Saudi appetite for rice boosts Pakistan’s exports by 35%

A Pakistani shopkeeper places rate cards on sacks of rice at the main wholesale market in Karachi on May 25, 2017. (AFP)
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Updated 17 June 2020
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Saudi appetite for rice boosts Pakistan’s exports by 35%

  • Pakistan records bilateral exports at $417 mln during current fiscal year despite global pandemic
  • The export of Pakistani rice to the Kingdom increased from $68.5 million to $107.4 million this year

KARACHI: Boosted by the demand for Pakistani rice, the country’s exports to Saudi Arabia show 35.4 percent increase during the current fiscal as the two countries move ahead ensuring quality standards, trade officials told Arab News on Monday. 
“Our exports to the Kingdom have increased by 35.4 percent this year by June 9, 2020 as compared to last year, “Azhar Ali Dahar, trade & investment chief at the Pakistani embassy in Riyadh, told Arab News over the phone. “We could have reached the $500 mln mark under normal circumstances,” he added.
Pakistan recorded its export volume with Saudi Arabia at $417 million during the fiscal period from July 2019 to June 2020 as compared to the $308 million for the year before, according to official data.
Pakistani officials say that Saudi appetite for Pakistani rice played a vital role in the country’s increased export quotient to the Kingdom — constituting 57 percent by value and 45 percent in terms of quantity.
“The export of rice increased from $68.5 million to $107.4 million. The demand for the rice was mainly due to the focus of Saudi authorities on the quality standards as Indian rice contains carcinogenic substance due to heavy use of pesticides,” Dahar said, adding that “continued exports from Pakistan during lockdown and emphasis on quality played a key role.”
India has been a major rice exporter to the Middle East and Europe but due to the presence of high level of tricyclazole pesticide in its agricultural produce, the EU banned import of rice from India in January 2018 after lowering the maximum residue limit (MRL) level for tricyclazole fungicide to no more than 0.01 mg per kilogram.
“Saudi authorities have begun imposing the regulations to match quality standards with that of European Union. If Saudi Arabia implements the standard, Pakistani rice exporters would standout as major beneficiaries,” Raza said. “Our exports to EU have also doubled,” he added.
India’s virus lockdown further opened the mid eastern market for Pakistani rice. 
“When India imposed lockdown, the situation was such that every country wanted to build the food stock to ensure supplies so the importers in Saudi Arabia and other Middle Eastern countries turned to Pakistan to maintain rice stock,” Muhammad Raza, Senior Vice chairman of Rice Exporters Association of Pakistan (REAP). told Arab News.
Pakistan is among the top 10 rice producing countries in the world. The production of rice is expected to remain stagnant at 7.2 million tons in the current fiscal year FY20, according to State Bank of Pakistan.
However, exporters say that the country has more than 3.3 million tones of exportable surplus and there is not shortage of grain in the country.
Officials view the next year to be challenging for Pakistan in terms of food exports given the current crises engulfing the South Asian nation, although efforts are underway to diversity the export basket.
Dahar said, “The COVID-19 and Locusts invasions have posed food security threat as the country itself would need to ensure availability of food stocks.” 
“We are focusing on IT, textile, Halal meat exports to the Kingdom. Besides, efforts are underway to lift the ban on import of fish products from Pakistan imposed by the Saudi authorities,” he said. 


Pakistani court sentences TLP leader for 35 years over incitement against ex-chief justice

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Pakistani court sentences TLP leader for 35 years over incitement against ex-chief justice

  • The case stems from a 2024 speech targeting former Chief Justice of Pakistan Qazi Faez Isa over a blasphemy ruling
  • Conviction follows the government’s move to proscribe Tehreek-e-Labbaik Pakistan after clashes with police this year

ISLAMABAD: A Pakistani court this week sentenced a leader of the religio-political party Tehreek-i-Labbaik Pakistan (TLP) to 35 years’ imprisonment on multiple charges for inciting hate against former Chief Justice of Pakistan Qazi Faez Isa.

Peer Zaheer ul Hasan Bukhari made the remarks in a 2024 speech at the Lahore Press Club against the former chief justice for issuing a judgment in a case involving a man named Mubarak Sani under the blasphemy laws, a member of a minority religious community whose death sentence was overturned.

Authorities said Bukhari’s comments amounted to incitement to violence, after which police registered a case against him under various terrorism-related provisions as well as charges of inciting hatred.

The cleric was handed multiple jail terms on a range of charges, with the longest being 10 years of rigorous imprisonment, amounting to a total of 35 years.

“All the sections of imprisonment awarded to the convict shall run concurrently,” Anti-Terrorism Court Judge Arshad Javed said in a letter to the Kot Lakhpat Central Jail superintendent.

A collective fine of Rs600,000 ($,150) was also imposed on the TLP party leader under the provisions of the Anti-Terrorism Act.

The move follows Pakistan’s decision in October to ban the TLP and designate it a proscribed organization under the Anti-Terrorism Act after violent clashes between its supporters and law enforcement in Punjab.

The unrest erupted as demonstrators attempted to travel from Lahore to Islamabad, saying they wanted to stage a pro-Palestine rally outside the US Embassy.

However, officials said TLP supporters were armed with bricks and batons, arguing their intention was to stir violence similar to earlier marches toward the federal capital.

The clashes between TLP supporters and police resulted in the deaths of five people, including two policemen, and injured more than 100 officers and dozens of protesters.

Led by Saad Hussain Rizvi, the TLP is known for its confrontational street politics and mass mobilizations.

Since its emergence in 2017, the party has repeatedly organized sit-ins and marches toward Islamabad, often triggering violent confrontations and prolonged disruptions on major routes to the capital.