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Pakistan taps Arab innovations in bid to expand global share of date trade

Special Pakistan taps Arab innovations in bid to expand global share of date trade
opening ceremony of 2nd Pakistan International Date Palm Festival in Karachi, on September 16, 2025. (AN Photo)
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Updated 6 min 43 sec ago

Pakistan taps Arab innovations in bid to expand global share of date trade

Pakistan taps Arab innovations in bid to expand global share of date trade
  • Pakistan, the world’s fifth-largest date producer, hosts second international festival in Karachi
  • UAE, Egypt, Jordan firms showcase packaging, cold storage, eco-friendly date palm products

KARACHI: Hundreds of Pakistani growers, exporters and international experts gathered in Karachi on Tuesday for the second Pakistan International Date Palm Festival to exchange ideas, showcase innovations and forge new trade links as the Pakistan’s date farming industry looks to modernize and expand its global reach.

The festival was organized in the port city of Karachi by the Trade Development Authority of Pakistan (TDAP) under the patronage of the United Arab Emirates’ Khalifa International Award for Date Palm & Agricultural Innovation.

The three-day event, running till Thursday, is featuring stalls from several countries, including the UAE, Egypt and Jordan, which offered different varieties of dates, farming techniques and packaging solutions to Pakistani growers.

With Pakistan ranked as the world’s fifth-largest date producer, yielding around 535,000 tons annually, the event aimed to help local growers meet the stringent requirements of international markets.

“The purpose of coming here is to connect our linkages with other countries, especially Ƶ and Dubai, so that we can improve our business and go toward import and export,” Ameer Sultan Zehri, a grower from Kharan in Pakistan’s Balochistan, told Arab News.

While Pakistan boasts diverse and high-quality date varieties, many farmers face logistical and technological barriers.

“I saw a lot of growers of date palms in Pakistan, [saw] different varieties,” said Engineer Mohamed Hasan Al-Shamsi Al-Awadhi, a board member of the UAE’s Date Palm Friends Society.

“We are very happy to be with them and to discuss what cooperation we can make with them for import and for export.”

Al-Awadhi stressed the importance of “proper packaging and quality control.”

“When you want to export internationally, you need good packing, good variety, good size,” he said, noting that European markets particularly demand strict specifications.

Growers like Ghulam Qasim Jiskani from Khairpur in Pakistan’s southern Sindh province had the same concerns.

“We don’t have factories to process dates,” he said. “If we have the same facilities, cold storage, marketing, and packaging, we can compete with the world.”

Jiskani, patron of the Pakistani Date Palm Growers Association, said he had personally imported and cultivated 15 varieties of date palms from the Gulf countries, which yielded “excellent results,” but it was hard to make a leap in export without necessary processing infrastructure in Pakistan.

To help address these gaps, international firms at the festival introduced new solutions, aimed at boosting farmer profitability and reducing waste.

Nur Al-Muhammad Berdibekov, manager of the UAE-based Best Bags Packing and Packaging Materials Trading LLC, displayed new mesh bags that protect dates from environmental damage and bird attacks.

“For the Pakistani market, it’s not new, but for the dates [industry], mesh bag, it’s new, new technology for them,” he said, adding the bags will help farmers save dates, reduce waste and increase profit.

On the sustainability front, Egypt’s Valorizen Research and Innovation Center firm showcased technology that transforms date palm waste, often burned or dumped in Pakistan, into thermal insulation and other eco-friendly products.

“[What] we provide is a solution of how to convert this biomass into an added-value product, maybe to substitute few imported products, maybe to substitute other types of, let’s say, material that are produced from petroleum-based ingredients,” Said Awad, an official at the Egyptian firm, told Arab News.

“If commercialized, this can be replicated in Pakistan and provide environmental and economic benefits.”

The festival also drew interest from exporters looking to tap into the growing Pakistani date market.

Amjad M. Tadros of Jordan’s Nadine Dates was seeking to capitalize on growing demand in Pakistan for his company’s unique ‘Madjoul’ dates.

“We would like to offer them the knowledge about the dates,” he said, “the different kinds of dates and why Madjoul dates are better and how to best market them.”


