Pakistan launches sea turtle protection project to boost shrimp exports to US, GCC
Pakistan launches sea turtle protection project to boost shrimp exports to US, GCC/node/2618292/pakistan
Pakistan launches sea turtle protection project to boost shrimp exports to US, GCC
In this picture taken on November 28, 2023, newly-hatched green turtles crawl towards the Arabian Sea, as they are released by the marine conservationists on Sandspit beach in Karachi. (AFP/ file)
ISLAMABAD: Pakistan has launched a Rs90 million ($320,000) project to protect endangered sea turtles caught in shrimp trawling nets, the government said on Thursday, part of efforts to make its fishing industry more sustainable and boost seafood exports to the UD, EU and GCC countries.
The initiative, announced on Thursday by Federal Minister for Maritime Affairs Muhammad Junaid Anwar Chaudhry, includes the free distribution and installation of Turtle Excluder Devices (TEDs), hands-on training for trawler crews, and data monitoring to assess their impact on shrimp catch efficiency and net performance.
A Turtle Excluder Device is a specialized mechanism fitted into shrimp trawl nets that allows sea turtles and other large marine animals to escape while retaining shrimp.Â
“Pakistan currently sells shrimp at a comparatively low rate of about $2 per kilogram,” Chaudhry was quoted as saying in a statement by the Press Information Department.Â
“With TED compliance and improved international certification, the price could rise to $6 per kilogram, unlocking new opportunities in lucrative markets including the US, EU, and Gulf Cooperation Council countries.”
Chaudhry said the introduction of TEDs would help reduce accidental turtle capture, mitigate concerns from fishermen over shrimp loss and ensure Pakistan meets international sustainability standards. He added that Pakistan’s shrimp exports currently stand at around $100 million annually. TED compliance and continued adherence to international standards could, he said, triple export volumes and expand access to premium markets in the US, GCC, and Europe.
The minister said the project aligns with Pakistan’s commitments on marine biodiversity conservation and sustainable fishing, enhancing the country’s credibility in global seafood trade.Â
“This initiative will showcase Pakistan’s commitment to responsible marine resource management, enhancing its reputation in global seafood trade,” Chaudhry said, warning that non-compliance could risk future export restrictions:Â
“One hundred percent TED compliance and credible enforcement will be ensured. Continued non-compliance risks further deterioration of Pakistan’s seafood exports under international traceability regimes.”Â
Pakistan already exports shrimp and other seafood products to several GCC countries, including the United Arab Emirates, ÂÜŔňĘÓƵ and Oman, which account for a significant share of its seafood trade. The government hopes that improved certification and traceability measures will further strengthen this foothold in Gulf markets.
In August 2025, the United States lifted its four-year ban on Pakistani seafood imports after a US inspection team found that the country’s fisheries now meet American standards for protecting marine mammals during fishing operations. The decision restored access to one of the world’s largest seafood markets, valued at over $6 billion annually, and is expected to significantly boost Pakistan’s foreign exchange earnings.
The new sea turtle protection project, Chaudhry said, will help sustain that access and demonstrate Pakistan’s long-term compliance with global sustainability standards.Â
The initiative is being supported by the Trade Development Authority of Pakistan (TDAP), the Pakistan Fisheries Exporters Association (PAKFEA), the Sindh Trawler Owners and Fisheries Association (STOFA) and the Karachi Fish Harbor Authority, among others.
RAWALPINDI: Pakistan has recorded a dramatic reduction in blindness rates, from 1.78 percent in 1990 to just 0.5 percent today, according to a study by one of Pakistan’s leading non-profit eye hospitals, which credited decades of joint effort by public and private stakeholders for the improvement.
Founded in 1985, the Al-Shifa Trust Eye Hospital provides free and subsidized eye care through a national network of hospitals and outreach programs. The organization’s extensive fieldwork, data collection, and partnerships with government health departments have made it a key reference point for national blindness statistics and trends.
Pakistan’s health experts have long cited preventable eye diseases, including cataracts, trachoma and diabetic retinopathy, as a major cause of disability. But as the population grows and life expectancy rises, genetic disorders and lifestyle-related conditions are expected to form a growing share of the country’s vision loss burden, experts warned on Thursday.
Speaking to reporters on World Sight Day, which falls on Oct. 9 each year, prominent ophthalmologist Dr. Tayyab Afghani said while the country’s success against avoidable blindness was encouraging, the focus must now shift toward new and complex causes of vision loss.
