Nobel Peace Prize candidate hopes nomination will bring good name to Pakistan

Pakistani philanthropist, Dr. Amjad Saqib, addresses an event in Lahore, Pakistan on Dec. 12, 2021. (Photo courtesy: Dr. Amjad Saqib)
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Updated 08 May 2022
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Nobel Peace Prize candidate hopes nomination will bring good name to Pakistan

  • Dr. Amjad Saqib is the founder of Pakistan’s largest interest-free microfinance program Akhuwat
  • Since its inception in 2001, Akhuwat has enabled hundreds of thousands of people to become self-reliant

ISLAMABAD: When he learnt about his nomination for this year’s Nobel Peace Prize, Pakistani philanthropist Dr. Amjad Saqib said he had never been motivated by awards, but hoped the news could present a good image of his country.
The founder of Pakistan’s largest interest-free microfinance organization Akhuwat, Saqib is among 251 individuals and 92 organizations announced last month as candidates for the annual prize that comes with a medal, a diploma, 10 million Swedish crowns ($1 million), and immediate global attention.
The peace prize is one of five separate prizes funded by Swedish industrialist Alfred Nobel that, according to his will of 1895, are awarded to those who “have conferred the greatest benefit to Mankind.” The other four awards are in the fields of physics, chemistry, medicine, and literature.
The Pakistani candidate already enjoys world-wide recognition for his work in social mobilization and poverty alleviation. In 2021, he received the Ramon Magsaysay Award, popularly known as Asia’s Nobel Prize.
“I am doing all this work for Allah, so I am not very excited about awards,” Saqib told Arab News in a recent interview.
“But it is a good news in this sense that this nomination will bring good name to my country and present a good image of Pakistan to the outer world.”




Pakistani philanthropist, Dr. Amjad Saqib, right, receives the 2021 Ramon Magsaysay Award at the Philippine embassy in Islamabad on Aug. 31, 2021. (Photo courtesy: Dr. Amjad Saqib)

Saqib left his job in Pakistan’s civil service to establish Akhuwat in 2001. Since its inception, the organization has opened 800 branches across Pakistan, enabling hundreds of thousands of people to become self-reliant.
“We created this interest-free loan fund in which wealthy people would contribute and the institution (Akhuwat) would distribute it to needy people but without any interest so that they can start a small business,” he said, adding that the first loan was given to a lady who purchased two sewing machines to start her business.
As of now, the charity has provided more than $870 million in 5 million interest free loans, while retaining a recovery rate of 99.9 percent. Operational costs are covered by donations that come mostly from Pakistani citizens.
“Forty-two percent of our beneficiaries are women,” Saqib said. “Akhuwat gives loans without any quota or discrimination, to such people who have skills, ideas and the will to work.”
Saqib believes the creation of businesses provides long-term dividends as it opens opportunities. 
His approach to education is similar.
The organization runs several colleges providing residential facilities for students who cannot afford quality education. They can pay for tuition 10 years later, when they have the means to do so. 
Works are underway to merge the colleges into Akhuwat University.
“Akhuwat University is an education project in which Akhuwat pays all the expenses of education like fee, boarding, food, clothes and others,” Saqib said. “A few colleges of the university are already functioning and around 1,500 students are getting education.”


Customs seize narcotics, smuggled goods, vehicles worth $4.9 million in southwest Pakistan

Updated 16 December 2025
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Customs seize narcotics, smuggled goods, vehicles worth $4.9 million in southwest Pakistan

  • Customs seize 22.14 kg narcotics, consignments of smuggled betel nuts, Hino trucks, auto parts, says FBR
  • Smuggled goods enter Pakistan’s Balochistan province from neighboring countries Iran and Afghanistan

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan Customs seized narcotics, smuggled goods and vehicles worth a total of Rs1.38 billion [$4.92 million] in the southwestern Balochistan province on Tuesday, the Federal Board of Revenue (FBR) said in a statement. 

Customs Enforcement Quetta seized and recovered 22.14 kilograms of narcotics and consignments of smuggled goods comprising betel nuts, Indian medicines, Chinese salt, auto parts, a ROCO vehicle and three Hino trucks in two separate operations, the FBR said. All items cost an estimated Rs1.38 billion, it added. 

Smuggled items make their way into Pakistan through southwestern Balochistan province, which borders Iran and Afghanistan. 

“These operations are part of the collectorate’s intensified enforcement drive aimed at curbing smuggling and dismantling illegal trade networks,” the FBR said. 

“All the seized narcotics, goods and vehicles have been taken into custody, and legal proceedings under the Customs Act 1969 have been formally initiated.”

In the first operation, customs officials intercepted three containers during routine checking at FEU Zariat Cross (ZC) area. The containers were being transported from Quetta to Pakistan’s Punjab and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa provinces, the FBR said. 

The vehicles intercepted included three Hino trucks. Their detailed examination led to the recovery of the smuggled goods which were concealed in the containers.

In the second operation, the staff of the Collectorate of Enforcement Customs, Quetta, intercepted a ROCO vehicle at Zariat Cross area with the local police’s assistance. 

The driver was interrogated while the vehicle was searched, the FBR said. 

“During interrogation, it was disclosed that drugs were concealed inside the spare wheel at the bottom side of the vehicle,” it said. 

“Upon thorough checking, suspected narcotics believed to be heroin was recovered which was packed in 41 packets, each weighing 0.54 kilograms.”

The narcotics weighed a total of 22.14 kilograms, with an estimated value of Rs1.23 billion in the international market, the FBR concluded. 

“The Federal Board of Revenue has commended the Customs Enforcement Quetta team for their effective action and reiterated its firm resolve to combat smuggling, illicit trade and illegal economic activities across the country,” it said.