Pakistan calls Israel’s Qatar strike an attack on Gaza peace mediation at UN rights debate

Pakistan calls Israel’s Qatar strike an attack on Gaza peace mediation at UN rights debate
Updated 11 sec ago

Pakistan calls Israel’s Qatar strike an attack on Gaza peace mediation at UN rights debate

Pakistan calls Israel’s Qatar strike an attack on Gaza peace mediation at UN rights debate
  • Pakistan’s envoy at UN Human Rights Council delivers statement on behalf of the OIC
  • He reaffirms support for all steps by Doha to protect its sovereignty under the UN Charter

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s envoy to the United Nations Human Rights Council in Geneva, Ambassador Bilal Ahmad, on Tuesday described Israel’s strike on Qatar this month as an attack on the mediation process the Gulf state has been facilitating to secure a Gaza ceasefire and the release of Israeli hostages held by Hamas.

Speaking during an urgent debate of the Council on behalf of the Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC), Ahmad said Israel’s Sept. 9 airstrike on a residential neighborhood in Doha, where Hamas leaders were discussing a US-backed Gaza ceasefire proposal, amounted to a blatant assault on international efforts to broker peace.

Qatar has played a pivotal role as a mediator in ceasefire and hostage negotiations between Israel and Hamas and hosts the Palestinian group’s political bureau to facilitate the process. However, Israel said it had targeted Hamas “terrorists” as the United States did when it killed Al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden in Pakistan in May 2011.

“The OIC Group condemns in the strongest terms the Israeli aggression against Qatar on 9 September 2025 in blatant violation of international law and the UN Charter,” the Pakistani diplomat said. “We strongly denounce this attack on the mediation process that Qatar has hosted commendably alongside regional and international countries to address the catastrophic humanitarian crisis in the OPT [Occupied Palestinian Territory], particularly Gaza.”

“This unjustifiable and unprovoked attack constitutes a dangerous escalation threatening the very foundation for the enjoyment of all human rights by all peoples in the region, as well as an attack on the sovereignty, security and territorial integrity of the State of Qatar under the pretext of countering terrorism,” he added.

Ahmad expressed solidarity with Qatar and supported all steps it may take to protect its security and sovereignty in accordance with the UN Charter.

His statement urged the international community to compel Israel to halt its “dangerous and ongoing attacks” in the region and called on the Council and its mechanisms to ensure accountability for what it described as serial violations of international law.

It said mediation efforts by Qatar and other countries offered “a starting point toward a just and lasting regional peace with equal rights and dignity for all peoples in the region, especially the people under occupation in Palestine.”

Ahmad’s statement came as a UN inquiry commission concluded on Tuesday Israel is committing genocide against Palestinians in Gaza.

The Israeli military launched a campaign in Gaza after Hamas attacked southern Israel in October 2023, killing nearly 1,200 people and taking about 250 hostages. Hamas said the assault was a response to the plight of Palestinians living under Israeli occupation.

Israel’s retaliation has since killed about 65,000 residents of Gaza and flattened civilian neighborhoods, while senior Israeli officials have spoken publicly about “erasing” Palestine and displacing its people to other Arab countries.


Punjab sees gradual return to normalcy after floods as monsoon spell persists

Punjab sees gradual return to normalcy after floods as monsoon spell persists
Updated 36 min 28 sec ago

Punjab sees gradual return to normalcy after floods as monsoon spell persists

Punjab sees gradual return to normalcy after floods as monsoon spell persists
  • PDMA reports normal water flow in major rivers, with only localized flooding on the Sutlej
  • Flash floods may occur in streams around Rawalpindi, Murree and Galiyat on Sept. 18-19

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s eastern Punjab province is seeing a gradual return to normalcy after heavy floods this month, even as more monsoon rains are forecast in several districts until Sept. 19, the Provincial Disaster Management Authority (PDMA) said on Wednesday.

Heavy rains and excess water released from Indian dams caused Punjab’s rivers to swell late last month, inundating more than 4,700 villages in the country’s agricultural heartland, destroying crops and homes and forcing millions to flee.

Since the onset of the monsoon season on June 26, Punjab has reported 296 deaths out of a nationwide toll of 998, according to the National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA). Other casualties include 504 deaths in northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, 80 in Sindh, 41 in Gilgit-Baltistan, 38 in Azad Kashmir, 30 in Balochistan and nine in Islamabad.

“The flow of water in Punjab’s rivers is returning to normal,” the PDMA said in a statement. “The Indus, Jhelum and Ravi rivers are at normal levels. The flow of water in the Chenab at Marala, Khanki, Qadirabad and Trimmu has normalized, while there is a medium-level flood in the Sutlej at Ganda Singh Wala and a low-level flood at Sulemanki and Islam headworks.”

The authority said Panjnad currently carries 194,000 cusecs of water with a low-level flood and that hill torrents in Dera Ghazi Khan have normalized.

