‘May our countries prosper’: Pakistani PM greets Saudi leaders on founding day

Saudi King Salman, second right, welcoming Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan, second left, in Jeddah on September 19, 2018. (SPA/File)
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Updated 22 February 2022
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‘May our countries prosper’: Pakistani PM greets Saudi leaders on founding day

  • Saudi Founding Day celebrates founding of first Saudi State, Emirate of Diriyah, by Imam Muhammad Bin Saud in 1727
  • On January 27, King Salman issued a Royal Order to commemorate February 22 every year as the nation’s Founding Day

ISLAMABAD: Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan on Tuesday greeted Saudi leaders over the kingdom’s "historic" founding day, wishing prosperity for the two nations and their people.

This is the first time Saudi Arabia will celebrate the anniversary of the founding day of the first Saudi state on Tuesday, February 22.

Saudi Founding Day celebrates the founding of the first Saudi State, the Emirate of Diriyah, by Imam Muhammad Bin Saud in 1727 — which occurred in February of that year. On January 27, the Custodian of The Two Holy Mosques, King Salman issued a Royal Order to commemorate February 22 every year as the nation’s founding day.

“On the historic Founding Day of Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, I extend our heartiest greetings to the Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques, HM King Salman bin Abdulaziz; HRH Crown Prince Mohammed Bin Salman; & brotherly people of the Kingdom,” Khan said on Twitter. “May our two countries & our people prosper.”

 

 

“Taking into account that the middle of the year 1139H, corresponding to the month of February of the year 1727, signals the commencement of the reign of Imam Muhammad Bin Saud, marking his founding of the first Saudi State,” the king’s Royal Order read.

The King said he took “Great pride in the deep roots of this blessed state and its citizens' firm bonds with its leaders which began three centuries ago with the reign of Imam Muhammad Bin Saud when he founded the first Saudi State in the middle of 1139H (early 1727), lasting until 1233H (1818), with Diriyah as its capital and the Holy Qur’an and the Sunnah of Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him) as its constitution, and which provided unity and security in the Arabian Peninsula following centuries of fragmentation, dissension and instability, and survived attempts of elimination.”


Pakistan set to auction loss-making national airline in live broadcast tomorrow

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Pakistan set to auction loss-making national airline in live broadcast tomorrow

  • This is Pakistan’s third attempt at PIA privatization, following a failed 2024 auction that got only one bid
  • Islamabad plans to retain PIA name and branding, expand fleet and route network under the new business plan

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan is set to broadcast live the auction of its loss-making national airline tomorrow, Pakistani state media reported on Monday, a move authorities say is aimed at ensuring transparency.

Pakistan will privatize 75 percent of the carrier, the Pakistan International Airlines (PIA), while retaining its name and branding, according to Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif’s Office.

The decision marks Islamabad’s most aggressive push in decades to reform the debt-ridden airline, which has accumulated more than $2.5 billion in losses and become a major burden on the national budget.

Pakistan prequalified in July four consortiums for the sale, but Fauji Fertilizer Company Ltd. withdrew later. Lucky Cement and Arif Habib Corporation lead two other consortiums, while private airline Airblue is the third contender.

“The government plans a full divestment of the airline, beginning with the auction of a 75 percent stake on Tuesday, with the remaining 25 percent to be offered later at a 12 percent premium,” Pakistan TV Digital reported quoted Privatization Commission Chairman Muhammad Ali as saying.

Once regarded as one of Asia’s premier carriers, PIA has struggled with chronic mismanagement, political interference, overstaffing, mounting debt and operational issues that led to a 2020 ban on flights to the European Union, United Kingdom and the United States (US) after a pilot licensing scandal. Privatizing the airline is also a key requirement under Pakistan’s $7 billion International Monetary Fund (IMF) program agreed last year.

This is Pakistan’s third attempt at PIA privatization, following a failed 2024 auction that received only one bid of $35 million that was far below the government’s nearly $300 million asking price, according to Privatization Commission records.

The government is targeting $302 million in privatization proceeds this year, though Ali said restoring PIA operations remains a priority over maximizing short-term revenue. Islamabad plans to expand PIA fleet and route network under the new business plan.

Ali last month said the government had aimed to finalize the airline’s sale by October 2025 but the target was missed due to delays in restructuring and valuation.

The PIA sale is seen as a key test of Pakistan’s broader economic reform agenda as the government seeks to cut losses from state-owned enterprises and revive investor confidence.

Islamabad has launched a five-year privatization plan covering 24 state entities between 2024 and 2029, including the Roosevelt Hotel in New York, three banks, power distribution companies, and the Postal Life Insurance Company, according to the Privatization Commission.