ֱ

New recipes help Pakistani mothers ward off malnutrition

New recipes help Pakistani mothers ward off malnutrition
This photograph taken on July 29, 2025 shows a female health worker (R) teaching mothers how to prepare nutritious meals for their children during a UNICEF nutrition programme at Fateh Muhammad Soomro village in the Sujawal district of Sindh province. (AFP)
Short Url
Updated 05 September 2025

New recipes help Pakistani mothers ward off malnutrition

New recipes help Pakistani mothers ward off malnutrition
  • Despite Sindh province being home to the country’s financial hub, 48 percent of children under five suffer from malnutrition and 20 percent from its most severe form
  • Parents are recommended to feed babies solid foods from about six months old, but in rural Sindh this often means adult leftovers, too spicy for young stomachs

SUJAWAL: Clutching their hungry babies, a group of mothers mix a semolina dish under the guidance of a teacher, an attempt to curb malnutrition which affects nearly one in two children in Pakistan’s south.

Despite Sindh province being home to the mega port city of Karachi, the financial center of the country that sprawls along the Arabian coastline, children in rural areas just a few hours away face stark levels of wasting and stunting.

In the arid village of Sujawal, lethargic children with prominent bones wilt in the searing heat as social workers educate mothers on nutrient-rich ingredients and dispel myths around food.

“Before, we only gave our children potatoes because they were always available at home,” said Shahnaz, 25, who has radically changed the diet of her six children, weak and frequently sick, after a year of classes.

Now, convinced that children should eat a varied diet, she has introduced affordable ingredients such as lentils and semolina into her cooking, lifting her daughter out of malnutrition.

In impoverished rural Sindh province, 48 percent of children under five suffer from malnutrition and 20 percent from its most severe form, wasting, according to the latest national survey on the issue conducted in 2018.

In this class, Azma, a social worker, shows mothers how to cook with semolina — easily available in the market.

“Semolina is cheap — for 50 rupees it can last a week if you’re feeding one to two spoonfuls daily to a six-month-old child,” she explained to AFP.

In Sindh, a province of 55 million people where contraception remains taboo and large families are the norm, 3,500 mothers have benefited from cooking classes developed by UNICEF.

Like many mothers in the area, Kulsoom, 23 and pregnant with her sixth child, all born prematurely and underweight, once only fed her children pieces of fried flatbread.

“One of my children died, and my youngest is extremely weak, so I was advised to take these classes,” said Kulsoom, who goes by only one name, like most women in her district.

NO SPICES

Parents are recommended to feed babies solid foods from about six months old, but in rural Sindh this often means adult leftovers, too spicy for young stomachs.

“The main problem is the lack of dietary diversity,” says Mazhar Iqbal, a nutritionist for UNICEF.

In Pakistan, 38 percent of children eat only two or fewer of the eight food categories recommended by UNICEF.

Meat is saved for special occasions, yet inexpensive protein alternatives exist such as chicken offal, boiled bones, lentils and beans.

As for fruit and vegetables, they are usually fried, losing their nutrients.

Bakhtawar Kareem joined the program after her child died of anaemia.

“I have no money. Sometimes we eat, sometimes we don’t,” she lamented, scanning the swollen belly of her one-year-old daughter, who has only sparse clumps of hair.

Like 72 percent of children in the village, her daughter has stunting, well above the average rate in Pakistan of 42 percent — one of the highest in the world.

Stunting is most closely associated with brain development and physical growth, and can have long-term physical and mental impacts.

Vulnerable to a lack of clean water and sanitation which contributes to malnutrition, children often also suffer from dengue fever or malaria, from vomiting, diarrhea, or difficulty urinating, and have abnormally swollen bellies.

WOMEN EAT LEFTOVERS

But the vicious cycle of malnutrition begins with the mothers.

“With early marriages and repeated pregnancies, more than 45 percent of women in Sindh are anaemic,” said the nutritionist.

