logo
Pakistan says it held productive trade talks in Washington

Pakistan says it held productive trade talks in Washington

The Hindua day ago
Pakistan said it held productive trade talks with the U.S. in Washington on Friday (July 18, 2025) to advance economic cooperation, according to a statement from the South Asian country's finance ministry.
Finance Minister Muhammad Aurangzeb met U.S. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick and U.S. Trade Representative Ambassador Jamieson Greer, the statement said.
"Both sides expressed satisfaction with the progress in enhancing trade and economic ties, a cornerstone of Pakistan-U.S. bilateral relations," the statement added.
It said Mr. Aurangzeb emphasized that the U.S. remained Pakistan's largest trading partner.
Both sides expressed optimism that ongoing trade talks would yield positive outcomes, benefiting the economies of both countries, the finance ministry said.
Pakistan was optimistic that the trade talks would conclude in a week's time after a virtual meeting between Mr. Aurangzeb and Mr. Lutnick late last month.
The negotiations, focused on reciprocal tariffs, are part of a broader push to reset economic ties at a time of shifting geopolitical alignments and Pakistan's efforts to avoid steep U.S. duties on exports.
Pakistan faces a 29% tariff on exports to the U.S. under President Donald Trump's measures to target countries with large trade surpluses with the U.S.
Pakistan's surplus was around $3 billion in 2024.
To offset the imbalance and ease tariff pressures, Islamabad has offered to import more U.S. goods, including crude oil, and to open up investment opportunities through concessions for U.S. firms in Pakistan's mining sector.
U.S.-Pakistan relations saw a major boost when Trump hosted Pakistan's army chief Field Marshal Asim Munir at the White House last month in an unprecedented meeting.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

INDIA bloc allies meet online for Monsoon Session strategy, set to raise Op Sindoor, Bihar SIR in House
INDIA bloc allies meet online for Monsoon Session strategy, set to raise Op Sindoor, Bihar SIR in House

The Print

timean hour ago

  • The Print

INDIA bloc allies meet online for Monsoon Session strategy, set to raise Op Sindoor, Bihar SIR in House

It was the first meeting of the INDIA bloc in more than a year, albeit a virtual one. The alliance leaders last met at Kharge's residence on 5 June 2024, a day after the Lok Sabha election results were announced. The meeting, which included representatives from 24 opposition parties, was attended by top Congress leaders, including party president Mallikarjun Kharge, Lok Sabha Leader of Opposition Rahul Gandhi, and parliamentary party chairperson Sonia Gandhi. New Delhi: Leaders of the INDIA bloc held a virtual meeting Saturday to plan their strategy for the upcoming Monsoon Session of Parliament, vowing to corner the Modi government over the Pahalgam terror attack and the sudden halt of Operation Sindoor. Apart from the Aam Aadmi Party, which has pulled out of the alliance, leaders of all other members of the coalition including Trinamool Congress national general secretary Abhishek Banerjee attended and spoke in the meeting which lasted nearly two hours. Sources who attended the meeting said that, in his remarks, Rahul said that the Pahalgam terror attack and the 'sudden halt' of the military operations against Pakistan were major issues that the Opposition must raise unitedly in Parliament. Leaders, including Rahul, also referred to US President Donald Trump's latest claim that five fighter jets were shot down during Operation Sindoor and underlined the need to question Prime Minister Narendra Modi's silence on the matter. Sources close to Banerjee told ThePrint that the Trinamool leader questioned the one-year extension given to Intelligence Bureau chief Tapan Deka despite Jammu and Kashmir Lt Governor Manoj Sinha admitting that intel failure led to the 22 April attack in Pahalgam resulting in the deaths of 26 people. The TMC national general secretary, who was part of a multi-party delegation dispatched by the Centre to various countries to present India's case against Pakistan-sponsored terrorism, is also learnt to have questioned the objectives achieved by the initiative. 'How many countries came in our support? Instead of briefing our own people, MPs were sent to brief people and relevant stakeholders of other countries,' Banerjee is learnt to have said. Sources said CPI general secretary emphasised on the need for the INDIA bloc parties to act in a more coordinated fashion and avoid bickering in public. His suggestion came against the backdrop of the controversy sparked by Rahul Gandhi's remarks that he fights both the Communist Party of India (Marxist) and the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh ideologically. CPI(M) general secretary who had termed Rahul's statement as deeply insulting, also attended the meeting but did not raise the matter, multiple leaders, who were in attendance, said. CPI(ML) general secretary Dipankar Bhattacharya said there was a near consensus on the need to put the Modi government in the dock on the subject of foreign policy and India's 'complete isolation'. 'Many leaders expressed the need for holding a physical meeting of the alliance soon. It is likely that the meeting will be held during the Monsoon Session itself as it will last one entire month,' Dipankar said after the end of the meeting. Congress general secretary (organisation) K.C. Venugopal said that the meeting would be held in August. Later, Congress Rajya Sabha Deputy Leader Pramod Tiwari told reporters that the Opposition also agreed to question the government's position on the continuing Israeli assault against Gaza. Among other issues that the Opposition resolved to raise in the Parliament include the demand for restoration of statehood to Jammu and Kashmir and the Special Intensive Revision in Bihar. Jammu and Kashmir Chief Minister Omar Abdullah also attended the meeting. The other CM present there was Jharkhand's Hemant Soren. The Samajwadi Party was represented by Ramgopal Yadav, while Tiruchi Siva of the Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam also spoke at the meeting. (Edited by Tony Rai) Also Read: Narasimha Rao reason why coalition govts perform better than majority govts, says Naidu

