Europe to remain Pakistan’s ‘steady partner’ in supporting Afghan refugees — EU envoy

The European Union's ambassador to Pakistan, Androulla Kaminara, speaks to Arab News in Islamabad on November 12, 2021. (AN photo)
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Updated 14 November 2021
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Europe to remain Pakistan’s ‘steady partner’ in supporting Afghan refugees — EU envoy

  • Ambassador cites concerns over human rights challenges in Pakistan, as the EU reviews GSP+ arrangement with Islamabad
  • She welcomes Pakistan’s environmental initiatives and efforts to mitigate the effects of climate change

ISLAMABAD: The European Union’s ambassador to Islamabad, Androulla Kaminara, has said the EU will continue to be Pakistan’s “steady partner” in supporting Afghan refugees amid increasing worries that Afghanistan’s collapsing economy could push fresh flows of asylum seekers to its neighbors.
Afghanistan plunged into economic crisis when its Western-backed administration collapsed in mid-August as the Taliban took control. The takeover triggered the suspension of billions of dollars in international assistance to the country’s aid-dependent economy.
As it is sinking deeper into economic crisis, with the international community facing a tough decision of how it should reach the Afghan people without recognizing the Taliban, neighboring countries such as Pakistan have been worried about a mass movement of refugees.
Pakistan has hosted millions of Afghan refugees from decades of conflict. While 1.4 million Afghans are officially registered by Pakistani authorities, the government estimates the actual number of refugees to be even 3.5 million.
“Pakistan has been very, very generous in hosting large number of refugees for many decades,” Kaminara told Arab News in an exclusive interview on Friday.
“I think we have been a very steady partner of Pakistan in trying to support the plight of the Afghan refugees and we will continue to play that role,” she said, as she outlined the EU’s aid efforts.
“We have a situation where there was a consistent humanitarian crisis which has almost doubled in intensity. So, first we have been providing aid at the beginning of the year we had announced 57 million euros of humanitarian aid to Afghanistan. We have recently made the number six times greater, it has gone up to 300 million,” Kaminara said, adding that EU assistance has also been directed at Afghan refugees in Pakistan.
“Over 30 million euros have been put in the past in to supporting Afghans in Pakistan, and also I have to underline where we help Afghan refugees, we also help Pakistani host communities.”
As the EU will undertake in February a periodic review of its preferential trade arrangement with Pakistan, the ambassador expressed concerns over human rights challenges in the South Asian nation.
Citing violence and discrimination against religious minorities, the European Parliament moved a resolution in April seeking an immediate appraisal of Pakistan’s eligibility for the trade facility — Generalized Scheme of Preferences Plus (GSP+).

GSP+ is a special trade arrangement offered to developing economies by European nations in return for their commitment to uphold and implement 27 international conventions on human rights, environmental protection and governance. Pakistan is said to be the largest beneficiary of the scheme that allows it to export its products to the European market on zero percent duty.
“GSP+ regulation basically says that we have to do periodic reviews of the progress of each country every two years. Currently, we are in the process of preparing the next report,” Kaminara said. “Whether or not that trade regime continues to be granted depends on the progress and depends on the result of this report which is being drafted.”
She added that the EU’s “list of areas of concerns have not changed” since the previous report was published in February 2020.
The EU envoy welcomed, however, Pakistan’s efforts to mitigate the effects of climate change.
“We are very pleased that Pakistan has given climate change mediation such a priority and we have often congratulate Pakistan for the progress made,” Kaminara said. “Pakistan is in a pretty unique position because although it contributes very small share in CO2 emission globally but it’s one of the most vulnerable countries to climate change impact.”

She added that the EU has been partnering with Pakistan in some of its renewable energy projects and has been contributing 18 million euros a year in development grants: “A lot of that funding is going into environmentally friendly projects and programs in order to further support Pakistan in this endeavor.”


Pakistan’s surgical exports slide as tax overhaul, rising costs squeeze Sialkot manufacturers

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Pakistan’s surgical exports slide as tax overhaul, rising costs squeeze Sialkot manufacturers

  • Industry leaders warn tax regime shift has hit SME-dominated surgical sector, reversing years of export growth
  • Rising energy costs and labor shortages add pressure on a globally competitive manufacturing hub

SIALKOT: Pakistan’s globally known surgical instruments industry, concentrated in the eastern city of Sialkot, is facing a sharp slowdown after years of steady growth, with exporters blaming a tax regime overhaul, rising energy costs and labor shortages for eroding competitiveness in one of the country’s most important export sectors.

Surgical instrument exports, which had risen consistently from about $420 million in 2021 to nearly $492 million in 2024, fell back to roughly $445 million last year, according to the Surgical Instruments Manufacturers Association of Pakistan (SIMAP). Industry leaders say the reversal reflects mounting structural pressures rather than a decline in global demand.

The slowdown has raised concerns about the future of a sector that supplies hospitals and medical distributors across Europe and North America and provides livelihoods to hundreds of thousands of skilled workers in Pakistan.

SIMAP Chairman Dr. Zeeshan Tariq said the transition from Pakistan’s long-standing Final Tax Regime (FTR) to the National Tax Regime (NTR) in 2024 had been particularly damaging for the industry, which is dominated by small and medium-sized enterprises.

