
IMF Makes Progress Toward Reaching Staff Agreement with Pakistan on First Review of $7 Bln Program
The mission and Pakistani authorities will continue policy discussions via video conference to finalize these discussions over the coming days, the statement said, according to the Pakistani newspaper, The News.
'The IMF and the Pakistani authorities made significant progress toward reaching a Staff Level Agreement (SLA) on the first review under the 37-month Extended Arrangement under the Extended Fund Facility (EFF),' Porter said in a statement on Friday.
The lender's team, led by Porter, was in Pakistan from February 24 to March 14 to hold discussions on the first review of Pakistan's economic program supported by the EFF and the possibility of a new arrangement under the lender's Resilience and Sustainability Facility (RSF).
The South Asian country, which has faced an economic meltdown in recent years, is treading a long path to economic recovery under the $7 billion IMF program it secured in September last year.
Meanwhile, the Pakistan-Afghanistan Joint Chamber of Commerce and Industry has called for immediate action from Islamabad to resolve the trade crisis with the Taliban and Central Asian countries.
The chamber's president highlighted the negative impacts of the closed Torkham border crossing and transit taxes on Pakistan's economy and regional trade.
Junaid Makda, president of the Pakistan-Afghanistan Joint Chamber of Commerce and Industry, said on Friday that increasing trade barriers, rising transportation costs, and the continued closure of the Torkham border are severely harming cross-border businesses.
Makda also warned of potential long-term damage to Pakistan's economy due to the ongoing situation, stating that it forces traders to use Iranian ports instead of Pakistani routes, which will harm the country's trade network.
The Torkham border has been closed for more than 20 days due to border tensions between Pakistan and the Taliban. Pakistan's Ministry of Foreign Affairs has stated that the crossing will remain closed until the Taliban halt construction activities in the area.
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
No more ‘acting': Taliban mark fourth year in power by dropping interim titles
KABUL: Mullah Hibatullah Akhundzada, the supreme leader of the Taliban, has ordered his ministers to remove the 'acting' designation from their titles, a move experts say indicates the establishment of a permanent Afghan government. Weeks after the Taliban took control of Afghanistan in August 2021, the group formed a caretaker government consisting almost entirely of senior figures and without female representation, which has remained in place ever since. As Afghanistan marks the fourth anniversary on Friday since the Taliban takeover of the country, the group's reclusive chief, who rules largely from Kandahar, told his officials to stop using 'caretaker' in their roles. 'All ministers and the cabinet of the Islamic Emirate should not use the word caretaker in their titles,' Akhundzada said in a statement. When the Taliban first announced a caretaker administration it was framed as a temporary set-up before the country established an official and inclusive government that included women and members of Afghanistan's diverse ethnic groups. Afghans were expecting a voting system to establish a permanent government that would include their voices, whether it was in the form of elections or a 'loya jirga,' a grand assembly traditionally held to reach a consensus on important political issues. 'But now that the supreme leader (has) instructed that the current government is official, from a legal perspective the supreme leader's decree constitutes a law for the Taliban government, replacing the constitution,' Abdul Saboor Mubariz, board member of the Center for Strategic and Regional Studies in Kabul, told Arab News. 'The political implication of this decision could be that there is no hope for major change in the present form of government.' The initial announcement of a caretaker government, he added, was in the hope of gaining official recognition by the international community. With the exception of Russia in July, no other nation has formally recognized Taliban rule since the group seized power in 2021. 'But now they (have) realized that no big progress has been made in that regard so they want to make the current government permanent,' Mubariz said. Naseer Ahmad Nawidy, a political science professor at Salam University in Kabul, said the removal of 'caretaker' in ministerial titles could mean higher authority for Taliban officials. '(It's) something positive. The ministries in Kabul need to have (a) free hand and more authority in their relevant tasks considering the expertise required for each sector,' he told Arab News. The Taliban also used the term initially to mean that 'the ministers were only temporary and that the actual authority was only with the supreme leader in Kandahar,' Nawidy added. 'It also has another message to the executive officials: that no one should be above obeying and all decrees of the leader must be implemented without any questions,' he said. 'The new announcement is an indication that the Islamic Emirate wants to show that the government is fully established.'


Arab News
2 hours ago
- Arab News
Prominent religio-political leader's children killed, wife injured in northwestern Pakistan home shooting
PESHAWAR: A shooting at the residence of a prominent religio-political party leader, Mufti Kifayatullah, in Pakistan's northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province left his son and daughter dead and his wife critically wounded on Saturday, while he himself sustained serious injuries, according to an official statement. A former provincial lawmaker from Malakand division and district chief of the Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam-Fazl (JUI-F) party, Kifayatullah was attacked inside his residence in Batkhela, Levies officials said in a statement. 'A shooting incident took place at the house of Mufti Kifayatullah, district chief of JUI-F in Batkhela,' the statement said. 'As a result of the firing, Kifayatullah was seriously injured, his daughter and son were killed, and his wife was also critically wounded.' Authorities said the assailant was the JUI-F politician's own son, who managed to escape after the attack. The bodies and the injured were taken to the District Headquarters Hospital in Batkhela, where doctors later said Kifayatullah's condition was out of danger. The motive behind the shooting was not immediately clear, though the incident appeared to be linked to some domestic dispute. The JUI-F, a major religio-political party with deep roots in northwestern Pakistan, has long exercised influence in the area. However, it struggled in the 2024 general elections, with leaders blaming security threats for their inability to run a full campaign.


Arab News
4 hours ago
- Arab News
Pakistan confirms ‘successful deployment' of satellite launched with China
ISLAMABAD: The Pakistan Space and Upper Atmosphere Research Commission (SUPARCO) has confirmed the 'successful deployment' and 'operational readiness' of the country's latest remote sensing satellite, launched from Xichang Satellite Launch Center (XSLC) in China, on July 31. The satellite, PRSS-1, will primarily be used in the fields of land resource surveys and disaster prevention and mitigation, and it will help promote the development of Pakistan, Planning Minister Ahsan Iqbal said this month. SUPARCO said the satellite, following the successful launch, has established 'stable contact' with ground stations and begun capturing and transmitting high-resolution imagery, greatly enhancing data availability and reliability for various national sectors. 'The satellite will deliver high-quality imaging capabilities to support a wide range of applications, revolutionizing urban planning, infrastructure development, and regional planning by monitoring urban expansion and growth trends,' it said in a statement on Friday. 'It will strengthen disaster management efforts through timely data for early warnings and rapid response to floods, landslides, earthquakes, and other hazards, while also aiding environmental protection by tracking glacier recession, deforestation, and climate change indicators.' The satellite will enhance agricultural productivity through precision farming, mapping of crop patterns, and improved water resource management, thereby contributing to food security, according to SUPARCO. In addition, it will play a strategic role in national development projects such as the China–Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) by mapping transportation networks, identifying geohazard risks and facilitating efficient resource allocation that will not only improve decision-making across multiple sectors but also promote sustainable socio-economic development and strengthen Pakistan's technological autonomy. The satellite launch and deployment mark another step in Pakistan's growing engagement with outer space through Chinese assistance. 'This remarkable accomplishment highlights Pakistan's advancing capabilities in space-based technologies, and SUPARCO's dedication to strengthening national infrastructure for Earth observation,' SUPARCO said. 'It not only contributes to achieving self-reliance but also opens new avenues for advancement, sustainability and informed decision-making across key sectors.' China and Pakistan are also preparing to send the first Pakistani astronaut into space aboard China's Tiangong space station, with training programs currently underway.