
Pakistan plans to launch transshipment operations between Gwadar and Gulf region
The statement came from officials at a high-level meeting of the Cabinet Committee on Gwadar Port operationalization, which was presided over by Planning Minister Ahsan Iqbal.
Maritime officials informed the participants that initial cargo categories will include minerals, dates, seafood, and cement, targeting sectors such as mining, fisheries, and processing industries.
Iqbal said Gwadar's geostrategic position as the shortest trade route to the Gulf and Central Asia highlighted the port's potential as a regional transshipment hub, the Radio Pakistan broadcaster reported.
'Iqbal emphasized the need to showcase Gwadar Port in international road-shows as a strategic trade hub linking the Gulf and Central Asia,' the report read. 'He directed stakeholders to promote the port's cost-effective trade routes and available incentives for international businesses.'
Gwadar, situated along the Arabian Sea, lies at the heart of the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC), under which Beijing has funneled tens of billions of dollars into massive transport, energy and infrastructure projects in Pakistan.
Pakistan, slowly recovering from a macroeconomic crisis under a $7 billion International Monetary Fund (IMF) deal, has been looking to capitalize on its geostrategic location to boost transit trade and foreign investment for a sustainable economic recovery.
The country plans to cut container dwell time at its seaports by up to 70 percent to improve trade competitiveness and ease congestion, while it last month reduced port charges for exporters by 50 percent at the country's second biggest Port Qasim.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Arab News
an hour ago
- Arab News
Pakistani tech firms urge 10-year tax stability, one-window compliance to ‘supercharge' exports
KARACHI: Pakistan can unlock billions in tech investment if it gives investors predictable taxes, friction-free remittances and a single digital compliance experience, the Pakistan Software Houses Association (P@SHA) said on Friday. P@SHA said it presented a 'Continuity & Consistency reform package' to the Ministry of Finance earlier this year, laying out a small number of high-impact changes that would slash compliance costs, bring tens of thousands of remote digital workers into the formal tax net, and catalyze both domestic and foreign investment into Pakistani tech firms. The requested changes are not subsidies; they are predictability, digitalization, and administrative simplification. Most steps can be budget-neutral or revenue-positive once increased documentation, broadened compliance, and higher recorded export flows are taken into account. 'Every serious investor, local or international, asks the same two questions: What will my tax exposure be, and will the rules change after I invest?' P@SHA Chairman Sajjad Syed said. 'Right now, innovators spend too much time navigating overlapping regimes and too little time building export-earning products. If we hard-code continuity and make compliance near effortless, capital will move to Pakistan.' Pakistan tech firms have been demonstrating their growing potential in the IT sector by showcasing their products and services at global forums, including the LEAP tech conference in Riyadh and GITEX global exhibition in Dubai. Pakistan recorded monthly IT exports of $338 million in June, up by 14% year on year and by 3% month on month, according to Karachi-based Toplines Securities brokerage and market research firm. This took Pakistan's annual IT exports to $3.8 billion, up by 18% YoY, in the outgoing fiscal year that ended in June. In its statement, P@SHA urged continuation of the 10-Year Final Tax Regime (FTR) on information technology/IT-enabled services (IT/ITeS) export income, removal of discrepancies in tax rates where Pakistani IT companies get penalized for running payrolls from Pakistan, exemption of the Capital Gains Tax to secure investor's confidence among other measures. The association proposed joint working sessions with the Federal Board of Revenue, Ministry of IT & Telecom, State Bank of Pakistan, National Tax Council, and provincial revenue authorities to translate its proposed reforms package into draft language, digital filing flows, and phased rollout milestones, recommending immediate start of technical work. 'Pakistan stands at an inflection point: with its young talent base, global client footprint, and expanding startup ecosystem, the country can compete for high-value digital work, if investors trust the rules,' it said. 'P@SHA urges policymakers to seize this moment to send that signal.'


Arab News
2 hours ago
- Arab News
Pakistan plans to build $10.5 million aquaculture park to promote seafood exports
KARACHI: Pakistan is planning to build Rs3 billion ($10.5 million) aquaculture park in the southern port city of Karachi, Maritime Affairs Minister Junaid Anwar Chaudhry announced on Saturday, amid efforts to strengthen the country's blue economy. According to the World Bank, the blue economy is defined as sustainable use of ocean resources for economic growth, improving livelihoods and creating jobs, while preserving the ocean ecosystem health. Pakistan has been pushing to modernize its port infrastructure and expand its role in regional trade by improving cargo handling, digitalizing port operations and encouraging public-private partnerships. Speaking at a meeting to review progress on blue economy, Chaudhry said this new aquaculture park will be built on 120 acres and directed the Qur'angi Fish Harbor Authority to submit its report within 10 days. 'Pakistani coastal waters are very suitable for aquaculture,' he said in a statement shared by the maritime affairs ministry. 'The project will be built under a public-private partnership and the park will boost seafood exports. Pakistan's fish and fish preparation exports reached $465.4 million in the outgoing fiscal year that ended in June, according to official data. The exports were up 13.4 percent from $410.3 million in the previous year. Authorities are currently trying to enhance the potential of Pakistan's fisheries, logistics and marine services while reducing environmental harm. 'Investment in aquaculture and port infrastructure is essential for national development,' Chaudhry told representatives of Gwadar Port, Qur'angi Fish Harbor, Marine Fisheries and Balochistan Chambers of Commerce and Industry at the meeting. 'The same aquaculture model will be implemented in Balochistan as well.' In May, the Pakistani government announced the creation of a new Maritime Chamber of Commerce and Industry (MCCI), saying it would serve as a specialized platform for uniting stakeholders from across the maritime spectrum to pursue greener policies and long-term economic resilience. 'This chamber will not only support investment and innovation in the maritime sector but also prioritize sustainability at ports, promote green technologies and foster carbon reduction strategies,' Chaudhry said at the time.


