Pakistani exporters strive to recapture Saudi rice market

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Biryani comes in a variety of flavors and is one of the most popular dishes in Pakistan and India. (AN photo)
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Biryani lovers enjoy at the 22nd Biryani Festival held at Governor House. (AN photo)
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Biryani lovers enjoy at the 22nd Biryani Festival held at Governor House. (AN photo)
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 Governor Sindh,  Imran Ismail (left) and Safder Hussain Mehkri, Chairman Rice Exporters Association of Pakistan at the Biryani festival on Friday. (Photo courtesy: REAP)
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 Pakistani biryani comes in a variety of regional flavors and ingredients. (Photo courtesy: REAP)
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Pakistani rice exporters present a shield to the governor of Sindh, Imran Ismail, on Friday. (Photo courtesy: REAP)
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 Participants at the Biryani festival at the governor house on Friday. (Photo courtesy: REAP)
Updated 22 March 2019
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Pakistani exporters strive to recapture Saudi rice market

  • 17-member Pakistani delegation to leave for Saudi Arabia on Saturday to attend Biryani Festival, other important events
  • Pakistan used to account for 80 percent Saudi rice imports, now down to 10 percent

KARACHI: A 17-member delegation of Pakistani rice exports is leaving for Dammam, Saudi Arabia, on Saturday to attend a number of events, including a Biryani Festival, in a bid to boost the country’s share in the Kingdom’s rice import market, exporters told Arab News on Friday.

“Our prices are at par with India and our quality is far superior. We are going to capture the Indian market,” Ali Hussam Asghar, Senior Vice Chairman of the Rice Exporters Association of Pakistan (REAP), who is leading the delegation, told Arab News.

He said the delegation would start the trip in Dammam to meet and hold business-to-business meetings with rice importers of the eastern region. It would then travel to Riyadh to meet top Saudi buyers of Indian rice.

“Then we will move on to Jeddah for the mega Biryani festal in Park Hide Hotel where 130 top buyers including Saudis, Pakistanis, and Indians are invited,” Asghar said. “Saudis will be able to taste 15 varieties of biryani there.”

Pakistani exporters say they have been energized by the recent visit of Saudi Crown Prince Muhammad Bin Salman and their businesses have received a new lease of support from the Saudi embassy in Pakistan and Pakistan’s ambassador to Saudi Arabia, Asghar said.  

Pakistan was the major rice import market for Saudi Arabia in the nineties, and accounted for 80 percent of rice imports to the Kingdom, now down to 10 percent.

“We want to get back our share in the Saudi market which was more than 80 percent,” Safder Hussain Mehkri, REAP chairman told Arab News on the sidelines of the 22nd Biryani Festival held at the Sindh Governor House on Friday night. “We request the Saudi government to accommodate and facilitate our exporters so that we can increase our bilateral trade.”

He said REAP was working with the federal and provincial governments to increase rice exports from Pakistan to $5 billion by 2023 from $2 billion currently.

Pakistani rice exporters also called on the Pakistani government to work to increase their market share of rice imports in Malaysia, whose Prime Minister, Mahathir Mohammad is visiting Pakistan as the chief guest of the March 23 military parade.

“Malaysian PM is visiting Pakistan so they can be asked to increase the share of imports of Pakistani rice,” Abdul Rasheed Jan Muhammad, a leading exporter and convener of REAP’s Biryani Festival, said. “The governor Sindh can play a vital role in this regard.”


Pakistan, Saudi Arabia discuss regional situation, upcoming engagements

Updated 14 February 2026
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Pakistan, Saudi Arabia discuss regional situation, upcoming engagements

  • Ishaq Dar and Prince Faisal bin Farhan agree to stay in contact amid Middle East tensions
  • The two officials speak ahead of Trump’s Feb. 19 Board of Peace meeting in Washington, DC

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Ishaq Dar discussed regional developments and upcoming international engagements with Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Faisal bin Farhan in a phone call on Saturday, according to the foreign office in Islamabad.

The conversation took place against the backdrop of deepening strategic ties between Islamabad and Riyadh. In September last year, the two countries signed a bilateral defense agreement that formalized decades of military cooperation and included a commitment to view aggression against one as an attack on both countries.

“Deputy Prime Minister/Foreign Minister Mohammad Ishaq Dar held a telephonic conversation today with the Foreign Minister of Saudi Arabia, Faisal bin Farhan Al Saud,” Pakistan’s foreign ministry said in a statement.

“The two leaders discussed the evolving regional situation, forthcoming international engagements, and agreed to remain in close contact,” it added.

The two officials spoke at a time of heightened tensions in the Middle East, with the conflict in Gaza far from resolution amid ongoing ceasefire violations by Israel.

The region has also been on edge as the United States pursues nuclear negotiations with Iran, prompting regional states to call for diplomacy rather than new military flare-ups.

Both Pakistan and Saudi Arabia are participants in US President Donald Trump’s Board of Peace, which is scheduled to meet on Feb. 19 in Washington.

Islamabad and Riyadh have consistently coordinated positions over regional and global issues.

The foreign ministry did not provide further details of the discussion.