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Pakistan to create digital IDs of citizens in economic transformation push

Pakistan to create digital IDs of citizens in economic transformation push
A election official man checks an ID of a voter during Pakistan's general election at a polling station in Lahore on July 25, 2018. (AFP/File)
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Updated 17 August 2025

Pakistan to create digital IDs of citizens in economic transformation push

Pakistan to create digital IDs of citizens in economic transformation push
  • Pakistan, a country of over 240 million people, has a vast informal economy and low tax compliance
  • The government has long identified digitization as key to improve governance and reduce corruption

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan will develop digital identities of all its citizens to enable secure and efficient payments, Pakistani state media reported on Sunday, amid the Islamabad’s push for economic transformation.

The report comes weeks after Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif directed provincial governments to fully cooperate with the center to move the country toward a “cashless” system as the central government aims to digitize the economy for greater transparency. Pakistan is a cash-dominated market where a significant portion of transactions, particularly in the informal sector, are conducted in cash.

In recent years, the country’s central bank has taken steps to ensure a transition toward a more cashless economy so that transactions are more traceable, reducing chances of tax evasion and corruption. Pakistan’s digital payments have also been on the rise. Since its 2021 launch, the central bank’s Raast system has processed over 892 million transactions worth Rs20 trillion ($72 billion) as of July 2025.

On Sunday, PM Sharif presided over a review meeting in Islamabad on cashless economy, at which he directed provincial chief secretaries to fully cooperate with the federal government in expanding the Raast digital payment system to the district level.

“The meeting was briefed that Pakistan will develop digital public infrastructure to create digital IDs for every citizen, integrating national Identity Cards, biometrics, and mobile numbers,” the Radio Pakistan broadcaster reported.

“These digital IDs will enable secure and efficient payments. It was further said that the provincial governments have shown significant progress in linking government-to-public and public-to-government payments with the Raast system.”

Pakistan, a country of over 240 million people, has a vast informal economy and low tax compliance. The government has long identified digitization as a key tool to improve governance, reduce corruption and expand the country’s narrow tax base.

The government has set an ambitious tax collection target of Rs14,131 billion ($49.46 billion) for the fiscal year 2025-26 (FY26), reflecting a nine-percent increase over last year’s goal.

Last month, Pakistan launched the Merchant Onboarding Framework that requires banks and payment providers to equip all merchants with Raast-enabled digital payment tools such as QR codes and POS [Point of Sale] systems. In May, the government also approved setting up the Pakistan Digital Assets Authority to regulate blockchain-based financial infrastructure.

Speaking at Sunday’s meeting, Sharif said his government was working on a priority basis to digitize the economy and transform financial transactions to cashless and digital system.

“Federal development agencies have granted Right of Way for fiber connectivity, while discussions are ongoing with Pakistan Railways and the National Highway Authority to expand digital infrastructure,” the report said, citing officials at the meeting.


Global particle physics lab reviews Pakistan’s scientific progress as associate member

Global particle physics lab reviews Pakistan’s scientific progress as associate member
Updated 29 August 2025

Global particle physics lab reviews Pakistan’s scientific progress as associate member

Global particle physics lab reviews Pakistan’s scientific progress as associate member
  • Delegation from CERN, which runs world’s largest particle accelerator, visits Pakistani research institutes
  • Pakistan joined CERN in 2015, gaining access to global projects, training and technology transfer

ISLAMABAD: A high-level delegation from the European Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN) has completed a five-day visit to Pakistan to review the country’s progress as an associate member, the foreign ministry said on Friday.

CERN, based in Geneva, Switzerland, is the world’s leading particle physics laboratory, best known for operating the Large Hadron Collider — the largest and most powerful particle accelerator in the world. The institution was founded in 1954 by European nations on the principle of “Science for Peace” and today counts 25 full members and nine associate members, including Pakistan.

“Through its Associate Membership, Pakistan has gained significant benefits — advancing the frontiers of scientific knowledge, fostering technological development, and training a new generation of scientists and engineers,” the ministry said in a statement.