“Genetic diseases are increasingly becoming a significant cause of blindness in Pakistan,” he said. “To address this, Al-Shifa Trust has established the country’s first ophthalmic genetics center, focused on early detection through community health education, qualified genetic counselling, and gene analysis.”
Afghani also warned that lifestyle factors such as diabetes and excessive screen time were fueling a rise in eye disorders among Pakistanis, particularly children.
“Apart from diabetes, myopia has reached epidemic levels in Pakistan and worldwide,” he said, urging families to limit children’s exposure to screens and promote regular eye exams through school screening programs.
Afghani called on the government to expand preventive eye care and rural infrastructure, warning that rising disease burdens could overwhelm public hospitals.
“The lack of trained specialists and unequal distribution of services continue to push low-income households toward expensive private treatment,” he said. “This leads to long-term economic and social impacts such as increased poverty and reduced productivity.”
To date, the Al-Shifa Trust has screened over three million children for vision-related issues nationwide.
The charity runs six hospitals in Rawalpindi, Muzaffarabad, Chakwal, Kohat, Sukkur and Gilgit, and plans to open a Lahore branch by 2027. It holds more than 150 free eye camps annually, treating over 900,000 patients and performing 73,000 surgeries each year, nearly 80 percent of them free of cost.
ISLAMABAD: A hunger crisis is looming in Pakistan as catastrophic floods have wiped out vast stretches of farmland in Punjab province, which produces around half of the country’s staple crops, the aid agency Islamic Relief warned on Thursday.
The charity said the floods, which began in June, have inundated about 1.8 million acres of agricultural land across Punjab, affecting up to 70 percent of the province, and are likely to disrupt at least two crop cycles, raising fears of severe food shortages and surging prices nationwide.
Nationwide, over 1,000 people have been killed and more than 4.5 million people affected since the monsoon season began on June 26. Many farmers in Punjab have lost all their crops, grain stocks and livestock — their only source of income — while some remain in damaged or flooded homes to protect surviving cattle.
“Punjab province is the most important food-producing region in Pakistan, but 70 percent of it has been flooded and crops and livelihoods have been washed away. It will have an impact across Pakistan and national food shortages are now looming,” said Raza Narejo, acting country director of Islamic Relief Pakistan.
“Many people here depend on agriculture, but now they have almost nothing. They are now completely dependent on government and humanitarian support. They urgently need food, water and sanitation services, and when they can return to their homes they will need seeds, fertilizer and further support to re-establish their crops on their land once more,” Narejo added.
Islamic Relief said it has so far provided assistance to more than 140,000 flood-affected people across Pakistan, distributing food, water, tents and hygiene supplies, and helping farmers to replant through seeds and other agricultural support.
Abdul Rehman, a 55-year-old farmer from Muradabad in Punjab province, said the floods came at night and left his family destitute.
“The floods came at night and we had to run away in a hurry. We couldn’t grab anything to take with us because we were in fear. In the morning everything was destroyed,” he told Islamic Relief. “We had two goats and two sheep but they all drowned.”
Pakistan, among the world’s most climate-vulnerable countries, has seen repeated bouts of destructive monsoon flooding.
In 2022, similar deluges killed more than 1,700 people and caused economic losses exceeding $30 billion, according to government and UN estimates.
ISLAMABAD: In the quiet of his home studio on the outskirts of Islamabad, Raja Changez Sultan moves with unhurried rhythm between canvas and easel.
The air smells faintly of turpentine. Tubes of paint spill across a long wooden table. A half-finished landscape leans against the wall, its blues and ochres still wet.
At 76, the painter-poet still carries the energy of a man mid-conversation with his work — mixing colors, reciting lines of poetry under his breath and occasionally stepping back to study the play of light.
For the soft-spoken Sultan, art has never been about recognition.
“Artists don’t become famous, their art does,” he said. “If the art speaks to people, if it touches them, that does you a whole lot of good because that’s what life is about as an artist.”
It’s a philosophy that has guided him through five decades of creative exploration, from the psychological depths of his Divided Self series to the sweeping grandeur of Himalayan Odyssey.
Born in Shakarparian, Islamabad, in 1949, just two years after Pakistan itself, Sultan is one of the country’s most distinguished painter-poets, equally at ease with the canvas and the page.
His recent retrospective, In Trinity Together, held last month at the Pakistan National Council of the Arts (PNCA), marked over fifty years of his creative journey, featuring more than 100 works from seven major series alongside poetry readings and live painting.
