Two Pakistani startups win $100,000 each at Saudi accelerator showcase

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Updated 17 March 2022
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Two Pakistani startups win $100,000 each at Saudi accelerator showcase

  • King Abdullah University of Science and Technology, Saudi British Bank reviewed 23 startups last week for $1.1 million grant
  • Among winners are Pakistan's Cubex, online marketplace for sea freight, and Autilent, which uses AI to prevent road accidents

KARACHI: Two Pakistani startups, Cubex and Autilent, are among eleven from around the world who have won funding out of a $1.1 million Saudi grant, the founders of the companies said on Wednesday.

Since its launch in 2016, more than 130 startups have graduated from TAQADAM. During that time, TAQADAM has given more than $10 million in non-dilutive funding to startup founders.

Last week, the King Abdullah University of Science and Technology (KAUST) and its partner, the Saudi British Bank (SABB), reviewed 23 startups during the annual TAQADAM Startup Accelerator Showcase for a $1.1 million grant.  

Among the startups chosen this year and which received $100,000 funding each are Cubex, an online marketplace for sea freight founded by Lahore-based Sheikh Ahsan Tariq and Wajiha Khalid Paracha, and Autilent, a startup by Karachi-based university graduates that uses computer vision (AI) to prevent traffic accidents.




Shaikh Ahsan Tariq, founder and Chief Executive Office of Cubex, a Pakistani startup that won a $100,000 grant at the TAQADAM Startup Accelerator Showcase, poses with his prize at Thuwal, Saudi Arabia, on March 10, 2022 (Photo courtesy: Shaikh Ahsan Tariq)

Cubex Tariq said his online marketplace, which connects freight forwarders with shippers in real time, had done $4,000,000 in revenue since 2020 and had 3,900 customers from 82 countries.

“We are targeting the global freight forwarding industry and currently have offices in UAE, Pakistan, USA, Oman,” Tariq told Arab News, adding that the startup would be launching in the Saudi market next month with offices in Riyadh and Jeddah.

Cubex has previously won the Global Ocean Innovation Award by the World Economic Forum in 2020, the Maritime Innovation Award by the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development in 2021 and the Aviatrix Award at LEAP Conference, Riyadh, 2022.

Tariq said collaboration between the Saudi and Pakistani startup ecosystems was "very important" to help generate future unicorns from this region.  

“This is the start of a new era of innovation. The Saudi government has opened doors for the world to come up with innovative ideas and build successful companies,” he said.

Another Pakistani startup, Autlient, was selected as the People’s Choice Recipient at last week's accelerator showcase and will also receive $100,000 in funding.




Abdul Muqsit Abbasi, chief executive officer of Autlient, with co-founder Muhammad Ibrahim Chippa (center) and Shareefa Kutbi, a Saudi partner at Autilent (left), at a TAQADAM Startup Accelerator Showcase event at Thuwal, Saudi Arabia, on March 10, 2022 (Photo courtesy: KAUST Innovation)

“There were going to be 11 winners out of 23, and each would get $ 100,000,” co-founder Asad Anwer told Arab News. “All hopes were gone by the tenth name. I was crying, but Alhamdulillah, our name was announced at the eleventh number.”

Anwar said his team conceived the idea of the startup because road accidents, which take 1.35 million lives annually and cause losses of $120 billion, were preventable.

“We, at Autilent, are leveraging the technology of AI to prevent these human errors,” said another co-founder Manal Farooq, “to save precious human lives and valuable assets.”


Death toll in Karachi mall fire rises to 73 after two more bodies recovered — rescue service

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Death toll in Karachi mall fire rises to 73 after two more bodies recovered — rescue service

  • Authorities have yet to confirm the cause of the fire at Gul Plaza which housed around 1,200 shops
  • The identification process has been slowed by the condition of the remains recovered from the site

KARACHI: The death toll from a devastating fire at a shopping mall in Pakistan’s largest city of Karachi climbed to 73 on Sunday, the Edhi rescue service said, following the recovery of the remains of two more persons.

The development came as rescuers and volunteers continued to comb through the debris at Gul Plaza, a densely packed commercial complex in the heart of Karachi where a deadly fire erupted on Jan. 17, for remains of the victims.

Over the past week, family members of more than a dozen missing persons have stayed near the destroyed plaza and hospital even after providing their DNA samples for testing, with some relatives also criticizing authorities for the slow pace of rescue efforts.

“The death toll in the Gul Plaza tragedy has reached 73,” the Edhi rescue service said in a statement on Sunday night. “The remains of two more bodies were shifted to the Edhi morgue today.”

There was no official comment on the increase in death toll.

“We have processed 71 sets of remains, of which 20 have been identified,” Chief Police Surgeon Dr. Summaiya Syed said on Friday.

The identification process has been significantly slowed by the condition of the remains recovered from the site, according to Syed. Many bodies were found in fragments, complicating DNA analysis and prolonging the process for families waiting for confirmation.

Authorities have yet to confirm the cause of the fire at the building, which housed around 1,200 shops. Traders say the blaze caused more than $53 million losses.

Fires are common in Karachi’s markets and factories, which are known for their poor infrastructure, but a blaze on such a scale is rare.

The provincial government has announced that it will give Rs10 million ($35,720) to each family of the deceased. All 1,200 shopkeepers will also be compensated.