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- Aligning passion with purpose
- The forgotten architects of Pakistan
- Pakistan pushes for agricultural trade reform at WTO
- Fuel-thirsty Asian countries line up for Russian oil
- Pakistan calls for collective action for debt-stricken nations
- India’s Jaishankar slammed for provocative comments on Pakistan
- Pakistan confirms US‑Iran indirect talks via relayed messages
- A diplomatic opening or test of Pakistan’s stature
Author: admin
Pakistan issued a stern rebuke of Indian Defence Minister Rajnath Singh’s recent comments suggesting that Sindh, the southeastern province of Pakistan, could one day return to India. The Foreign Office (FO) described Singh’s remarks as “delusional and dangerously revisionist,” warning that such rhetoric threatens regional peace and stability while reflecting an expansionist mindset at odds with international law and the sovereignty of nations. Singh, speaking at a gathering of the Sindhi community in Delhi, claimed that although Sindh is not part of India today, its “civilizational” ties to India remain unbroken. “Who knows, tomorrow Sindh may return to India again,”…
Pakistan has taken a decisive and overdue step to bring both transparency and security to its Afghan transit trade by introducing non-intrusive inspections (NII) for all containers passing through its borders. Instructed by the Federal Board of Revenue (FBR), customs authorities are now equipped to scan 30 percent of imported and exported containers using advanced X-ray and gamma-ray technologies, ensuring goods can be inspected without physically opening the containers. This is not a piecemeal reform. Officials plan to expand the initiative gradually to include non-containerized cargo, signaling a comprehensive overhaul of a system that has long been exploited by smugglers…
Pakistan’s trade with the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) has long been described in Islamabad’s economic circles as a relationship full of promise yet stubbornly short of fulfilment. The numbers themselves tell a familiar story: trade volume in 2024 reached $11.5 billion, an improvement on previous years but still a fraction of what officials insist is possible. Behind the headline figure lies a deeper reality of missed chances, structural weaknesses and policy hesitations that continue to define one of Pakistan’s most underdeveloped regional partnerships. Even as the political rhetoric of “Look East” gains renewed life every few years, the…
The dramatic crash of India’s Tejas fighter jet at the Dubai Air Show has cast a long, unflattering shadow over the country’s defence manufacturing ambitions. As the aircraft plummeted in flames before the eyes of an international audience, the tragedy not only claimed the life of the pilot but also reignited a debate that has lingered quietly in defence circles for years: the technical reliability and operational viability of the Tejas program. The Tejas, often touted in Indian official rhetoric as a symbol of domestic ingenuity and self-reliance, has long been a source of both pride and scrutiny. In reality,…
The gathering of Shanghai Cooperation Organization leaders in Moscow offered Pakistan a fresh reminder of how deeply its regional fortunes hinge on diplomacy rather than on the lonely comfort of strategic isolation. For Islamabad, the summit was never only about the official speeches delivered beneath chandeliers and national flags. It was, as so often in these multilateral settings, the corridor conversations and carefully choreographed meetings on the sidelines that carried the real weight. Pakistan’s deputy prime minister and foreign minister, Ishaq Dar, arrived in Moscow not simply to participate, but to reassert the country’s place in a region where alliances…
