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Karachi crowds gather on beaches as first supermoon of 2025 brightens night sky

Karachi crowds gather on beaches as first supermoon of 2025 brightens night sky
Screengrab taken from a video shared by Reuters on October 7, 2025, showing a man taking a picture of “Harvest Supermoon” in Karachi, Pakistan.
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Updated 1 min 32 sec ago

Karachi crowds gather on beaches as first supermoon of 2025 brightens night sky

Karachi crowds gather on beaches as first supermoon of 2025 brightens night sky
  • Pakistan’s space agency says the October supermoon appeared larger and brighter than usual
  • The brightest supermoon of the year will appear in November as the moon moves closer to Earth

KARACHI: A “Harvest Supermoon,” one of the year’s largest and brightest celestial events, lit up the skies over Pakistan’s port city of Karachi on Monday night, drawing crowds eager to photograph the glowing lunar spectacle from beaches and waterfronts.

The phenomenon occurs when a full moon coincides with the moon’s closest point to Earth in its elliptical orbit — a position known as perigee — making it appear noticeably larger and brighter.

According to Pakistan’s national space agency SUPARCO, the October supermoon was about 6.6 percent larger and 13 percent brighter than an average full moon, reaching its peak at 8:47 p.m. local time (0347 GMT).

Residents flocked to popular viewing spots such as Sea View and Clifton Beach, where the moon rose above the Arabian Sea and cast a golden reflection across the water.

“It’s not every day you get to see this view,” said Umair Aslam, a Karachi resident. “This opportunity only comes once a year, so we came to enjoy the season, see the supermoon, and take some selfies.”

“We had an amazing time,” he added.

Another local, Mohammad Qaisar, said the sight drew nature enthusiasts from across the city.

“For those who love nature and keep their eyes on the sky, the first supermoon of 2025 was a deeply charming event,” he said. “It brought great happiness to everyone who witnessed it over Karachi.”

SUPARCO said this was the first of three supermoons expected in 2025, with the next two forecast for November 5 and December 5.

The brightest supermoon of the year is expected in November, when the moon will come as close as 221,817 miles (357,067 kilometers) to Earth, offering another luminous spectacle for skywatchers worldwide.


Pakistan PM vows easier investment climate in talks with Malaysian venture capital group

Pakistan PM vows easier investment climate in talks with Malaysian venture capital group
Updated 21 sec ago

Pakistan PM vows easier investment climate in talks with Malaysian venture capital group

Pakistan PM vows easier investment climate in talks with Malaysian venture capital group
  • Gobi Partners, with over $1.6 billion in assets, invests in tech startups across emerging Asian markets
  • Shehbaz Sharif receives honorary doctorate for leadership and governance from Malaysian university

ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif told a leading Malaysian venture capital group on Tuesday Pakistan and Malaysia were working to strengthen business-to-business links, with his administration pledging to make it easier to invest and operate in the country, particularly in the digital economy.

Sharif made the remarks during a meeting in Kuala Lumpur with Gobi Partners, a Malaysia-based firm that invests across Asia’s emerging markets. He welcomed the firm’s interest in Pakistan’s startup ecosystem and said the government was committed to improving the ease of doing business and supporting early-stage investors through targeted reforms.

Sharif is on a three-day visit to Malaysia, where he held wide-ranging talks a day earlier with his Malaysian counterpart Anwar Ibrahim.

The two countries announced a new $200 million halal meat trade quota and pledged to deepen cooperation in the digital economy, agriculture and education, in what both leaders described as a renewed effort to expand economic and strategic ties between the two Muslim nations.

“We are determined to create a business-friendly environment and improve the ease of doing business,” Sharif said, according to a statement from his office, during the meeting. “Our priority is to mobilize domestic and international capital to build a sustainable startup ecosystem.”

He said the Special Investment Facilitation Council (SIFC), a hybrid civil-military body set up two years ago to fast-track decisions in key economic sectors, was actively working to provide all necessary support to foreign investors.

Sharif also highlighted that Pakistan’s digital economy — including fintech, e-commerce and IT services — occupied a central place in the country’s national development strategy.