“This increases the risk of having low birth weight babies, who are more likely to suffer from malnutrition.”

In Sujawal, where only a quarter of the population can read and write, myths about food also deprive women of vital nutrients.

Farrah Naz, the head of the Global Alliance for Improved Nutrition in Pakistan, regularly has to repeat that eggs and dried fruits do not cause women to bleed more during their periods.

Cultural norms around women serving meals to men first and eating the leftovers — despite the physical work they carry out in the fields — also contributes to poor health.

“And when food runs out, it’s their rations that are cut first.”


Pakistan launches first hyperspectral satellite from China to boost agriculture, climate mapping

Pakistan launches first hyperspectral satellite from China to boost agriculture, climate mapping
Updated 20 October 2025

Pakistan launches first hyperspectral satellite from China to boost agriculture, climate mapping

Pakistan launches first hyperspectral satellite from China to boost agriculture, climate mapping
  • HS-1 satellite to strengthen Pakistan’s space-based monitoring of agriculture, urban growth and climate resilience
  • SUPARCO says data from the mission will improve crop yield estimates and disaster-response capability across the country

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s Space and Upper Atmosphere Research Commission (SUPARCO) on Sunday launched the country’s first Hyperspectral Satellite (HS-1) from China’s Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center, state-run Radio Pakistan reported, marking what officials described as a major leap in national space and climate-monitoring capability.

The HS-1 mission will capture hundreds of spectral bands across visible and infrared wavelengths to help detect changes in soil, vegetation, water bodies and man-made structures with far greater precision than conventional imaging satellites. Officials say the technology will be applied to improve agricultural productivity, monitor environmental degradation and strengthen early-warning systems for floods and landslides.

“Pakistan has achieved a major milestone in its space program with the successful launch of its first Hyperspectral Satellite, HS-1, from the Chinese Satellite Launch Center,” Radio Pakistan reported. 

“The satellite is expected to significantly enhance national capacities in areas such as precision agriculture, environmental monitoring, urban planning, and disaster management. Its high-resolution data will support improved resource management and strengthen Pakistan’s resilience to climate-related challenges.”

SUPARCO, the national space agency, said last week the satellite will provide “detailed insights into crop health, soil moisture and irrigation patterns, enhancing yield estimation by 15–20 percent and contributing significantly to food security.” 

The agency added that HS-1’s sensors would also enable mapping of infrastructure and tracking of urban expansion to support sustainable city planning and land-use management.

“The mission aligns with the National Space Policy and SUPARCO’s Vision 2047, which aim to position Pakistan at the forefront of space technology and innovation for sustainable national development,” the space agency added. 

The new satellite will join Pakistan’s growing remote-sensing fleet, which includes PRSS-1 launched in 2018 and two Earth-observation satellites— EO-1 and KS-1— placed in orbit earlier this year. 

Officials said integrating HS-1 will expand Pakistan’s capacity for disaster assessment, water-resource modelling and climate-change monitoring, while deepening collaboration with China in the civilian space sector.


ֱ welcomes Pakistan-Afghanistan agreement on ceasefire, peace mechanism

ֱ welcomes Pakistan-Afghanistan agreement on ceasefire, peace mechanism
Updated 20 October 2025

ֱ welcomes Pakistan-Afghanistan agreement on ceasefire, peace mechanism

ֱ welcomes Pakistan-Afghanistan agreement on ceasefire, peace mechanism
  • Riyadh says it supports all regional and international efforts aimed at consolidating peace and stability
  • Truce follow week of intense border clashes triggered by Islamabad’s accusations that Kabul harbors militants

Islamabad: ֱ on Monday welcomed an agreement between Pakistan and Afghanistan to an immediate ceasefire after a week of fierce border clashes, the worst violence between the South Asian neighbors since the Taliban seized power in Kabul in 2021.