The five-member CERN team met with the Chairman of the Pakistan Atomic Energy Commission (PAEC) and toured a number of institutions between Aug. 24–28.

These included the National Center for Physics (NCP), Heavy Mechanical Complex-3 (HMC-3), Pakistan Institute of Engineering and Applied Sciences (PIEAS), Pakistan Institute of Nuclear Science and Technology (PINSTECH), Institute of Nuclear Medicine and Oncology (INMOL), and the National Institute for Laser and Optronics (NILOP).

Pakistan became an associate member of CERN on July 31, 2015, with PAEC designated as the lead coordinating agency for the collaboration. Pakistani scientists and engineers have since contributed to CERN’s experiments and technology development while gaining training and access to high-tech procurement programs.

The visit underlined Pakistan’s efforts to strengthen international scientific partnerships and build domestic research capacity at a time when the country seeks to expand its technological base.


Pakistan breaches riverbank to save major city as monsoon floods kill 20 in Punjab

Pakistan breaches riverbank to save major city as monsoon floods kill 20 in Punjab
Updated 19 min 29 sec ago

Pakistan breaches riverbank to save major city as monsoon floods kill 20 in Punjab

Pakistan breaches riverbank to save major city as monsoon floods kill 20 in Punjab
  • 429,000 evacuated, 1,769 villages submerged, about 1.45 million people affected in Pakistan’s most populous province
  • PM says working paper to soon be shared with provincial governments to develop joint plan against climate change

ISLAMABAD: Pakistani authorities deliberately breached a river embankment in Punjab on Friday to divert powerful flood surges away from Jhang city, as disaster officials reported 20 deaths in the province this week and more than 429,000 people evacuated.

The flood emergency comes at the height of the South Asian monsoon, when rivers routinely swell but in recent years have become more destructive due to climate change. Punjab, home to more than half of Pakistan’s 240 million people and the country’s breadbasket, has been among the worst hit this week. Officials said the devastation was fueled both by torrential rains and excess water released from upstream dams in India.

According to the Provincial Disaster Management Authority (PDMA), at least 1,769 villages are inundated, affecting some 1.45 million people. Nationwide, Pakistan’s monsoon death toll since June has climbed past 820.

Addressing a press conference on Friday morning, PDMA Director General Irfan Ali Kathia said water levels in Lahore, the provincial capital, had steadied and begun to recede after reaching levels unseen since 1988. 

“By the grace of Allah, all destruction was avoided due to timely response and public cooperation,” he told reporters, adding that rescue calls in the city had now tapered off.

It is also the first time in nearly four decades, the official explained, that the Ravi, Sutlej and Chenab rivers have all been in simultaneous high flood, forcing rescue workers to intensify operations across multiple districts. 

Kathia warned that a powerful surge of around 217,000 cusecs — cubic feet per second, the standard unit used to measure river discharge — was moving downstream on the Ravi River. At Balloki Barrage, flows have already reached close to 147,000 cusecs and are still rising, with the tributary Nala Deg expected to add another 10,000–20,000 cusecs.

To protect populations, authorities carried out a controlled breach at Riwaz Bridge near Jhang, which diverted water away from the city at the cost of inundating farmland and smaller settlements. 

At Chiniot Bridge, flows reached around 830,000 cusecs, with further increases possible. 

The combined population of Jhang and Chiniot districts, now under strain, is about 4.6 million people.

Controlled breaches — where embankments or barrages are deliberately cut to release pressure — are a long-standing but controversial flood management tactic in Pakistan. 

Authorities say they are necessary to save major population centers and key infrastructure, even if it means sacrificing farmland and villages. Similar breaches were carried out during the 2010 and 2022 “super floods,” when hundreds of thousands were displaced to protect barrages and cities downstream.

Kathia said 365 relief camps have been established in public buildings, though only 4,000–4,500 people had moved in so far. 

“Along with this, looking at the water and the lower districts, this number is increasing every hour,” he said. 