He has exhibited widely across Pakistan, Europe, and the Middle East and served in key cultural institutions, including as Director General of the PNCA. His career, spanning from the United Nations in Geneva to Islamabad’s galleries, mirrors his belief that art must bridge the aesthetic, the moral and the human.
“I left Pakistan when I was 15,” he recalled. “So, where Pakistan was concerned, it wasn’t really arts that really mattered. I was into math and physics, and they’d make very poor artists.”
At a boarding school in England, he met art teacher John Alford, who changed the course of his life.
“He’s still alive, and we’re still the best of friends,” Sultan said. “I guess I’ll always remain a student. But the relationship transcended into something much bigger.”
Exposure to European masters further shaped his sensibility.
“Every painting that you see has a story to tell,” he said. “You learn, really, from everybody, not just one single artist.”
When he began painting in 1979, Pakistan’s art institutions were few but artists were emerging, Sultan explained.
“Whether it’s Sadquain or whether it’s Gulgee or Allah Baksh or somebody who did miniatures, there were genuine efforts being made,” he said, naming three world-renowned Pakistani artists.
But the infrastructure was limited.
“Whether they were sufficient or not, it’s obvious that they weren’t because here’s a country with a huge population and you can count the number of art schools on one hand.”
Sultan’s early work was largely abstract, but he soon realized that local audiences struggled to connect with it.
“I felt that abstraction isn’t what really communicates that well out here,” he explained. “So I tried to find a middle ground, leaving enough to the imagination of a viewer, but at the same time giving them a sufficient amount to relate to.”
That search for connection led to a body of work merging psychology and poetry.
“Whether it’s the series of Divided Self, which was the first real series that I began, I was 17, 18 at that time,” he said. “And it’s still my most important series that I work on.”
Sultan said the series explored the “pluses and minuses” of human nature, the inner struggle between multiple selves that define every person.
By the early 1990s, his focus turned outward, from the internal landscapes of Divided Self to the vastness of Himalayan Odyssey.
“Our mountains afford you a kind of luxury where there’s earth, air, fire, or water,” the painter said. “They’re interacting with sunlight through a very rare quantum affair.”
That project, accompanied by his poem In These Silent Wastes Only Spirits Roam, inspired The Wood Nymphs and The Crucifixion of Eve.
“Women in this country need a much, much, much stronger force to liberate them,” he said. “Liberation doesn’t mean that they have to take off and fly out of a cage and spread their wings. What it means is that they also realize the importance, the kind of role they can play in Pakistan and be leaders, be whatever they want to be.”
ART AND PAKISTAN’S EVOLVING IDENTITY
Though his career took him from Geneva to Islamabad, Sultan’s reflections on recognition remain grounded.
“Whether you have gotten somewhere or not is not really for you to judge,” he said. “It’s for time to tell. And in the meantime, what will help you is that you keep your concentration on your work.”
Indeed, the poet-painter has little patience for self-promotion.
“These works don’t really find avenues unless you become a marketeer yourself,” he said. “And I refuse to spend my time wanting to market myself. I’d rather do my work and leave it at that.”
For Sultan, art and cultural identity are also deeply connected, especially as he came of age as an artist in the shadow of military rule, when state narratives of strength and discipline often left little space for reflection or beauty.
“The art scene then [seventies] was that the artists really didn’t have much of a place in our society,” he said. “Here’s a country with a martial race type attitude. If you wish to see the concept of beautifying our cities, they’d put a plane in the middle of a square or roundabout and maybe a tank in another place.”
He said the general awareness of art in Pakistan was “not of an aesthetic kind but one that told a story about a country that might have been in a war or has the ability of standing up and protecting its own.”
That environment, he reflected, “doesn’t really make for a good breeding place for artists — but then it’s one of those things where somebody has the will, there’s always a way.”
The painter argued that such displays of power reflect a young nation still struggling to define its cultural identity.
“We are one of the most diverse countries on God’s earth,” he said, “but also one of the most complicated, because it’s newly born. Seventy-five or eighty years is not enough to give you an identity, especially when the level of education has not been very high all these years.”
That search for identity, he believes, is precisely where art can play a unifying role.
“Arts are one area that can give people the kind of unity that is needed for the future,” Sultan said.
When asked about legacy, Sultan returned to his familiar ethos of persistence and humility.
“I guess that I have been able to work consistently at whatever I started and set out to do,” he said. “There are no shortcuts in life. You stick with it, it will stick with you. You don’t stick with it, it will walk away just like anybody else.”