Arab News
5 hours ago
- Arab News
Taste of exile: Beloved Afghan street food disappears from Pakistani cities amid deportation drive
ISLAMABAD/KARACHI: In a bustling corner of Islamabad's F-10 Markaz, the scent of sizzling oil and green chili chutney once signaled the presence of Afghan street food. For the latest updates, follow us on Instagram @ Today, the aroma is gone and so are the stalls that created it — the hum of grills and laughter and life. 'There used to be a few [Afghan fries stalls] around my neighborhood and then one morning, they just upped and left,' said Hamza Nofil, 28, who used to daily have the crinkle-cut, ridged, and golden chips, always served with the signature green chutney. 'So, you know, it breaks my heart.' The heartbreak is shared by many in Pakistan's urban centers where those fries, and the people who served them, were part of a larger story — of exile, adaptation and community — that is now vanishing as a result of a sweeping deportation drive targeting Afghan nationals. Since November 2023, Pakistan has expelled nearly one million Afghans as part of a crackdown on undocumented foreigners. The government has also not renewed Proof of Registration (PoR) cards for 1.4 million Afghan refugees, allowing their legal stay to lapse in June 2024. While the policy has drawn criticism from rights groups and international powers, it is the quieter losses, of flavor, memory, and a sense of belonging, that now echo through city markets and street corners. Among the casualties are the street food stalls, modest, smoky kitchens on wheels, where generations of Afghan refugees introduced Pakistanis to flavors from across the border: the fries dunked in secret chutney, paratha-wrapped burgers and mounds of Kabuli Pulao rice heaped with raisins, nuts and slow-cooked beef. Shahid Ali, 22, a Pakistani vendor in F-10, said he remembered when there were six or seven Afghan fries stalls in the area, as well as those selling Afghan burgers wraps packed with shredded chicken or kebab, slathered with sauces and served in paratha. 'You won't see any Afghans around here because the government sent them back to Afghanistan,' Ali said. As Afghan families depart, Pakistani vendors have tried to mimic the recipes but something vital has been lost. 'We are missing them [Afghan food stalls],' said Iqra, 29, a banker who only gave her first name. 'I will definitely miss them, especially their green chutney. I loved that.' 'A WORLD IS GOING' In Karachi's Al-Asif Square, nicknamed 'Small Kabul' for its long-settled Afghan community, the losses are not just culinary. They are existential. 'The craftsmen are going, the shopkeepers are leaving,' said Sayed Abdul Wali, a 27-year-old shopkeeper. 'A world is going to Afghanistan.' Abdul Kabir, a Pakistani who sells traditional Afghan naan flatbreads, said demand had plummeted. 'Where once three sacks of flour would be used, now we only use one,' he said. 'Even the morning batch is still lying here.' Anthropologist Saeed Husain warned of cultural erasure, saying more than flavor was being lost. He described Afghan food culture as a form of lived knowledge, passed down from generation to generation, evolving with each retelling. 'All these traditions will be lost,' Husain said. 'And then we'll just have copies, really cheap copies… all of that will be lost too now.' Afghans began arriving in Pakistan in large numbers after the Soviet invasion of 1979, with successive waves fleeing war, drought, and political instability. In urban Pakistan, cities like Karachi and Islamabad, they became traders, laborers, mechanics, and cooks, helping build the very urban fabric from which they are now being erased. 'Pakistan is a country founded in 1947 and made by refugees,' said Dr. Sanaa Alimia, author of Refugee Cities: How Afghans Changed Urban Pakistan. The professor said Afghans were deeply woven into the economic and cultural fabric of urban centers and played a foundational role in shaping the cities of Pakistan, building homes, laying roads, running businesses — and serving food. 'There are many examples, from agricultural production and farming techniques, to mechanics, to doctors… artists, tandoor wallas, and so much more,' Dr. Alimai said. But she cautioned against reducing the worth of Afghans to their economic value. 'Human and political rights are about protecting and valuing people irrespective of if they contribute to the economy or not.' Back in Karachi, Mohsin, a local customer, feared not just the loss of food but of taste, tradition, and togetherness. 'If our Afghan brothers leave,' he said, 'then perhaps the taste and flavor will leave too.'