the country’s economic growth and prosperity,” Radio Pakistan said. 

Agriculture constitutes the largest sector of Pakistan’s economy, as per the Pakistan Bureau of Statistics (PBS), with the majority of the country’s population, directly or indirectly, depending on it.

As per the PBS, agriculture contributes about 24 percent to the GDP and accounts for half of Pakistan’s employed labor force. It is also the largest source of foreign exchange earnings.