The ground fighting between the two nations and Pakistani airstrikes across their contested 2,600-km (1,600-mile) frontier were triggered after Islamabad demanded that Kabul rein in militants who had stepped up attacks in Pakistan, saying they operated from havens in Afghanistan. Kabul denies this. 

Both sides agreed to a ceasefire after talks in Doha on Sunday and will meet again on Oct. 25 in Istanbul for detailed discussions. The clashes had already killed dozens and wounded hundreds before the truce deal. 

“The Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Kingdom of ֱ welcomes the agreement between the Islamic Republic of Pakistan and Afghanistan on an immediate ceasefire and the establishment of mechanisms to entrench peace and lasting stability between the two countries during the round of negotiations held in Doha,” the ministry said in an X post on Monday. 

The Kingdom expressed support for “all regional and international efforts aimed at consolidating peace and stability” and reaffirmed its “constant keenness on responding to all initiatives that achieve stability and prosperity for the brotherly Pakistani and Afghan peoples.”

“The Kingdom looks forward to this positive step leading to the reduction of tensions along the borders between the two countries,” the ministry added. 

ֱ also commended diplomatic efforts by Qatar and Turkiye in facilitating dialogue between Pakistan and Afghanistan.

ֱ has maintained ties with both Islamabad and Kabul and has repeatedly called for regional cooperation to prevent instability spilling across borders.
 


‘Last Mohanas’:Jackson Wild award-winning film immortalizes Pakistan’s last boat-dwellers

‘Last Mohanas’:Jackson Wild award-winning film immortalizes Pakistan’s last boat-dwellers
Updated 20 October 2025

‘Last Mohanas’:Jackson Wild award-winning film immortalizes Pakistan’s last boat-dwellers

‘Last Mohanas’:Jackson Wild award-winning film immortalizes Pakistan’s last boat-dwellers
  • ‘Mohanas,’ dwelling on boats in Manchar Lake, were once prosperous fisherfolk who shared their daily catch with travelers
  • Contamination of the lake and erratic monsoons have destroyed livelihoods, forcing the community to abandon its centuries-old habitat

ISLAMABAD: Jawad Sharif, 38, spent five years documenting the lives of a Pakistani fisherfolk community living on boats in Manchar Lake in the southern Sindh province.

But he never expected that his film, Moklani – The Last Mohanas, shot with a seven-member crew, would go on to win the prestigious Jackson Wild Media Award in the United States.

Moklani won the Best Film award in the Global Voices category at the ceremony held in Wyoming on Oct. 3, making Sharif the first Pakistani filmmaker to receive an often described as the “Oscars for nature filmmaking.”

“The story of the Mohanas fascinated me,” Sharif told Arab News on the sidelines of the film’s trailer launch in Islamabad. “Their existence is a living piece of our history. They are the last community still living on boats [in Pakistan], their lives tied entirely to the water. But that way of life is dying.”

The word Mohana, meaning fisherfolk in Sindhi, traces its roots to the ancient civilization of Mohenjo-Daro that flourished around 2,500 BCE. The Mohanas, also known as Mir-al-Bahr — “Lords of the Seas” — were once prosperous fishermen who distributed parts of their daily catch among travelers.

Today, their descendants struggle to survive as pollution and climate change transform their ancestral Manchar Lake into a toxic wasteland.

Manchar Lake is Pakistan’s largest natural freshwater lake and lies west of the Indus River in Sindh’s Jamshoro and Dadu districts. Its surface area once swelled from 36 to 500 square kilometers during the monsoon season. But decades of contamination have turned its waters saline.

Since the 1990s, irrigation and drainage projects have diverted effluent into the lake, killing fish and forcing the Mohanas off their boats.

“The disaster began to unfold several decades ago, when the Water and Power Development Authority in 1976 converted the MNVD (Main Nara Valley Drain) from a fresh water stream to a saline water drain pouring agricultural effluent of northern Sindh districts into Manchar Lake,” researcher Naseer Memon wrote in a 2023 article.