He added that his only true competition is himself.
“You’re never competing with another artist, you’re competing with your last painting. Is the new one better than that? The interactive for improvement is well within you yourself.”
POETRY FOR THE PLANET
Now in his seventies, Sultan is collaborating with his son on a poetry project focused on endangered species.
“We as the human race have not been kind to wildlife,” he said. “What we have done to our wildlife is criminal really. So many species have walked off the face of the earth.”
The father-son duo initially set out to write 100 poems but never stopped.
“It’s been 15 years and we still don’t know where to stop,” he said. “There are so many wonderful creatures about whom if we learn a little, our world becomes that much richer.”
Asked what advice he would offer young Pakistani artists, Sultan was direct.
“Never look for shortcuts. If they can avoid shortcuts, they’ll be solving half the problem of life,” he said. “And no artist needs an ego. If you want to face your worst enemy, put an ego in front of you and say this is who you are and you’ll find yourself in trouble.”
His closing words echo his life’s philosophy:
“Whatever you take up, stick with it ... Be true to that particular field and put your absolute very best in it without any shortcuts. Value what others do and do what you value.”
ISLAMABAD: Pakistan has launched a groundbreaking initiative to align its financial sector with global climate goals through the Paris-Aligned Finance Fellowship that is set to begin in mid-October, the country’s central bank said on Thursday.
The program, financed by the German Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development (BMZ) and implemented by GIZ Pakistan in collaboration with the State Bank of Pakistan (SBP), aims to build the capacity of financial institutions to manage climate risks and unlock green investment.
As global trade and investment increasingly demand low-carbon and sustainable practices, the fellowship positions Pakistan’s financial sector to support businesses in adapting to changing market requirements. By embedding climate and sustainability principles into financial strategies, the initiative is expected to promote economic resilience and competitiveness.
A key outcome of the fellowship will be the creation of a community of practice among financial institutions to collaborate on advancing climate finance in Pakistan. Organizers hope the program will catalyze long-term changes in banking and investment practices, supporting projects that enhance climate resilience, foster green exports, and contribute to sustainable growth.
“Strengthening the financial sector’s ability to respond to climate challenges is central to ensuring sustainable growth,” Maraj Mahmood, managing director of the SBP’s Banking Services Corporation, was quoted as saying by the central bank.
“The State Bank of Pakistan is pleased to support this important initiative.”
Pakistan, which ranks among nations most vulnerable to climate change, has seen erratic changes in its weather patterns which have led to frequent heat waves, untimely rains, storms, cyclones, floods and droughts in recent years. As monsoon floods killed 1,037 and caused initial losses worth $1.31 billion, experts have warned that without urgent adaptation and mitigation measures, the human and economic toll of climate change will only deepen in the years ahead.
The fellowship brings together 50 senior professionals from the central bank, commercial banks, development finance institutions, and regulatory bodies, who will undergo specialized training in sustainable finance, focusing on climate risk management, transition finance, sustainability reporting and green lending practices, according to the SBP.
The program kicks off with a Foundation Track in Karachi on October 13–17, followed by an Expert Track in Germany, providing fellows with international exposure and advanced tools to integrate climate considerations into financial decision-making.
“This fellowship will enable Pakistan’s banks to unlock new opportunities for climate-smart investment while managing risks more effectively,” Maria-Jose Poddey, the GIZ Pakistan country director, was quoted as saying by the SBP.
“It is about preparing the sector for the future of global finance.”
South Africa lose fast bowler Maphaka for Pakistan white ball tour
The 19-year-old has been replaced by Ottneil Baartman to face Namibia, Pakistan in T20s
Lizaad Williams is his replacement for One Day International matches on the subcontinent
Updated 09 October 2025
Reuters
Teenage left-arm fast bowler Kwena Maphaka has been ruled out of South Africa’s one-off Twenty20 international against Namibia in Windhoek on Saturday and their entire white ball tour to Pakistan after being sidelined with a hamstring strain.
The 19-year-old has been replaced in the squad to face Namibia and the T20 series against Pakistan by seamer Ottneil Baartman. Lizaad Williams is his replacement for the One Day Internationals on the subcontinent.
Maphaka was injured in a domestic four-day fixture last week and subsequent medical assessments indicated a Grade 1-2 injury which will require rehabilitation over the next four weeks.
South Africa play three T20s in Pakistan between October 28-November 1, and three ODIs from November 4-8.