Gobi Partners, founded in 2002, has more than $1.6 billion in assets under management, investing across emerging markets in and around Malaysia’s immediate neighborhood, particularly in startups.

The visiting delegation expressed interest in collaborating with Pakistani firms in the financial technology and online commerce sectors, according to the statement.

Later in the day, the prime minister received an honorary doctorate in leadership and governance from the International Islamic University Malaysia.

Sharif spoke about the Islamic paradigm of leadership while addressing the occasion and thanked the participants of the event.

“Today, the Muslim Ummah confronts formidable challenges,” he said in his acceptance speech. “Conflicts, poverty, disunity and more than ever, it is in these testing times that we need to hold on together to our values and ethics guided by our religion, Islam, to be able to reclaim our lost place in the comity of nations.”

“Our responsibility as servants and as leaders is to provide them the right platforms to serve the cause of suffering humanity with compassion and with great commitment,” he added.

The prime minister said he also hoped his visit would strengthen academic cooperation between Pakistan and Malaysia and praised IIUM as one of the Muslim world’s most respected institutions that integrate knowledge, and ethics.


Pakistani textile giant eyes Gulf, Western markets with $35 million Egypt manufacturing plant

Pakistani textile giant eyes Gulf, Western markets with $35 million Egypt manufacturing plant
Updated 29 min 24 sec ago

Pakistani textile giant eyes Gulf, Western markets with $35 million Egypt manufacturing plant

Pakistani textile giant eyes Gulf, Western markets with $35 million Egypt manufacturing plant
  • Interloop facility at Suez Canal Economic Zone to cut shipping time by 20 days and production costs by 10 percent
  • Plant to use Pakistani yarn, target $40 million in exports to US, Europe, Africa and GCC within three years

FAISALABAD: Interloop, a Pakistani textile firm that manufactures socks for Nike, Adidas and other global apparel brands, is building a hosiery manufacturing hub in Egypt to boost exports to the West and Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) markets, its chairman said.

Interloop has the capacity to produce about one billion socks annually through its manufacturing plants in Pakistan, China, Sri Lanka and Bangladesh. It supplies socks and leggings to brands such as Nike, Adidas, Puma, Target, H&M, Marks & Spencer, Zara and M&S, according to Interloop Chairman Musadaq Zulqarnain.

The textile firm is investing $35 million in its textile manufacturing facility at Egypt’s Suez Canal Economic Zone, which is expected to be completed in next 18 months. The facility will initially target $40 million in exports to its retail customers in the US, Europe, Africa and Gulf markets within three years of its operationalization.

“Egypt has a duty-free agreement with USA. And also, you can supply to EU and UK duty-free from Egypt,” Zulqarnain told Arab News in an interview in Faisalabad, when asked why his firm chose to establish the facility in Egypt.

The plant will use Pakistani yarn.

Interloop exploring new markets augurs well for Pakistan that has been struggling to boost exports which declined 12 percent to $2.5 billion last month. This, coupled with 14 percent hike in imports, widened the country’s trade deficit by 46 percent to $3.3 billion in Sept., according to the Pakistan Bureau of Statistics (PBS) data. Overall, this year through September, Pakistan’s trade gap widened by 33 percent to $9.4 billion.

Zulqarnain said the Egyptian plant will reduce Interloop’s shipping time across the regions by 20 days.

“It has a very close proximity to Europe and the shipping times from Egypt to US are much shorter,” he said, adding their production costs in Egypt would drop by 10 percent and the company will have 22 percent less trade tariff than Pakistan’s.

“From Pakistan the duty into US is 13 to 14 percent on top of that we have a 19 percent reciprocal tariff, while from Egypt they just have a 10 percent reciprocal tariff so if somebody is importing goods from Egypt his or her duty as compared to Pakistan will be 20 to 22 percent lower so that’s a huge advantage out of Egypt.”

SQUEEZED MARGINS

Interloop is seeking economies of scale, given what Zulqarnain said “higher” taxation, energy and labor costs and unavailability of value-added raw materials at home and a short-term compression in global demand specially from Europe, where consumers were shifting to Chinese products because of US tariffs.