Authorities have also evacuated more than 301,000 animals and ordered uninterrupted fodder and wheat supplies. Families of those killed are being compensated with Rs1 million (\$3,570) each.

Punjab Chief Secretary Zahid Akhtar Zaman said tent villages had been established, mobile “Clinics on Wheels” dispatched, and medical camps stocked with essential drugs, including anti-snakebite vaccines. Schools in flood-hit districts may be closed for a week, while the livestock department has been tasked with supplying feed and vaccines. 

Flows on the Sutlej River remain elevated, with 261,000 cusecs at Ganda Singh Wala for the fourth straight day, raising levels downstream in Okara, Pakpattan and Bahawalnagar to between 100,000–150,000 cusecs. 

Kathia said the surges are expected to enter Sindh’s river system in the coming days and provincial authorities there have been placed on alert.

Meanwhile, Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif instructed officials to begin work on a comprehensive policy to tackle the impacts of climate change and the monsoon, pledging that a working paper would soon be shared with provincial governments to develop a joint plan.

“Climate change is a reality, and only through effective preparedness can the damages of natural disasters be avoided,” Sharif said, adding that water reservoirs would be built “through consultation and complete consensus of all provinces.”

He said a high-level meeting would be convened once the emergency subsides, bringing together chief ministers of all four provinces as well as the leaders of Azad Kashmir and Gilgit-Baltistan, to finalize a national approach on water storage and disaster management.

Pakistan’s 2022 monsoon floods, the worst in its history, submerged a third of the country, killed more than 1,700 people and displaced 33 million.

Sindh bore the brunt of the calamity with over 1,000 deaths, nearly 2 million homes destroyed, and more than 4 million acres of crops lost.


Pakistan plans to lay three new submarine Internet cables this year

Pakistan plans to lay three new submarine Internet cables this year
Updated 29 August 2025

Pakistan plans to lay three new submarine Internet cables this year

Pakistan plans to lay three new submarine Internet cables this year
  • Project aims to boost speed, reliability and support rollout of 5G technology
  • Pakistan’s 150 million Internet users face regular outages and shutdowns

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan will lay three new submarine Internet cables this year in a bid to transform digital connectivity, expand bandwidth capacity and support the rollout of 5G services, state broadcaster Radio Pakistan reported this week. 

Officials say the addition of new submarine cables will expand bandwidth, improve reliability and strengthen Pakistan’s ability to integrate with global data flows. The government also hopes the upgrade will accelerate the rollout of 5G services and attract investment in digital industries ranging from e-commerce to financial technology.

“This initiative will not only boost Internet speed but also ensure reliability, reduce service outages, and unlock broader economic potential,” Federal Minister for Information Technology Shaza Fatima Khawaja was quoted by Radio Pakistan as saying.

The new cables are expected to reduce dependence on older, outage-prone systems such as AAE-1 and SMW-4 and position Pakistan more strongly in global digital networks, according to the broadcaster.

Pakistan has over 150 million Internet subscribers, most of them mobile broadband users, making it one of the largest online markets in the world.

But connectivity remains inconsistent. The country has faced repeated cable faults that disrupt bandwidth nationwide, while limited fiber penetration slows the growth of digital services.

Civil society groups also point out that frequent government-ordered Internet shutdowns, often imposed during protests or security operations, have undermined confidence in the digital economy. Rights activists say such disruptions cost billions of rupees in lost productivity and erode freedom of expression online. 

The government denies it uses Internet shutdowns as a tool or censorship.


Pakistan, Afghanistan, UAE to play T20I tri-series from today

Pakistan, Afghanistan, UAE to play T20I tri-series from today
Updated 29 August 2025

Pakistan, Afghanistan, UAE to play T20I tri-series from today

Pakistan, Afghanistan, UAE to play T20I tri-series from today
  • Pakistan, Afghanistan will play tri-series tournament from Aug. 29 to Sept. 7
  • Tournament to help teams prepare for Asian Cricket Council’s T20 Asia Cup

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan, Afghanistan and the United Arab Emirates will participate in a tri-series of Twenty20 international matches, starting today, Friday, to tune up for next month’s Asia Cup followed by the World Cup next year.