Under the FTR, exporters paid a fixed tax deducted at source, with limited paperwork. The NTR requires exporters to manage full accounts, maintain balance sheets and comply with documentation requirements at every stage from production to export, a shift Tariq described as overwhelming for family-run workshops.

“As per our opinion, government policy is the main reason of decline of exports,” Tariq told Arab News in an interview at his office in Sialkot.

“We were in FTR, the final tax regime, since last 32 years. But in 2024, government ended the FTR scheme for exporters and put us in NTR, the national tax regime.”

Rising electricity prices and aggressive tax enforcement had compounded the impact of the tax overhaul, insiders say.

“The electricity cost is rising. We did not get any support from the government in any cost and there are multiple departments who are just piling up taxes and taxes on us,” Tariq said.

While Pakista historically benefited from low labor costs, exporters say energy prices and compliance costs are now eroding that advantage relative to other Asian producers.

Responding to SIMAP’s concerns, Adviser to the Finance Minister Khurram Schehzad said the shift from the final tax regime to the national tax regime was part of a broader policy decision aimed at bringing all sectors into the standard tax system, rather than allowing exporters to remain under special arrangements indefinitely. He explained that the government considered the final tax regime a temporary measure that was being phased out, with only a few sectors still covered under it for limited periods.

“Going forward, if there are sweet spots like surgical instruments, they’re exporting significantly and adding to the exchequer, so is the IT industry, so is the textile industry .... so the policy shift, if it’s there, it will be for all the sectors across the board,” Schehzad added. 

He said the government had established a dedicated tax policy office to assess sector-specific needs through data-driven analysis. This body would review proposals from industries considered “sunrise sectors,” those with growth potential and strategic importance, and evaluate whether targeted incentives or policy adjustments were justified to support value creation and long-term economic impact.

According to Schehzad, the aim was not only to support individual industries, but to ensure that tax policy contributed to broader economic growth by encouraging sectors that added value, adopted new technologies and strengthened Pakistan’s export base.

“Our tax policy office has been set up for this very purpose, to look into the specific proposals of the industry and adopt them going forward, so that the value creation can happen,” the adviser said.

A COLONIAL-ERA INDUSTRY AT RISK

Pakistan remains a recognized exporter of surgical instruments, ranking among the world’s top 40 exporters of medical instruments, though its share of the global surgical instruments trade is estimated at under 1 percent, reflecting niche specialization rather than large-scale production.

Exports are heavily concentrated in a small number of markets, particularly the United States, Germany and the United Kingdom, which together account for a significant share of Pakistan’s surgical exports. Analysts say this market concentration increases vulnerability to domestic policy shocks.

Sialkot manufacturers compete with surgical clusters in Germany’s Tuttlingen region, Malaysia, Hungary and Poland, while China has expanded its presence through scale, automation and state-backed industrial support.

Sialkot’s surgical manufacturing dates back to the British colonial era, when local craftsmen repaired medical tools for hospitals across the empire, gradually evolving into a global export industry.

The sector employs an estimated 300,000 workers, many trained through traditional apprenticeship systems.

But that workforce is aging and manufacturers say they are now also facing a structural labor crisis.

The sector relies heavily on manual craftsmanship like forging, grinding, polishing and finishing — skills that are typically learned through long apprenticeships rather than formal training. But industry leaders say fewer young workers are entering the trade, leaving factories increasingly dependent on an aging workforce.

“It’s a huge gap because 20 years ago, the average worker, average age of a worker in an industry, in our industry was 25 to 27 years, which is now 45 years,” Tariq said.

He said younger Pakistanis were increasingly reluctant to join the labor-intensive sector, opting instead for service jobs, overseas employment or technology-related work.

“The new generation does not want to come and get their hands dirty because our business, our industry is mainly hand-based and they have to get their hands dirty.”

Industry figures warn that without new entrants and structured skills development, the loss of experienced craftsmen over the next decade could weaken Pakistan’s ability to meet global demand, maintain quality standards and compete with automated manufacturers in countries such as China.

To overcome this, businesses are now seeking government-backed joint ventures with Chinese medical equipment firms to introduce automation and expand product offerings.

“Our government has promised us that they will help us facilitate doing those JVs and our companies are ready to invest if such facility comes or if there opportunity arrives because now everyone wants a one-shop solution,” Tariq said.

He also urged state support for international compliance costs, which remain prohibitively high for many SMEs.

“The fees are very high. We have asked them not to give us money but either do the MoUs [Memorandums of understanding] with the government or the certifying bodies,” he said.

“If someone is interested in getting that compliance, he should do his part and the fees should be paid by the government.”

But despite current pressures, Tariq said the industry’s long-term prospects remained strong if policy constraints were addressed.

“Let me tell you that we can. Now we are around $450 to $500 million industry and our instruments are sold at around $10 billion all over the world. So I think that we can double our exports within a couple of years if we get the proper support from the government,” he said.

Meanwhile, a proposed sector-specific industrial zone, known as “Surgical City,” remains stalled in court despite land acquisition.

“The land has been acquired but now the cases are in court and it’s still pending,” Tariq said.