“We have seen ups and downs in demand because of the changing market conditions, especially the US tariffs have brought in a lot of uncertainty,” he said, adding his clients were “being very cautious” in building up inventories.

“Our margins have been squeezed,” said Zulqarnain, whose firm employs more than 40,000 people.

Interloop reported its earnings for fiscal year 2024-25 in a filing to the Pakistan Stock Exchange (PSX) last month, showing 13 percent hike in sales to Rs179 billion ($638 million).

The textile giant’s profits, however, declined threefolds, or by 66 percent, to Rs5.6 billion ($20.1 million) from Rs16.5 billion ($59 million) of the previous year, with the cost of sales surging 25 percent to Rs143 billion ($507 million).

Its shareholders got one-rupee dividends.

“Because of the labor wage adjustment and the energy… at least 5 percent hit has been taken on the cost of production,” Zulqarnain told Arab News.

Finance Minister Muhammad Aurangzeb is trying to get Pakistan’s debt-ridden economy out of what he has said the frequent boom-and-bust cycles and was recently able to strike a trade deal with the US, which slashed the initial 29 percent tariffs to 19 percent. The new rate is expected to make Pakistan’s exports competitive.

Unaware of what her company is facing, 24-year-old Esha-tur-Razia was busy supervising a group of staffers at the Interloop manufacturing facility in Faisalabad, which produces 8,000 pairs of socks daily.

“We do socks production here and we do packing and finishing in here,” she said. “Our daily target is 1,200 pairs [of socks in our eight-hour shift].”

GULF MARKET

According to PBS data, Interloop exported goods worth $500 million in fiscal year 2023-24, compared to Pakistan’s total textile exports of $1.6 billion that year. It seeks $700 million exports this year.

The company has now set sights on $35 billion Gulf market that is expected to grow to as much as $45 billion in the next five years.

“Half of it is Ƶ and half is rest of the GCC countries,” Zulqarnain said. “The current retail for apparel and clothing in GCC alone is $35 billion.”

Interloop’s business development teams are working on the GCC market and its chairman plans to export $50 million denim jeans, knitwear and socks to the region over next few years.

“It will make more sense for us to export from Egypt to Ƶ or GCC if we are able to develop that demand,” he said.

To materialize these projects, Zulqarnain plans to issue rights shares to his firm’s shareholders in the next couple of years.

In March 2019, Interloop raised more than Rs5 billion ($17.7 million) through Pakistan’s largest private sector Initial Public Offering (IPO), something Zulqarnain said all of his group companies, including dairy, IT and logistics, would do in the next three years.

“We might invite one of the international development finance institutions to come with us as equity partners,” he said.

Maira Javeed, a deputy general manager sales and merchandise at Interloop, keeps looking for new customers.

“We are in touch with some of the customers in the Gulf market,” Javeed said. “We are aiming to bring new customers on our portfolio to increase our revenue.”


Disaster agency says Punjab rivers stable after monsoon rains, no immediate flood risk

Disaster agency says Punjab rivers stable after monsoon rains, no immediate flood risk
Updated 07 October 2025

Disaster agency says Punjab rivers stable after monsoon rains, no immediate flood risk

Disaster agency says Punjab rivers stable after monsoon rains, no immediate flood risk
  • PDMA says water levels expected to rise in Sutlej, Ravi, Chenab and Jhelum but they remain within safe limits
  • Monsoon season since late July has killed more than 1,000 people in Pakistan, damaged homes and farmland

ISLAMABAD: River flows across Pakistan’s Punjab province remained normal on Tuesday despite rising water levels following a recent spell of monsoon rains, the Provincial Disaster Management Authority (PDMA) said, ruling out any immediate threat of flooding.

The update came as Pakistan continues to recover from weeks of torrential rains and riverine floods that inundated large parts of Punjab and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, damaging homes, infrastructure and farmland. The monsoon season, which began in late July, has claimed at least 1,037 lives in incidents including roof collapses, landslides and flash floods.