The image shows crew memembers on stage after the screening of Pakistani film Moklani – The Last Mohanas, on October 17, 2025. (AN photo)

A subsequent project, the Right Bank Outfall Drain (RBOD-II), was launched in 2001 to carry wastewater to the sea but has faced repeated delays. The Supreme Court took notice of the contamination in 2011, but no solution has yet emerged.

Arab News reached out to Sindh Irrigation Minister Jam Khan Shoro regarding the RBOD’s current status and its impact on local communities but did not receive a response.

Environmentalists say Manchar’s troubles have been worsened by climate change. Erratic rainfall patterns and extreme weather have forced thousands to migrate from the lake’s shores.

“The shift of the monsoon had caused torrential rainfall in the hills of southern Punjab and Balochistan [in 2022] and the RBOD which was actually to take the agricultural effluent through the Manchur lake and toward the Indus river and from the Indus river on to the sea... its capacity wasn’t enough to be able to drain the water,” said Afia Salam, a leading Pakistani environmentalist.

“The intense rainfall [elsewhere in Sindh] made the water accumulate and not drain out fast enough and that is why in the 2022 floods Manchar lake had to be breached,” she added.

CULTURAL LOSS

Sharif says his film captures not just an environmental tragedy, but a cultural extinction.

“It could be the loss of identity, of a language, or of a tradition. In Moklani, there are multiple reasons this culture is dying; it is literally taking its last breaths,” he said.

Using natural color grading to highlight the haunting beauty of Sindh’s wetlands, Sharif paired visuals with an original soundtrack that mirrors the rhythm of life on water.

“I wanted them to feel it, to feel what it’s like to lose something that has existed for centuries,” he said.

Co-producer Syeda Kashmala, a former lawyer, said the decline of the community is starkly visible.

“Where there were once 40 boats housing dozens of families, now only about 20 remain, as the saline and contaminated water causes faster erosion [of ecosystem],” she said.

The film’s trailer features an elderly Mohana recalling a vanished past:

“The water of Manchar Lake was once so pure we could drink it from lotus leaves,” he said. “Now even migratory birds refuse to drink from it and we must travel miles on land to fetch clean water.”

The old man’s words echo the grief at the heart of Moklani, a story that has moved artists and audiences beyond Pakistan.

Independent filmmaker Jamil Iqbal praised the film for its “emotional power and relevance.”

“It’s a beautiful film not just because of its visuals, but because of its heart-wrenching, thought-provoking story,” he said. “We need more storytellers like Jawad Sharif in Pakistan who take on serious subjects such as climate change and cultural loss.”

He added that films like Moklani serve as both awareness tools and historical archives, documenting the resistance of indigenous communities facing environmental collapse.

Syed Ahmed Khan, a business development director who attended the trailer launch, said the film resonates deeply with audiences.

“Everyone watching the trailer feels a connection with it because everyone has said farewell to something or someone in their lives,” he said. “The pain of disconnection is profoundly visible in the film, and the subtle way Sharif addresses climate change, without rhetoric, makes the message powerful and clear about how man-made disasters are destroying our own future.”

Indeed, Sharif feels storytelling can be a catalyst for change.

“A story can always initiate a change,” he said. “When we talk about Mohanas, or climate change, or environmental loss, we are essentially talking about our own future. The hope is that these conversations turn into action.”

For him, the award signifies more than global recognition.

“The happiest thing for me is that this film started a conversation,” Sharif said. “Because of the award, there was a lot of awareness created locally. People began talking about this story, about this culture, about climate change and man-made disasters. That dialogue, that awareness, is what I value most.”


