Pakistanis stranded in Kabul due to cancelled Saudi Arabia flights begin returning home

In this photo shared on July 05, 2021, men walk past the buses as Pakistan embassy in Kabul make arrangements to send back its residents stranded in Kabul. (Photo courtesy: @ambmansoorkhan/Twitter)
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Updated 05 July 2021
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Pakistanis stranded in Kabul due to cancelled Saudi Arabia flights begin returning home

  • Operation underway to send back home 4,000 Pakistanis stranded in Kabul, ambassador to Afghanistan says
  • First batch repatriated to Pakistan on Sunday by road from the Torkham border with Afghanistan

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan said on Monday an operation was underway to send back home 4,000 of its residents stranded in Kabul due to the cancelation of flights to Saudi Arabia.
Zahid Hafeez Chaudhri, a spokesperson for the Pakistani ministry of foreign affairs, said the first batch of Pakistani nationals was repatriated to their home country on Sunday by road via the Torkham border with Afghanistan. 
“Our Embassy in Kabul is in contact with the Pakistani nationals stranded in Afghanistan due to suspension of flights to Saudi Arabia,” Chaudhri said in a statement. “Besides making adequate arrangements for the repatriation of these stranded Pakistanis through Torkham, the Embassy has also made effective arrangements in terms of transport, food and cash grant to facilitate return of these Pakistani nationals to their homes.”
Mansoor Ahmad Khan, ambassador of Pakistan to Afghanistan, said in a tweet:

Thousands of Pakistanis have been unable to return home in recent weeks due to flight cancelations by Middle Eastern operators following recent travel bans in their countries.


Pakistan, ADB reaffirm partnership to push IMF-backed reforms

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Pakistan, ADB reaffirm partnership to push IMF-backed reforms

  • ADB signals further budget support aligned with Pakistan’s $7 billion IMF program
  • Finance minister outlines focus on privatization, energy reforms, project execution

KARACHI: Pakistan and the Asian Development Bank (ADB) on Monday reaffirmed their strategic partnership to accelerate IMF-backed economic reforms, as Islamabad seeks to sustain macroeconomic stabilization and deepen private-sector-led growth.

The commitment came during a meeting between Finance Minister Muhammad Aurangzeb and a senior ADB delegation in Islamabad, where both sides reviewed Pakistan’s reform trajectory under the International Monetary Fund’s Extended Fund Facility (EFF) and discussed ways to improve development impact and project execution.

Pakistan has been pursuing wide-ranging fiscal, energy and structural reforms under the $7 billion IMF loan program after years of balance-of-payments stress and repeated stabilization cycles. While recent reviews have pointed to improved macroeconomic indicators, the government has stressed that sustained growth will depend on translating policy commitments into implementation, particularly in taxation, state-owned enterprises and the energy sector.

“ADB representatives expressed appreciation for Pakistan’s reform progress under the IMF program and confirmed ADB’s readiness to provide further budget support aligned with the EFF,” the finance ministry said in a statement. 

“They outlined future areas of engagement, including insurance sector reforms, public-private partnerships, pension reforms, and continued support for climate resilience and social sector development.”

Aurangzeb told the delegation that the government was focused on improving project readiness and execution, noting that delays had historically weakened the impact of development spending, especially in social sectors and climate-related initiatives. He said visible progress on privatization and energy sector restructuring was essential to building investor confidence and sustaining reform momentum.

The finance minister highlighted recent steps, including the privatization of a small bank, renewed interest in strategic transactions and ongoing work to restructure electricity distribution companies. He also pointed to encouraging trends in exports, remittances and services, particularly information technology, while cautioning that growth needed to remain balanced and sustainable.

According to the statement, ADB officials reiterated the bank’s emphasis on results-based engagement and faster project implementation, saying streamlined processes were critical for timely disbursements and measurable outcomes. The delegation also flagged expanded support for private-sector development through guarantees, public-private partnerships and potential infrastructure transactions.