Pakistani teenager summits Manaslu, gets closer to being youngest climber of all eight-thousanders

A combination of photos shared by Pakistani mountaineer Shehroze Kashif on September 21, 2021 shows him during his summit of Manaslu (8,163 m), the world's eighth highest peak in Nepal. (Photo courtesy: @Shehrozekashif2/Twitter)
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Updated 25 September 2021
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Pakistani teenager summits Manaslu, gets closer to being youngest climber of all eight-thousanders

  • Climber's father says he will try to summit all of the world's 14 highest peaks within two years
  • Shehroze Kashif made the world record as the youngest mountaineer to scale K2, his third eight-thousander, last month

KHALPU, Gilgit-Baltistan: Shehroze Kashif, a teenage Pakistani mountaineer who last month summited K2, on Saturday scaled Nepal's Manaslu, officials and the climber's father confirmed, as he moved closer to becoming the youngest person to reach the world's 14 highest peaks.

Kashif, 19, began climbing in his early teens. A native of Lahore, Punjab province, he scaled the world’s 12th highest mountain, Broad Peak (8,047 meters), at the age of 17. In May, he became the youngest Pakistani to scale Mount Everest (8,849-meters), the world’s highest mountain, and in August made the world record as the youngest person to scale K2 (8,611 meters), the world’s most deadly peak known as the Savage Mountain.

Manaslu (8,163 meters), located in the Mansiri Himal in the Nepalese Himalayas, west-central Nepal, is the world's eighth-highest mountain and the fourth of the 14 eight-thousanders Kashif aims to scale.

"Today morning, Shehroze summited Manaslu 8163m ASL in Nepal at 5:40 a.m. PST," Karrar Haidri, secretary of the Alpine Club of Pakistan, announced in a social media post. "The whole nation is proud of you Shehroze."

The young climber's father told Arab News he will try to summit the remaining tallest peaks within two years.

"We will leave no stone unturned to achieve his goal. IA, he will become the youngest climber in the world to scale all 14 peaks within the next two years,” Salman Kashif said, adding that his son's achievements show his commitment toward the goal.

The 14 peaks — all above 8,000 meters — are located in the Himalayan and Karakoram mountain ranges — across Nepal, Tibet and Pakistan.

"A teenager summited three peaks above eight–thousand including Mount Everest within five months," the father said. "This is a very proud movement for not only parents but also for the whole nation."

Congratulations poured in on Saturday following Kashif's summit of Manaslu.

"You make us proud. Keep it up," Pakistan President Dr. Arif Alvi said in a tweet.

Punjab Sports Minister Rai Taimoor Khan Bhatti also took to social media to call Kashif a "young national hero" and say he had "never seen such an example of bravery and courage at such a young age."


Pakistan says $50 million meat export deal with Tajikistan nearing finalization

Updated 09 December 2025
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Pakistan says $50 million meat export deal with Tajikistan nearing finalization

  • Islamabad expects to finalize agreement soon after Dushanbe signals demand for 100,000 tons
  • Pakistan is seeking to expand agricultural trade beyond rice, citrus and mango exports

ISLAMABAD: Tajikistan has expressed interest in importing 100,000 tons of Pakistani meat worth more than $50 million, with both governments expected to finalize a supply agreement soon, Pakistan’s food security ministry said on Tuesday.

Pakistan is trying to grow agriculture-based exports as it seeks regional markets for livestock and food commodities, while Tajikistan, a landlocked Central Asian state, has been expanding food imports to support domestic demand. Pakistan currently exports rice, citrus and mangoes to Dushanbe, though volumes remain small compared to national production, according to official figures.

The development came during a meeting in Islamabad between Pakistan’s Federal Minister for National Food Security and Research Rana Tanveer Hussain and Ambassador of Tajikistan Yusuf Sharifzoda, where agricultural trade, livestock supply and food-security cooperation were discussed.

“Tajikistan intends to purchase 100,000 tons of meat from Pakistan, an import valued at over USD 50 million,” the ambassador said, according to the ministry’s statement, assuring full facilitation and that Islamabad was prepared to meet the demand.

The statement said the two sides agreed to expand cooperation in meat and livestock, fresh fruit, vegetables, staple crops, agricultural research, pest management and standards compliance. Pakistan also proposed strengthening coordination on phytosanitary rules and establishing pest-free production zones to support long-term exports.

Pakistan and Tajikistan have long maintained political ties but bilateral food trade remains below potential: Pakistan produces 1.8 million tons of mangoes annually but exported just 0.7 metric tons to Tajikistan in 2024, while rice exports amounted to only 240 metric tons in 2022 out of national output of 9.3 million tons. Pakistan imports mainly ginned cotton from Tajikistan.