Pakistan to raise $250 million via first-ever yuan-denominated Panda bonds by end-2025

Pakistan to raise $250 million via first-ever yuan-denominated Panda bonds by end-2025
Updated 20 October 2025

Pakistan to raise $250 million via first-ever yuan-denominated Panda bonds by end-2025

Pakistan to raise $250 million via first-ever yuan-denominated Panda bonds by end-2025
  • The issuance of Panda bonds will have credit enhancement from Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank and Asian Development Bank
  • Finance Minister says the move was ‘long overdue’ to strengthen ties with Asian markets and reduce reliance on Western channels

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan plans to raise $250 million through its first-ever yuan-denominated Panda bonds by the end of 2025, Pakistani state media reported on Sunday, amid Islamabad’s efforts to diversify funding sources and strengthen macroeconomic resilience.

Islamabad is being advised on the issuance of Panda bonds by the China International Capital Corporation, a partially state-owned financial services company. However, the latest figure shared in Jan. is lower than the $300 million targeted by Pakistan last year.

Pakistan’s Finance Minister Muhammad Aurangzeb has confirmed that the issuance of Panda bonds will feature credit enhancement from the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB) and the Asian Development Bank (ADB), the state-run Pakistan TV reported.

“From our perspective, this is a very important trade, a funding diversification discussion,” Aurangzeb was quoted as saying by the broadcaster.

“We have previously done Euro issuances and US dollar Islamic support, so we have been late, quite frankly, in terms of tapping the second-largest and second-deepest capital market in the world.”

The South Asian nation faced a prolonged economic crisis in recent years that pushed it to the verge of a sovereign debt default in mid-2023. Pakistan has since implemented stringent economic reforms.

He said the move was “long overdue” to strengthen ties with Asian markets and reduce reliance on Western financial channels.

“We are following the Egyptian model because they had credit enhancement, so we will have the same from AIIB and ADB,” he explained.

The bond issuance is part of a broader strategy to consolidate macroeconomic stability which has shown notable improvements, according to the finance minister.

“If we look at it in a holistic way, around macroeconomic stability, a stable currency, FX reserves, inflation coming into single digits, and the policy rate coming down,” he said.

“We are making progress that now has two external validations.”


Three dead, dozens missing in boat capsizes off Italy with Pakistanis, Africans aboard

Three dead, dozens missing in boat capsizes off Italy with Pakistanis, Africans aboard
Updated 19 October 2025

Three dead, dozens missing in boat capsizes off Italy with Pakistanis, Africans aboard

Three dead, dozens missing in boat capsizes off Italy with Pakistanis, Africans aboard
  • More than 32,700 migrants have died attempting to cross the Mediterranean since 2014, including an estimated one in five who were children
  • Two migrants were found dead, 14 others in critical condition when Italian police intercepted boat with 85 Pakistani, Eritrean and Somali nationals

MILAN: A migrant boat carrying around 35 people sailing from Libya capsized in the central Mediterranean leaving one confirmed dead and two dozen missing, UNICEF country coordinator for Italy said on Sunday.

The rescue operation was carried out on Friday off the coast of Italy’s Lampedusa island by the Italian Coast Guard, which saved 11 migrants, including four children traveling alone, and recovered the body of a pregnant woman, UNICEF’s Nicola Dell’Arciprete said.

The survivors and the body were brought to Lampedusa, while the remaining passengers remain unaccounted for.

The boat capsized after two days at sea, Dell’Arciprete said.

In a separate event, on Sunday two migrants were found dead and 14 others were in critical condition when Italian tax police intercepted a boat with 85 people on board from Pakistan, Eritrea and Somalia, the AGI news agency reported.

The 14 migrants in need of assistance and the two bodies were transferred onto two Coast Guard units 16 nautical miles off the Lampedusa coast and brought ashore to be transferred to hospitals, AGI said.

More than 32,700 migrants have died attempting to cross the Mediterranean since 2014, including an estimated one in five who were children, according to data from United Nations agencies, Dell’Arciprete said.

Flavio Di Giacomo, a spokesperson for the United Nations’ International Organization for Migration, on Saturday said on social media platform X that at least 916 migrants had died in the central Mediterranean so far in 2025.