ISLAMABAD: Pakistan has decided to strengthen itself in the field of biotechnology by securing assistance from Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, Radio Pakistan reported on Friday.
The country’s minister for science and technology, Chaudhary Fawad Hussain, emphasized the need to enhance cooperation with the two Gulf states during his meeting with the UAE ambassador, Hamad Obaid Ibrahim Al Zaabi, in Islamabad on Thursday.
The UAE envoy told the media that Pakistan wanted to set up a biotechnology park by collaborating with his country and Saudi Arabia.
He also acknowledged the minister’s efforts regarding the promotion of science and technology in Pakistan, saying he had assured Chaudhry of UAE’s full support and cooperation in the said scientific arena.
Biotechnology involves the use of living organisms and can help agricultural and medical sciences. It can also be utilized to make useful chemicals and other products or perform similar industrial tasks.
In the Middle East, Saudi Arabia and the UAE have significantly exceled in this area. According to some sources, the biotech industry in the Kingdom has reached a value of almost $45 billion. There has also been a huge increase in the pharmaceutical and biotech marketplace in the UAE.
Pakistan enjoys close relations with both Arab states and seeks to broaden them further by exploring this intellectual arena with them.
Pakistan to secure biotechnology assistance from Saudi Arabia and UAE
Pakistan to secure biotechnology assistance from Saudi Arabia and UAE
- Saudi Arabia and the UAE are leading the Middle East in this intellectual realm
- Biotech involves use of living organisms for industrial and other purposes
Police arrest 49 suspected militants in Pakistan’s Punjab in a month
- The development follows a steep rise in militancy-related deaths in Pakistan last year
- Authorities have lodged cases against the arrested suspects affiliated with banned outfits
ISLAMABAD: The counter-terrorism department (CTD) of Punjab police has arrested 49 militants in different areas of Pakistan’s most populous province in a month and foiled a major terror plan, the CTD said on Saturday.
Pakistan is currently facing an uptick in militant attacks, mainly by the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), in its northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) province, which borders Punjab.
The attacks in KP have forced authorities in Punjab to heighten security and take pre-emptive measures in view of potential spillover of militants into the country’s most populous province.
CTD officials arrested these militants in 425 intelligence-based operations and seized weapons, explosives and other prohibited materials from the arrestees, according to a CTD spokesperson.
“Forty-four cases have been registered against the arrested terrorists and further investigation is being carried out,” the spokesperson said in a statement.
The development comes a steep rise in militancy-related deaths in Pakistan in 2025. According to statistics released by the Pakistan Institute for Conflict and Security Studies (PICSS) last month, combat-related deaths in 2025 rose 73 percent to 3,387. These included 2,115 militants, 664 security forces personnel, 580 civilians and 28 members of pro-government peace committees, the think tank said.
CTD conducted 6,131 combing operations in the province and arrested 599 suspects, according to the statement. Around 570 police reports were registered against these suspects, which led to 477 recoveries.
In Nov., the Punjab government had launched the country’s “first” mobile counterterrorism unit to monitor complex security operations in real time, while in Sept. the province announced the arrest of 90 suspected militants in a three-month counter-terrorism sweep.
Pakistan has struggled to contain the surging in militancy in KP since a fragile truce between the Pakistani Taliban and Islamabad broke down in Nov. 2022. The country faces another decades-long insurgency by Baloch separatists in its southwestern Balochistan province.
Islamabad has frequently accused Afghanistan of allowing the use of its soil and India of backing militant groups for attacks against Pakistan. Kabul and New Delhi deny the allegation.










