Pakistan urges international community to condemn ‘state terrorism’ at SCO meeting

This file photo shows Pakistan’s Minister for Foreign Affairs Shah Mahmood Qureshi speaking at the National Assembly on Jan. 7, 2020. (Photo courtesy: Foreign Office of Pakistan)
Short Url
Updated 13 May 2020
Follow

Pakistan urges international community to condemn ‘state terrorism’ at SCO meeting

  • FM Qureshi says terrorism allegations should not be used to malign and victimize any country or religion
  • Calls COVID-19 ‘a litmus test for multilateralism’

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s Foreign Minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi urged the international community on Wednesday to condemn the “perpetrators of state terrorism” and hold them accountable in regions where people are spending their lives in illegal occupations.

According to an official handout circulated by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Islamabad, Qureshi made the statement while addressing a Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) meeting that was convened by the Russian Federation in its capacity as the current SCO chair.

The meeting brought together foreign ministers of all member states through a video link along with the organization’s secretary general and the director of its anti-terrorist structure.

The foreign minister emphasized that tackling terrorism and extremism should continue to be a priority, but he added that terrorism related allegations should not be used as a political tool to malign and victimize any country or religion. He also stressed the importance of rejecting xenophobic ideologies including Islamophobia.

Discussing the coronavirus pandemic, Qureshi said it was “a litmus test for multilateralism,” adding that it posed a challenge of unprecedented scale that necessitated coordinated responses from the international community. He also maintained that the SCO was well placed to tackle the crisis.

The foreign minister also stressed the need for the SCO to reject stigmatization and discrimination of any community in the context of COVID-19 on the basis of race, religion or ethnicity.

“Highlighting the socio-economic repercussions of the health crisis, Foreign Minister Qureshi underscored the salience of Prime Minister Imran Khan’s ‘Global Initiative on Debt Relief’ for developing countries as a means to formulate a comprehensive multi-stakeholder plan of action to shore up economies and promote sustainable growth. He emphasized that SCO’s coordinated efforts in this context would be crucial,” read the handout.

Qureshi also welcomed the US-Taliban Peace Agreement and hoped that the Afghan leadership would seize the historic opportunity to work out a comprehensive and inclusive political settlement. He noted that the SCO, through its contact group on Afghanistan, could play a facilitative role at this juncture.


Pakistan to export halal meat worth $14.5 million to Tajikistan

Updated 6 sec ago
Follow

Pakistan to export halal meat worth $14.5 million to Tajikistan

  • Effective trade facilitation can increase bilateral Pakistan-Tajikistan trade to $300 million, says state media
  • PM Shehbaz Sharif approved Pakistan’s halal meat policy earlier this month in bid to boost meat exports

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan will export 143,000 tons of halal meat to Tajikistan worth $14.5 million in the near future, state media reported on Tuesday amid Islamabad’s efforts to bolster trade with Central Asian countries. 

Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif, earlier this month, approved Pakistan’s halal meat policy that aims to boost Islamabad’s meat exports to Muslim states. 

In a high-level meeting on Dec. 24, Federal Minister for Food Security Rana Tanveer Hussain said Malaysia, Saudi Arabia, Iran and other Gulf countries are ready to import Pakistani fresh meat and rice. The minister said Tajikistan has expressed the demand to import nearly 100,000 tons of meat from Pakistan. 

“According to details, Pakistan will export one hundred and forty-three thousand tons of halal meat to Tajikistan, valued at 14.5 million dollars,” state broadcaster Radio Pakistan reported. 

It did not, however, specify a timeline as to when Islamabad planned to export the halal meat items to the Central Asian nation.

The state media said that effective trade facilitation will increase bilateral trade between Pakistan and Tajikistan to $300 million, strengthening regional economic integration.

Pakistan has recently attempted to increase its halal meat exports to other Muslim countries such as Malaysia. Both countries announced they had agreed to a $200 million halal meat trade quota during Sharif’s visit to Malaysia in October. 

A 2024 report by the Pakistan Bureau of Statistics (PBS) mentioned that the country exported meat worth $512 million in 2024, which included beef, mutton and poultry.

According to the PBS, the UAE remained Pakistan’s top meat export market in 2024 with exports to the Gulf nation reaching $201 million. Meanwhile, meat exports to Saudi Arabia recorded a growth of 65.1 percent last year valued at $141 million.