A flood discharge report from the Flood Forecasting Division at 6 a.m. Wednesday showed most key river sites, including Tarbela, Kalabagh, Chashma and Taunsa on the Indus, as well as Mangla and Rasul on the Jhelum and all major Chenab stations, at normal levels.

Guddu and Sukkur barrages on the Indus in the southern Sindh province were at high flood while Kotri was at low flood.

The PDMA warned the monsoon’s 11th spell would continue until Sept. 19, with rain expected in Rawalpindi, Murree, Galiyat, Attock, Chakwal, Jhelum, Gujranwala, Lahore, Gujrat and Sialkot, and chances of showers in Narowal, Hafizabad, Mandi Bahauddin, Okara, Sahiwal, Kasur, Jhang, Sargodha and Mianwali.

Flash floods could occur in streams around Rawalpindi, Murree and Galiyat on Sept. 18 and 19.

The provincial administration remains on alert on the instructions of Punjab’s chief minister, the PDMA said.


Pakistan backs idea of joint Arab security force after Israel’s strike in Doha

Pakistan backs idea of joint Arab security force after Israel’s strike in Doha
Updated 17 September 2025

Pakistan backs idea of joint Arab security force after Israel’s strike in Doha

Pakistan backs idea of joint Arab security force after Israel’s strike in Doha
  • Ishaq Dar tells Al Jazeera the force would be defensive, aimed at protecting regional states against ‘the occupier’
  • He says Pakistan will ‘discharge its duty’ toward the Muslim world, highlights its conventional military abilities

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Ishaq Dar backed the idea of a joint Arab security force this week after Israel’s Sept. 9 airstrikes on Qatar, saying that his country was ready to play a role while highlighting its conventional military abilities.

Speaking to Al Jazeera ahead of the emergency Arab-Islamic summit in Doha, Dar said it was vital to strengthen multilateralism to ensure peace for everyone by carrying out institutional reforms at the United Nations.

His remarks came days after Israel targeted a group of Hamas leaders discussing a US-backed Gaza ceasefire proposal by hitting a residential neighborhood in Doha. Qatar has been a key mediator in ceasefire and hostage negotiations between Israel and Hamas, hosting the Palestinian group’s political bureau as part of the process.

Confirming reports that Arab states were discussing the idea of a combined security force, he said: “Why not? What’s wrong with that? They should [have such a force]. And according to their own capacity, their own strength, they should create some [defense] mechanism.”

Dar maintained such a force would not be developed for offensive purposes but to defend regional states and ensure peace by “stopping the occupier … [and] somebody who just doesn’t listen [to anyone].”

When asked about the role of “nuclear powered Pakistan,” he said his country’s nuclear arsenal was for deterrence but noted Islamabad would stand with Arab states and “discharge its duty” toward the Muslim community.

“Pakistan [has] a very large, known, very effective army, very effective Air Force, very effective Navy,” he added.

Referring to Pakistan’s military standoff with India in May, Dar said his country’s armed forces had proven their worth during the exchange.

Asked if Israel had also targeted Pakistan after Qatar, he said Israel had fully supported India in its war against Pakistan but had seen the results.


Pakistan PM to meet Saudi crown prince today to strengthen ties, discuss regional developments

Pakistan PM to meet Saudi crown prince today to strengthen ties, discuss regional developments
Updated 17 September 2025

Pakistan PM to meet Saudi crown prince today to strengthen ties, discuss regional developments

Pakistan PM to meet Saudi crown prince today to strengthen ties, discuss regional developments
  • Visit comes amid Middle East tensions where Israel has widened its military campaign across regional states
  • Shehbaz Sharif met the crown prince in Doha at an Arab-Islamic summit supporting Qatar after Israel’s attack

ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif is scheduled to meet Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman today, Wednesday, during a day-long state visit to the Kingdom to discuss regional and global developments and formalize bilateral cooperation in a range of areas, according to the foreign office of Pakistan.

Sharif has visited Ƶ multiple times since assuming office, including twice this year, aiming to strengthen trade, investment and economic ties. Last year in October, both countries signed 34 memoranda of understanding (MoUs) and agreements worth $2.8 billion. These agreements were aimed at increasing private sector cooperation and commercial partnerships.

The Pakistani prime minister’s visit to Ƶ this time comes amid rising volatility in the Middle East, where Israel has substantially expanded its military campaign by targeting several regional countries, including Iran in a 12-day war and Qatar in an airstrike earlier this month. The strike on Qatar came as its leadership was facilitating ceasefire and hostage negotiations between Israel and Hamas.

