Pakistan Railways won't be able to pay staff after June — minister

In this file photo, a train is stationed along a deserted platform at Karachi Cantonment railway station during a government-imposed nationwide lockdown as a preventive measure against the COVID-19 coronavirus, in Karachi on March 25, 2020. (AFP)
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Updated 06 May 2020
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Pakistan Railways won't be able to pay staff after June — minister

  • Company struggles to contain economic fallout of virus shutdown, seeks bailout of Rs2 billion a month till year’s end
  • Minister says the railway operator seeks to resume services on May 10, ahead of Eid Al-Fitr

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan Railways will only be able to pay the salaries of its workers until June, as coronavirus lockdowns and a nationwide transportation shutdown have upended its operations, a minister said on Tuesday.
“We will not be able to pay salaries of Pakistan Railways staff in the month of July as we have money till June only. We urgently need Rs5 billion to pay the salaries and other expenses in July 2020,” Railways Minister Sheikh Rasheed Ahmed told Arab News.
The company has run out of money as the operations of all of its 42 passenger trains have been suspended since March 25, when the government suspended railway services to contain the spread of the disease.
According to Ahmed, his ministry has requested Rs2 billion a month from the budget to cover the expanses of Pakistan Railways until the year’s end.
“We have to pay the salaries of 77,000 employees and 200,000 pensioners along with other expenses like utility bills and maintenance of fleet. We have asked the government for a bailout package of Rs2 billion a month to overcome this crisis,” he said, adding that the closure of operations had severely affected the company which was already facing deficit trouble before the current health crisis.
“Pakistan Railways was already running at a loss. We succeeded in reducing its annual deficit by Rs6 billion, bringing it down to Rs32 billion in 2019 from 38 billion a 2018. This coronavirus pandemic and the subsequent lockdown has brought all our operations to a halt. The railways have had no income from past six weeks, which will further increase our losses,” Ahmed said.
He added that the ministry had requested that the lockdown be eased from May 10 for the railway operator to run passenger services ahead of the Eid Al-Fitr holiday which marks the end of Ramadan and normally sees many people returning to their hometowns to celebrate it with families.
“If they (the government) allow us, we will start 32 trains across the country. The final decision would be taken by Prime Minister Imran Khan after May 9. In case of delays, we plan to start operations on May 15,” Ahmed said.
The Eid holiday this year will be celebrated in the last week of May.
“As a precautionary measure, we have already installed thermal scanners and other checking machines on different railway stations and will operate trains on a 50 percent occupancy to maintain safe distance between passengers,” the minister said, adding that all standard operating procedures are in place to protect both the passengers and staff from contracting the virus.


Pakistan, seven Muslim nations back Palestinian technocratic body, stress Gaza-West Bank unity

Updated 15 January 2026
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Pakistan, seven Muslim nations back Palestinian technocratic body, stress Gaza-West Bank unity

  • The National Committee for the Administration of the Gaza Strip was announced on January 14
  • Muslim nations call for consolidation of the ceasefire and unimpeded humanitarian aid into Gaza

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan and seven other Muslim-majority countries on Thursday welcomed the formation of a temporary Palestinian technocratic body to administer Gaza, stressing that it must manage daily civilian affairs while preserving the institutional and territorial link between the Gaza Strip and the West Bank amid the ongoing peace efforts.

In a joint statement, the foreign ministers of Pakistan, Egypt, Jordan, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Türkiye, Indonesia and the United Arab Emirates said the newly announced National Committee for the Administration of the Gaza Strip would play a central role during the second phase of a broader peace plan aimed at ending the war and paving the way for Palestinian self-governance.

“The Ministers emphasize the importance of the National Committee commencing its duties in managing the day-to-day affairs of the people of Gaza, while preserving the institutional and territorial link between the West Bank and the Gaza Strip, ensuring the unity of Gaza, and rejecting any attempts to divide it,” the statement said.

The committee, announced on Jan. 14, is a temporary transitional body established under United Nations Security Council Resolution 2803 and is to operate in coordination with the Palestinian Authority, the ministers said.

The statement said the move forms part of the second phase of US President Donald Trump’s Comprehensive Peace Plan for Gaza, which the ministers said they supported, praising Trump’s efforts to end the war, ensure the withdrawal of Israeli forces and prevent the annexation of the occupied West Bank.

The top leaders of all eight Muslim countries attended a meeting with Trump in New York last September, shortly before he unveiled the Gaza peace plan.

The ministers also called for the consolidation of the ceasefire, unimpeded humanitarian aid into Gaza, early recovery and reconstruction and the eventual return of the Palestinian Authority to administer the territory, leading to a just and sustainable peace based on UN resolutions and a two-state solution on pre-1967 lines with East Jerusalem as the Palestinian capital.