Punjab, the country’s agricultural heartland, experienced one of its worst floods in years after neighboring India released excess water into three major rivers, affecting millions of people across the province.

“River flows in Punjab are currently normal,” said PDMA Punjab Director General Irfan Ali Kathia in a statement. “While rainfall has led to an increase in water levels, there is no risk of flooding at this stage.”

According to the PDMA, the flow in the Ravi River was recorded at 23,000 cusecs at Jassar, 22,000 cusecs at Shahdara, 55,000 cusecs at Balloki and 45,000 cusecs at Sidhnai.

The Sutlej River had flows of 59,000 cusecs at Ganda Singh Wala and 31,000 cusecs at Sulemanki, while the Chenab River recorded 31,000 cusecs at Marala, 17,000 at Khanki, 11,000 at Qadirabad and 11,000 at Trimmu.

At Panjnad, the flow stood at 30,000 cusecs.

The PDMA said water levels were expected to rise further in the next 24 hours in the Sutlej, Ravi, Chenab and Jhelum rivers, though all remained within safe limits.

It also reported that no water flow was observed in hill torrents across the Dera Ghazi Khan division, an area that often experiences flash flooding during heavy monsoon rains.

The statement said the PDMA’s control room continued to monitor the situation round the clock and coordinate with irrigation and district authorities to ensure timely alerts and preventive measures.


Pakistan tells UN seven in 10 women killed in conflicts last year were in Gaza

Pakistan tells UN seven in 10 women killed in conflicts last year were in Gaza
Updated 07 October 2025

Pakistan tells UN seven in 10 women killed in conflicts last year were in Gaza

Pakistan tells UN seven in 10 women killed in conflicts last year were in Gaza
  • It criticizes UN Secretary-General’s report on Women, Peace and Security for excluding situation in Kashmir
  • A Pakistani diplomat tells UN that women remain the ‘first casualties and last to be heard’ in global conflicts

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan on Monday told the United Nations Security Council that seven in ten women killed in conflicts worldwide last year were in Gaza, as it urged greater representation of women in UN-mediated peace processes across the world.

Counsellor Saima Saleem, speaking during an open debate on Women, Peace and Security, said the UN framework to promote female participation in conflict prevention, peace building and post-war recovery was established under Resolution 1325 25 years ago.

However, she noted it now stood at a crossroads, with women continuing to be the first casualties and the last to be heard in conflict situations.

“The plight of Palestinian women is one of the gravest tragedies of our times,” she said. “Seven in ten women killed in conflicts worldwide in 2024 were in Gaza. Homes, schools, and maternity wards were bombed. Pregnant women gave birth under fire without anesthetics or water. Tens of thousands were displaced; hundreds of thousands now face famine.”

“These are not collateral tragedies but deliberate crimes that demand accountability,” she added.

The Pakistani diplomat also highlighted the suffering of women in Sudan, the Democratic Republic of Congo and the Sahel, noting that women sustain families and communities amid war but remain sidelined from formal mediation processes and deliberately targeted by armed groups.

“Conflict-related sexual violence has risen by nearly 90 percent in just two years, while the number of women and children killed quadrupled between 2023 and 2024,” she said.

Saleem criticized the UN Secretary-General’s latest report over the issue for omitting the situation of women in Indian-administered Kashmir, saying they have endured “decades of occupation,” adding the UN mechanisms and global rights organizations had documented “structural impunity” and “reprisals against female family members of the disappeared.”

New Delhi maintains the Kashmir issue is an internal matter, though Pakistan says it is an internationally recognized disputed region subject to UN resolutions.

Citing research showing that peace agreements with women’s participation are more durable, Saleem called for binding thresholds for women’s representation in all UN-mediated processes and for accountability wherever sexual violence is deployed as a deliberate tactic of war.

“The road to peace must be built by women and men together,” she said. “Sustainable peace demands women at the heart of decision-making — as mediators, peacekeepers, and leaders.”