Tech company CEO resigns after controversy over video captured at Coldplay concert
Tech company CEO resigns after controversy over video captured at Coldplay concert

The Hindu

timean hour ago

  • The Hindu

Tech company CEO resigns after controversy over video captured at Coldplay concert

The IT company CEO captured in a widely circulated video showing him embracing an employee at a Coldplay concert has resigned. Andy Byron resigned from his job as CEO of Cincinnati-based Astronomer Inc., according to a statement posted on LinkedIn by the company on Saturday (July 19, 2025). 'Astronomer is committed to the values and culture that have guided us since our founding. Our leaders are expected to set the standard in both conduct and accountability, and recently, that standard was not met,' the company said in its post on LinkedIn. The move comes a day after the company said that Mr. Byron had been placed on leave and the board of directors had launched a formal investigation into the jumbotron incident, which went viral. A company spokesman later confirmed in a statement to AP that it was Mr. Byron and Astronomer chief people officer Kristin Cabot in the video. The short video clip shows Mr. Byron and Ms. Cabot as captured on the jumbotron at Gillette Stadium in Foxborough, Massachusetts, during a Coldplay concert on Wednesday (July 16, 2025). Lead singer Chris Martin asked the cameras to scan the crowd for his 'Jumbotron Song,' when he sings a few lines about the people the camera lands on. 'Either they're having an affair or they're just very shy,' he joked. Internet sleuths identified the man as the chief executive officer of a U.S.-based company and the woman as its chief people officer. Pete DeJoy, Astronomer's cofounder and chief product officer, has been tapped as interim CEO while the company conducts a search for Byron's successor. It's easy to miss, but most concert venues have signs informing the audience that they could be filmed during the event. Look for them on the walls when you arrive and around the bar areas or toilets. It's common practice especially when bands like to use performances for music videos or concert films. The venue in this case, Gillette Stadium in Foxborough, also has a privacy policy online which states: 'When you visit our location or attend or participate in an event at our location, we may capture your image, voice and/or likeness, including through the use of CCTV cameras and/or when we film or photograph you in a public location.' 'They probably would have got away with it if they hadn't reacted,' said Alison Taylor, a clinical associate professor at New York University's Stern School of Business. And by the time the alleged identities emerged on social media, it hit a classic nerve around 'leaders acting like the rules don't apply to them,' she added. Still, Mr. Taylor and others stress how quickly such a video lead to an internet search to find the people involved — and note that it's important to remember that such 'doxing' isn't just reserved for famous people. Beyond someone simply spotting a familiar face and spreading the word, technological advances, such as the rising adoption of artificial intelligence, has made it easier and faster overall to find just about anyone in a viral video today. 'It's a little bit unsettling how easily we can be identified with biometrics, how our faces are online, how social media can track us — and how the internet has gone from being a place of interaction, to a gigantic surveillance system,' said Mary Angela Bock, an associate professor in the University of Texas at Austin's School of Journalism and Media. 'When you think about it, we are being surveilled by our social media. They're tracking us in exchange for entertaining us.'

