PM Khan performs Umrah, meets OIC Secretary General

The collage shows photos from Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan's Makkah visit on May 9, 2021. (Photo courtesy: @PakPMO/Twitter)
Short Url
Updated 09 May 2021
Follow

PM Khan performs Umrah, meets OIC Secretary General

  • Khan also visited and prayed at the Prophet’s Mosque in Madinah
  • Khan arrived in the Kingdom on Friday at the invitation of Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s Prime Minister Imran Khan, who is on a three-day official tour of Saudi Arabia, performed the Umrah pilgrimage in Makkah on Sunday after which he met the Secretary General of the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (OIC), according to the PM office.

 

 

He is soon scheduled to address the Pakistani community at a ceremony regarding Roshan Digital Account in Jeddah.
Khan performed Umrah alongside his wife, Bushra Bibi, and was received by a number of officials of the General Presidency for the Affairs of the Two Holy Mosques and the special force for the security of the Grand Mosque in Makkah.

 

 

Khan arrived in the Kingdom on Friday alongside high ranking Pakistani officials at the invitation of Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman and the two leaders held wide ranging bilateral and delegation level talks on Saturday in Jeddah.
Earlier on Sunday, Khan left Madinah headed for Jeddah, after he visited the Prophet’s Mosque and performed prayers there.
He was seen off from Prince Mohammad bin Abdulaziz International Airport in Madinah by a number of senior, civilian and military officials.


Kazakhstan offers to finance rail link to Pakistan ports via Afghanistan

Updated 4 sec ago
Follow

Kazakhstan offers to finance rail link to Pakistan ports via Afghanistan

  • Kazakh envoy says country ready to fully fund Central Asia-Pakistan rail corridor
  • Project revives Pakistan’s regional connectivity push despite Afghan border disruptions

ISLAMABAD: Kazakhstan has offered to fully finance a proposed railway linking Central Asia to Pakistan’s ports via Afghanistan, according to a media report, a move that could revive long-stalled regional connectivity plans and deepen Pakistan’s role as a transit hub for landlocked economies.

The proposal would connect Kazakhstan to Pakistan’s ports of Karachi and Gwadar through Turkmenistan and Afghanistan, providing Central Asia with direct access to warm waters and offering Pakistan a long-sought overland trade corridor to the region.

“We are not asking Pakistan for a single penny,” Kazakhstan’s ambassador to Pakistan, Yerzhan Kistafin, said in an interview with Geo News on Tuesday. “This is not aid. It is a mutually beneficial investment.”

Pakistan has for years sought to position itself as a gateway for Central Asian trade, offering its ports to landlocked economies as part of a broader strategy to integrate South and Central Asia.

However, its ambition has faced setbacks, most recently in October last year when border skirmishes with Afghanistan prompted Islamabad to shut key crossings, suspending transit and bilateral trade.

Kistafin said the rail project would treat Afghanistan not as an obstacle but as a transit partner, arguing that trade and connectivity could help stabilize the country.

“Connectivity creates responsibility,” he said. “Trade creates incentives for peace.”

Under the proposed plan, rail cargo would move from Kazakhstan through Turkmenistan to western Afghanistan before entering Pakistan at Chaman and linking with the national rail network.

Geo News reported the Afghan segment, spanning about 687 kilometers, is expected to take roughly three years to build once agreements are finalized, with Kazakhstan financing the project.