Sharif also met the Saudi crown prince on the sidelines of the emergency Arab-Islamic summit in Doha earlier this week, a meeting convened in support of Qatar after the Israel attack targeting Hamas leaders.

“At the invitation of His Royal Highness Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, Prime Minister Muhammad Shehbaz Sharif is undertaking a state visit to the Kingdom of Ƶ on 17 September 2025,” the foreign office said on Wednesday. “He will be accompanied by key members of the Cabinet.”

“The two leaders are expected to exchange views on regional and global developments of mutual interest,” the statement continued. “The visit is expected to result in the formalization of cooperation in diverse fields, reflecting the shared commitment of both sides to further enhance and deepen their longstanding fraternal ties.”

According to the foreign office, both leaders are expected to review the full spectrum of Pakistan-Ƶ relations. The statement noted that Pakistan and Ƶ enjoy a historic relationship, rooted in shared faith, values and mutual trust.

“The visit of the Prime Minister will provide an important opportunity to the two leaders to consolidate this unique partnership, while exploring new avenues of collaboration, for the benefit of the peoples of the two countries,” it added.

Pakistan considers Ƶ as one of its closest strategic partners and economic allies in the region. The Kingdom has extended significant support to Pakistan during Islamabad’s prolonged economic challenges in recent years, which includes external financing and assistance with International Monetary Fund (IMF) loan programs.

Ƶ is also the largest source of foreign remittances for Pakistan, where over 2.5 million expatriates reside. These remittances are crucial for keeping Pakistan’s fragile, $350 billion economy afloat as it faces external pressures and macroeconomic challenges.


UAE’s Mashreq launches Shariah-compliant digital banking services in Pakistan

UAE’s Mashreq launches Shariah-compliant digital banking services in Pakistan
Updated 17 September 2025

UAE’s Mashreq launches Shariah-compliant digital banking services in Pakistan

UAE’s Mashreq launches Shariah-compliant digital banking services in Pakistan
  • Mashreq commits $100 million to Pakistan digital bank, aims to boost inclusion, remittances
  • New services aim to drive remittances, financial inclusion and job creation over next decade

KARACHI: Leading UAE lender Mashreq on Tuesday announced the launch of its digital banking services in Pakistan, offering fully Shariah-compliant online solutions as part of a $100 million commitment to the South Asian country.

Pakistan, where nearly 70 percent of adults remain outside the formal financial system, has been encouraging foreign and local lenders to expand digital banking to increase inclusion and attract investment. The State Bank of Pakistan introduced a new regulatory framework in 2022 and has since granted licenses to several digital banks, including Mashreq, as part of efforts to modernize the sector.

Mashreq, Dubai’s third-largest lender by assets, registered in Pakistan in 2023 before receiving central bank approval to launch Islamic banking operations last year.

The bank said its new platform will be powered by “state-of-the-art technology, seamless customer experience and a strong commitment to responsible banking.”

“Mashreq Bank Pakistan aims to offer unparalleled digital banking solutions, built to be fully Shariah compliant,” the bank said in a statement, adding that it aimed to drive digital transformation, financial inclusion and job creation over the next five to ten years.

Pakistani customers will be able to access zero-fee ATM withdrawals, free debit cards and AI-driven risk controls. Overseas Pakistanis in the UAE will also be able to open accounts back home and remit funds seamlessly through the new platform.

On the occasion, Mashreq Chairman Abdul Aziz Al Ghurair highlighted the bank’s decades-long relationship with Pakistan.

“Dating back to the establishment of our representative office in Karachi in 1978, we start a new chapter in our journey, grounded in trust, shaped by regional aspirations and backed by long-term cooperation,” he said.

“Pakistan is a story of resilience and sustained ambition and we’re here because the future is promising and we want to help build it.”

Mashreq Bank Pakistan Chairman Fernando Morillo said the institution’s vision was to create an ecosystem where consumers, small and medium enterprises and overseas Pakistanis could connect to financial opportunities.

“Pakistan marks the first international market where we are deploying Mashreq’s full-service digital retail bank,” he said.

The bank’s global capability center in Pakistan already employs more than 415 people across technology, compliance, human resources and customer experience.

Pakistan, with a $350 billion economy and a large overseas workforce -more than 2.5 million Pakistanis live in the UAE alone — relies heavily on remittances, much of which flows through the banking system. Mashreq said its new platform would help streamline remittance inflows while providing digital-first solutions to local consumers.

The bank’s statement said Mashreq had committed $100 million by this year to support its operations in Pakistan through the digital bank and global capability center.