Bangladesh's Islamist party projects force with a big rally in Dhaka
Bangladesh's Islamist party projects force with a big rally in Dhaka

The Hindu

time5 hours ago

  • The Hindu

Bangladesh's Islamist party projects force with a big rally in Dhaka

Hundreds of thousands of supporters of Bangladesh's largest Islamist party rallied in the capital on Saturday (July 19, 2025) to show their strength ahead of elections expected next year, as the South Asian nation stands at a crossroads after the ouster of former Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina. An interim government headed by Nobel Peace Prize laureate Muhammad Yunus said the next election would be held in April but his administration did not rule out a possibility of polls in February as strongly demanded by the Bangladesh Nationalist Party and its allies. Jamaat-e-Islami, which had sided with Pakistan during Bangladesh's war of independence in 1971, said earlier it would mobilise 1 million people on Saturday. While Ms. Hasina was in power from 2009 until she was toppled in student-led protests last year and fled to India, top leaders of Jamaat-e-Islami were either executed or jailed on charges of crimes against humanity and other serious crimes in 1971. In late March in 1971 Pakistan's military had launched a violent crackdown on the city of Dhaka, then part of East Pakistan, to quell a rising nationalist movement seeking independence for what is today known as Bangladesh. The party on Saturday placed a seven-point demand to the Yunus-led administration to ensure a free, fair and peaceful election, the trial of all mass killings, essential reforms and proclamation and implementation of a charter involving last year's mass uprising. It also wants the introduction of a proportional representation system in the election. Thousands of supporters of Jamaat-e-Islami had spent the night on the Dhaka University campus before the rally. On Saturday morning, they continued to stream toward the Suhrawardy Udyan, a historical ground where the Pakistani army had surrendered to a joint force of India and Bangladesh on Dec. 16 in 1971, ending the nine-month war. 'We are here for a new Bangladesh where Islam would be the guiding principle of governance, where good and honest people will rule the country, and there will be no corruption,' Iqbal Hossain, 40, told The Associated Press. 'We will sacrifice our lives, if necessary, for this cause.' Many of the young supporters in their 20s and 30s were also present. 'Under Jamaat-e-Islami, this country will have no discrimination. All people will have their rights. Because we follow the path of the holy book, Quran,' Mohidul Morsalin Sayem, a 20-year-old student, said. 'If all the Islamist parties join hands soon, nobody will be able to take power from us.' It was the first time the party was allowed to hold a rally on this ground since 1971. To many, the decision signaled a shift supported by Yunus' government in which Islamists are gaining momentum with further fragmentation of Bangladesh's politics and shrinking of liberal forces. Hasina, whose father was the independence leader and the country's first president, is a fierce political rival of Jamaat-e-Islami. The party is expected to contest 300 parliamentary seats and is attempting to forge alliances with other Islamist groups and parties in hopes of becoming a third force in the country behind the BNP, headed by former Prime Minister Khaleda Zia, and Hasina's former ruling Awami League party. The party had previously shared power with the BNP, and it had two senior Cabinet members under Zia in 2001-2006. After Hasina was ousted, tensions grew between parties over reforms agenda undertaken by the Yunus government, which is facing challenges to establish order in the country. The government has been criticized by Hasina's party and others for using force in a confrontation with protesters in a Hasina stronghold on Wednesday, where four people died. Their families complained that authorities did not conduct autopsies and hurriedly buried or cremated their relatives. Autopsies are part of an investigation in any violence. Yunus' office said the government was doing everything lawfully in Gopalganj, the district where the violence occurred. Jamaat-e-Islami has now established close ties with a new political party formed by students who led the anti-Hasina uprising. Both Jamaat-e-Islami and the students' National Citizen Party also promote anti-India campaign. The Yunus-led administration has banned the Awami League and Hasina has been in exile in India since Aug. 5. She is facing charges of crimes against humanity. The United Nations said in February that up to 1,400 people may have been killed during the anti-Hasina uprising in July-August last year.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store