Pakistan says ‘speeding up’ work on joint film, TV productions with Saudi Arabia

A combination of photos of Pakistani film and dramas.
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Updated 04 January 2021
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Pakistan says ‘speeding up’ work on joint film, TV productions with Saudi Arabia

  • Information minister says government wants to create “institutional mechanism” so productions could take place without delay
  • A number of Pakistani dramas and films have been dubbed in Arabic and broadcast in Saudi Arabia in recent months, including the film ‘Parchi’

Islamabad: Pakistani information minister Shibli Faraz has said Islamabad wanted enhanced cultural cooperation with Riyadh and to ‘speed up’ work on joint film and television productions to bring the people of the two countries closer together. 

In 2018, former information minister Chaudhry Fawad Hussain visited the Saudi capital and announced Islamabad’s plans to export its television series to the Kingdom. Three serials were selected for dubbing, namely Dhoop Kinare, Tanhaiyan and Aahat.

In January 2018, Parchi became the first Pakistani film ever to release in Saudi Arabia and one of the first international releases in the Kingdom after it ended a nearly 40-year ban on cinemas. 

“Some dramas got dubbed and were sent there [Saudi Arabia] … some films ... Some even the royal family watched, like Parchi,” Pakistani information minister Shibli Faraz told Urdu News in an interview that was published on Sunday. 

“There is a lot of similarity in our cultures, so on the basis of that, we would want that we can do more joint productions in films, in dramas ... This is a very powerful tool to bring two countries, two relationships, closer together.”

He said productions were already in the pipeline and work on them would be sped up. 

“The government’s effort is to bring speed into this [process], and to create an institutional mechanism in which this process can go on without delay,” Faraz added.


Pakistan urges UN Security Council to sanction separatist BLA group after recent attacks

Updated 05 February 2026
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Pakistan urges UN Security Council to sanction separatist BLA group after recent attacks

  • Separatist BLA launched attacks in multiple Balochistan cities last week, killing over 50 as per official figures
  • Pakistan envoy says since Taliban assumed control of Afghanistan, BLA, other militant groups have a “new lease of life“

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s UN Ambassador Iftikhar Ahmed this week urged the Security Council to impose sanctions against the separatist Baloch Liberation Army (BLA) militant group and designate it as a “terrorist” group, after its recent coordinated attacks in southwestern Balochistan province. 

Pakistan’s military said on Thursday it has concluded security operations in Balochistan against separatists that was launched since Jan. 29, killing 216 militants. The military launched counteroffensive operations in Balochistan after the BLA said it launched coordinated attacks in several parts of the province last Friday and Saturday. 

The attacks killed 36 civilians and 22 law enforcement and security forces personnel, Pakistan’s military said. Pakistan’s government has accused India of being involved in the attacks, charges that New Delhi has dismissed. 

“We hope the Council will act swiftly to designate BLA under the 1267 sanctions regime acceding to the listing request that is currently under consideration,” Iftikhar said on Wednesday during a UNSC briefing on the topic ‘Threats to International Peace and Security caused by Terrorist Acts.’

The 1267 sanctions regime is a UNSC program that seeks to impose sanctions on individuals and entities associated with “terrorism.”

The regime seeks to impose travel bans, freeze assets and impose an arms embargo on individuals and groups primarily associated with Al-Qaeda or the Taliban. 

Ahmad said that after the Taliban takeover of Afghanistan in 2021, “externally sponsored and foreign-funded proxy terrorist groups” such as the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan and the BLA have got a “new lease of life.”

“Operating with virtual impunity from Afghan soil and with the active support of our eastern neighbor, these groups are responsible for heinous terrorist attacks inside Pakistan,” he said. 

The Pakistani envoy said it has become imperative to prevent billions of dollars of sophisticated weapons and equipment, which were left behind by foreign forces in Afghanistan, “from falling into the hands of terrorists.”

“There must be accountability of external destabilizing actors who support, finance and arm these groups, including their proxies in Afghanistan,” Ahmad said in a veiled reference to India. 

Pakistan’s largest and poorest province, mineral-rich Balochistan borders Iran and ‌Afghanistan and is home to China’s investment in the Gwadar deep-water ‍port and other projects.

Balochistan has been the site of a ‍decades-long insurgency led by ethnic Baloch separatists seeking greater autonomy and a larger share of its natural ‍resources. 

They accuse the state of denying locals a fair share of the province’s mineral wealth, charges that are denied by the Pakistani government.