She reaffirmed Pakistan’s commitment to the UN’s Gender Parity Strategy, noting that Pakistani women peacekeepers had served in the Democratic Republic of Congo, Mali, South Sudan and other missions, helping survivors where justice was denied.

“The Pact for the Future has reaffirmed our collective commitment to this agenda,” she said. “Now is the time to act: mandate women’s participation, guarantee their protection, promote their leadership, and strengthen accountability.”


Saudi firm to establish AI hub in Pakistan to transfer knowledge, jointly develop solutions

Saudi firm to establish AI hub in Pakistan to transfer knowledge, jointly develop solutions
Updated 07 October 2025

Saudi firm to establish AI hub in Pakistan to transfer knowledge, jointly develop solutions

Saudi firm to establish AI hub in Pakistan to transfer knowledge, jointly develop solutions
  • The development comes as both nations plan to forge partnerships in AI, cybersecurity and other tech fields
  • Pakistani software developers body says the initiative will boost training, innovation and startup collaboration

ISLAMABAD: Ƶ’s GO Telecom company will establish an artificial intelligence (AI) hub in Pakistan this month that would help transfer knowledge and jointly develop innovative digital solutions, Pakistan’s information technology (IT) ministry said on Monday.

The decision to establish the GO AI Hub in Pakistan was made during a meeting between Pakistani IT Minister Shaza Fatima Khawaja and the leadership of GO Telecom at the company’s headquarters in Riyadh last week.

GO Telecom plays a significant role in Ƶ’s digital transformation landscape, offering cloud, data center and management services to businesses. The company has expanded regionally through partnerships such as with Oman’s Data Park and by acquiring a majority stake in Ejad Tech, a Saudi IT solution provider.

While GO has a strong domestic presence in Pakistan’s petroleum sector, the planned AI hub appears to be its first major tech venture in the South Asian country, marking an expansion of its international footprint.

“The official launch of the [GO AI] Hub is planned for October 2025, with participation from senior government and industry leaders from both countries,” the IT ministry said in a statement shared with Arab News, adding that the initiative will promote joint development of digital solutions between Ƶ and Pakistan.

During the meeting, future collaborations, including digital infrastructure expansion, data center development, and the establishment of a technical talent development center in Pakistan, also came under discussion, reflecting the shared vision to enhance regional digital connectivity and innovation.

“Through initiatives like GO AI Hub Pakistan, we aim to strengthen collaboration in emerging technologies, empower youth through digital skills, and accelerate our shared vision of a connected, knowledge-driven future,” the IT ministry’s statement said.

Arab News reached out to GO Telecom but could not get an immediate response on more details about the AI hub.

In an earlier statement shared by the Pakistani IT ministry, GO Telecommunications Group CEO Yahya bin Saleh Al-Mansour said the discussions with the Pakistani IT minister in Riyadh underscored the “strong potential” for cooperation between Ƶ and Pakistan.

“The Group’s expansion into the Pakistani market aligns with our strategic vision of diversification and strengthening partnerships with friendly and brotherly nations,” he was quoted as saying.

The Pakistan Software Houses Association (P@SHA) welcomed the initiative, saying the AI hub would open new avenues for Pakistani startups in training, innovation and bilateral collaboration.

“This is an excellent initiative as it will provide Pakistani AI and telecommunications companies with access to the GO Telecom Group’s platform, enabling greater collaboration and growth opportunities,” P@SHA Chairman Sajjad Mustafa Syed told Arab News.

Pakistan and Ƶ have long enjoyed close ties, but in recent years have sought to broaden their cooperation further. During Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif’s visit to Riyadh in October 2024, they signed 34 memoranda of understanding worth $2.8 billion across multiple sectors.

Both countries are now planning to forge a partnership in the fields of artificial intelligence (AI) and cybersecurity, Pakistani state media reported last week.

Syed said the GO AI Hub would help increase the reach of Pakistani companies and startups to the Saudi market.

“Our companies have long lacked access to major international markets through a credible and established platform but with the GO AI Hub Pakistan, they will finally gain that opportunity as the Saudi telecom giant offers extensive reach in the Kingdom and region,” he added.