The T20I tournament will serve as a launching pad for the teams to prepare for the Asian Cricket Council’s T20 Asia Cup, scheduled to take place in the UAE from September 9 to 28, it added.

India and Sri Lanka will co-host the Twenty20 World Cup in February-March next year.

“The tri-series will feature teams from Pakistan, Afghanistan and the UAE from 29 August to 7 September at the Sharjah Cricket Stadium,” the Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) said.

The opening match of the tri-series tournament will be played between Afghanistan and Pakistan on August 29.

Each team will play the others twice, giving all sides at least four matches before the top two teams qualify for the final, scheduled on September 7.

Tournament schedule (all matches at Sharjah Cricket Stadium):

29 August — Afghanistan v Pakistan
30 August — UAE v Pakistan
1 September — UAE v Afghanistan
2 September — Pakistan v Afghanistan
4 September — Pakistan v UAE
5 September — Afghanistan v UAE
7 September — Final
 


Pakistan finalizing five-year textiles and industrial policies to boost exports — minister

Pakistan finalizing five-year textiles and industrial policies to boost exports — minister
Updated 29 August 2025

Pakistan finalizing five-year textiles and industrial policies to boost exports — minister

Pakistan finalizing five-year textiles and industrial policies to boost exports — minister
  • Textile sector makes up over half of Pakistan’s exports but faces high costs, outdated infrastructure, policy uncertainty
  • Exporters warn new facilitation scheme amendments could disrupt cotton supply chains, risking delays, supply shocks

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan is finalizing a five-year Textiles and Apparel Policy as well as a National Industrial Policy aimed at making industry regionally competitive, removing trade barriers and ensuring long-term export growth, Commerce Minister Jam Kamal Khan said on Friday.

The textile and apparel sector is Pakistan’s largest export earner, accounting for more than half of the country’s total exports, contributing around 8.5 percent of GDP and employing nearly 40 percent of the industrial labor force. But high energy costs, outdated infrastructure and policy uncertainty have slowed growth and left the country trailing regional peers such as Bangladesh.

“Pakistan must rely on export growth,” Khan said in remarks released by the commerce ministry after a meeting with industry representatives, including the All Pakistan Textile Mills Association (APTMA), where he discussed the new textile policy. 

“The government is committed to ensure all decisions are taken in consultation with stakeholders. For the first time, the government and industry are aligned in their determination to revive and enhance momentum of increasing exports.”

He added: “We will announce permanent and predictable policies to promote exports.”

Khan said the government would also analyze regional competitors’ policies, citing his recent visit to Dhaka where he observed Bangladesh’s “remarkable success in industrial development and exports of ready-made garments.” 

Bangladesh’s ready-made garment sector now generates about $50 billion annually and accounts for nearly 80 percent of its total exports, a scale Pakistan has struggled to match.

Prime Minister’s Special Assistant on Industries and Production Haroon Akhtar Khan said the new industrial policy would extend beyond a few sectors to cover the broader industrial landscape, including energy, tariffs and taxation, financing and economic zones. 

“The policy will also include facilitation for Greenfield projects, land-lease models under Public-Private Partnership, and a one-window facility for investor facilitation,” he said, adding that the initiative would “inject new vigor into industrial development” under Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif’s vision.

APTMA representatives urged the government to remove structural inefficiencies and provide a more enabling environment to improve competitiveness in global markets.

Separately this week, the Pakistan Textile Council (PTC) raised concerns over recent amendments to the Export Facilitation Scheme that removed essential raw materials such as cotton, cotton yarn and grey cloth without specifying tariff codes. 

PTC Chairman Fawad Anwar said the ambiguity was causing delays and inconsistent implementation, risking disruption to supply chains. 

“This ambiguity is already causing delays, inconsistent implementation, and risks of disruption in the supply chain, which could harm Pakistan’s largest foreign exchange–earning sector, the textile industry,” he warned.