Arab News captures scenes set for arrival of Saudi Crown Prince in Islamabad

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In an Islamabad supermarket, a student reads a print copy of Arab News which was published and circulated on Saturday, Feb 16, 2019, ahead of the crown prince’s arrival. (AN photo)
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Portraits of (right to left) Prime Minister Imran Khan, Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, Saudi King Salman bin Abdul Aziz and President Dr. Arif Alvi on Constitution Avenue, in front of Parliament House in Islamabad. (AN photo)
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Workers are busy putting up welcome banners and decorating the roads here in Islamabad ahead of a celebratory welcome for the Saudi Crown Prince who will arrive on Sunday. (AN photo)
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Islamabad’s Constitution Avenue, in front of Prime Minister Secretariat and President House, is decorated with banners, colorful lights and the national flags of Saudi Arabia and Pakistan to welcome Saudi dignitaries and the entourage of the crown prince. (AN photo)
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A copy of Arab News next to a portrait of crown prince Mohammed bin Salman in The Nation, are displayed at a local bookshop and newspaper stall. (AN photo)
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National Flags of Saudi Arabia and Pakistan have been hoisted up in different parts of Islamabad ahead of the crown prince’s two-day visit. (AN photo)
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Banners displayed at different avenues in Islamabad deliver strong messages of Pak-Saudi relationships. Some of them read, “Pakistan-Saudi Brotherhood for Peace, Progress and Development.” (AN photo)
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The Pakistan army has been assigned the security of the royal guests and troops have been deployed in Islamabad’s Red Zone. (AN photo)
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“We Welcome His Royal Highness to His Second Home,” reads a banner on a bridge at the Islamabad Expressway, below a waving queue of the national flags of Saudi Arabia and Pakistan. (AN photo)
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Ahead of the crown prince’s visit, Pakistan army’s 111-brigade troops have been patrolling Islamabad. (AN photo)
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Life-sized banners with portraits of Prime Minister Imran Khan, Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, Saudi King Salman bin Abdul Aziz and President Dr. Arif Alvi in front of Islamabad’s diplomatic enclave. (AN photo)
Updated 17 February 2019
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Arab News captures scenes set for arrival of Saudi Crown Prince in Islamabad

ISLAMABAD: The federal capital, Islamabad, has been dressed up in anticipation of the Saudi prince’s arrival here on Sunday, its streets and avenues decorated with welcome banners, colored lights and the national flags of Saudi Arabia and Pakistan.

The crown prince will be received personally by Prime Minister Imran Khan and accorded a historic red-carpet welcome along with a 21-gun salute.

During the prince’s two-day visit, Pakistan is expecting to sign off on a raft of investment deals and other agreements with Saudi royals and businessmen worth over $10 billion, including the establishment of an oil refinery in the port city of Gwadar in Pakistan’s southwestern Balochistan province.

Ahead of the prince’s arrival, the Arab News team traveled to several parts of Pakistan’s capital city to document the historic preparations made for the royal welcome.


Pakistan deputy PM directs authorities to monitor food prices ahead of Ramadan 

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Pakistan deputy PM directs authorities to monitor food prices ahead of Ramadan 

  • Prices of essential food items surge during holy month of Ramadan due to hoarding, profiteering by traders
  • Deputy PM Ishaq Dar directs authorities to prevent artificial price hikes, exploitation of consumers in Ramadan

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s Deputy Prime Minister Ishaq Dar on Tuesday directed authorities to monitor prices of essential food items ahead of Ramadan to prevent artificial price hikes and consumers from getting exploited, his office said. 

Pakistani increasingly shop for essential food items during the holy month of Ramadan, as millions across the country fast from dawn till sunset. Prices of essential food items surge during the holy month every year as traders often indulge in hoarding and profiteering. 

Dar chaired a meeting to review the availability and prices of essential commodities across the country on Tuesday, his office said. 

“DPM/FM [foreign minister] directed federal & provincial authorities to continue close monitoring, particularly in view of the approaching month of Ramazan, to prevent any artificial price hike or exploitation of consumers by unscrupulous elements,” Dar’s office said in a statement.

A central moon sighting committee in Pakistan, the Ruet-e-Hilal Committee, determines when Ramadan begins. The Islamic month is expected to start this year after mid-February, around Feb. 17 or Feb. 18.

Pakistan’s government also announces subsidies for the masses during the holy month to lower the prices of essential food items. 

In 2024, the Shehbaz Sharif-led government announced a Ramadan package comprising a subsidy of $26.8 million (Rs7.5 billion) to lower the prices of essential items for over 30,96,00,000 families.