Pakistani tech firm makes Forbes 'Asia’s Best Under A Billion' list for third time

This undated file photo shows Systems Limited premises. (Photo courtesy: @Pakistanomy/Twitter)
Short Url
Updated 22 August 2022
Follow

Pakistani tech firm makes Forbes 'Asia’s Best Under A Billion' list for third time

  • Each year, Forbes releases its list of top 200 mid-sized businesses in the Asia-Pacific area
  • Pakistan's Highnoon Laboratories on list, 24 Indian companies make it to list this year

ISLAMABAD: Pakistani company Systems Limited, which develops software and provides business process outsourcing services, has made it to the ‘Forbes Asia’s Best Under A Billion’ for the third time in a row.

Each year, Forbes releases its list of top 200 mid-sized businesses in the Asia-Pacific region. This year’s list includes 75 returnees from the prior year, reflecting their resiliency in a fast-changing environment.

“As Covid-19 restrictions ease across the Asia-Pacific and people adapt to the new normal, this year’s annual Best Under A Billion list highlights the shift to discretionary spending,” Forbes said on its website. “While healthcare and pharmaceutical-related companies were standouts last year, the post-pandemic return to daily life has benefitted apparel makers, mall operators, restaurants, consumer electronics and entertainment companies, among others.”

Forbes said Systems Limited had clients in North America, Europe and the Middle East that operated in the telecom, retail, pharmaceutical and finance industries. Founded in 1977, the company is based in Lahore, Pakistan.

“Systems Limited has created a thriving ecosystem that consistently meets outstanding performance metrics. It gives me immense pleasure that Systems Limited is the only IT company hailing from Pakistan that has been recognised by Forbes Asia as Best Under A Billion company three times, consecutively,” CEO Asif Peer said. 

“This great honour is monumental to Systems Limited’s sustainability and consistent growth in all the verticals and segments in which we are excelling.”

Previously, Systems Limited has won the 2021 Poll of Asia’s Outstanding Companies by Asia Money in two categories. The company also holds the title of Pakistan’s top IT exporter and has been awarded the prestigious Microsoft Inner Circle for Business Applications 2021/2022 and 2022/2023 memberships.

Another company which has made the list is Highnoon Laboratories, which manufactures, markets and distributes drugs and other healthcare products, primarily in Pakistan. It specializes in drugs related to cardiology, diabetes, gastroenterology and respiratory disease. The company was founded in 1984 and is headquartered in Lahore.

The number of Indian businesses that made the "Best Under A Billion" list this year was 24, down from 26 in 2021.

In terms of Asian nations, this put India in fourth place, one spot ahead of China, which had 22 enterprises on the list. With 30, Taiwan has the most publicly traded companies, followed by Japan with 29 and South Korea with 27.


Separated twice: An Afghan man’s life in Pakistan and the fear of losing home again

Updated 2 min 39 sec ago
Follow

Separated twice: An Afghan man’s life in Pakistan and the fear of losing home again

  • Lost as a child in Peshawar, Mohammad Rahim Khan built a life in Pakistan but remains undocumented
  • Deportation drive of ‘illegal’ foreigners exposes legal gaps around adoption, marriage, refugee status

ISLAMABAD: Mohammad Rahim Khan was five years old when he last saw his mother.

It was at the Hajji Camp bus stop in Pakistan’s northwestern city of Peshawar, more than four decades ago. His mother, an Afghan refugee fleeing war, had brought him across the Tari Mangal border in Kurram district and into Pakistan. While waiting at the crowded terminal, Khan wandered to a nearby toy shop. When he returned, she was gone.

He searched for her for two days. She never came back.

A local shopkeeper, Ali Muhammad, took pity on the child and brought him home, promising to help find his family. The temporary shelter became permanent. Khan grew up in Pakistan, adopted informally into the household, and never returned to Afghanistan.

Now 45, he lives on the outskirts of Islamabad in a modest two-room house, working as a daily wage laborer. But a nationwide deportation drive launched by Pakistan in 2023 has placed his entire life under threat.

Since November 2023, authorities have deported nearly 2 million Afghan nationals, targeting those without legal documentation. Khan, who has remained undocumented throughout his adult life, fears he may soon be among them.

“I spoke to my lawyer that I am very worried,” Khan told Arab News. “I love Pakistan.”

A FAMILY WITHOUT PAPERS

Ali Muhammad later married Khan to his daughter, Gul Mina. Together, they have six children, four daughters and two sons. Yet despite decades in Pakistan, Khan’s Afghan nationality continues to shadow the family.

Khan never held an Afghan refugee card, Afghan Citizen Card (ACC), Proof of Registration (POR), or any other formal documentation. His family assumed for decades that his informal adoption, marriage to a Pakistani citizen, and long residence would provide sufficient legal standing. They only sought legal advice when the deportation drive began threatening separation.

Without a Pakistani national identity card, his children cannot obtain Form-B, the birth registration document required for school enrolment.

“They [children] are told to get a Form-B,” Gul Mina told Arab News. “Otherwise, they will not go to school.”

Three of their daughters were forced to leave school after eighth grade.

Healthcare has also been affected. When Khan’s 13-year-old son, Ehsanullah, fractured his arm, a public hospital refused to issue a registration card without identity documents.

“Then I went to a [private clinic] in Chak Shahzad and got my treatment there,” Khan said.

The family has petitioned the Islamabad High Court to block his deportation. Lawyers say the case highlights how thousands of long-term residents fall through legal cracks created by Pakistan’s citizenship, refugee and documentation framework.

LEGAL GREY ZONE

Pakistan does not legally recognize Western-style adoption. Instead, it uses a guardianship system under the 1890 Guardians and Wards Act, aligning with Islamic principles that preserve lineage, so adopted children don’t inherit or change their family name but receive care, education and welfare through court-appointed guardianship.

“Because we don’t have a legal pathway for adoption per se, the adopted child does not get citizenship of the adopting parents automatically,” said Advocate Umer Ijaz Gillani, a legal expert on citizenship.

Years earlier, Khan’s father-in-law had offered to register him as his biological son to obtain identity documents, but Khan refused, calling the move fraudulent. Because Khan later married his father-in-law’s daughter, both he and his wife cannot legally list the same person as their father on official records, leaving them without a lawful workaround.

Marriage offers no certainty either. Pakistan’s Citizenship Act of 1951 grants citizenship to foreign women married to Pakistani men, but is silent on foreign husbands married to Pakistani women.

While higher courts have, at times, ruled in favor of such men, implementation has been inconsistent. In October 2025, the Supreme Court struck down a high court order that had directed authorities to grant citizenship to an Afghan man married to a Pakistani woman.

Even the Pakistan Origin Card (POC), a long-term residency document, remains difficult to secure.

“We have experienced that in the case of especially Afghan men who marry Pakistani women, the government authorities are often reluctant to recognize this right,” Gillani said.

According to submissions made by government officials in court, authorities have received at least 117 applications for nationality from Afghan men married to Pakistani women following directives issued by the Peshawar High Court, reflecting a broader pattern rather than isolated cases.

‘NO RELAXATION’

Officials say the deportation policy allows no exceptions.

“No relaxation has been granted by the government, including for those who’ve married to Pakistani citizens,” said Asmatullah Shah, the chief commissionerate for Afghan refugees.

“If they want to live here, they should go back and apply for a visa and then they can come here with valid documentation.”

Legal experts note that deportation would send Khan to Afghanistan despite having no known relatives there, and that returning legally would require obtaining an Afghan passport and a Pakistani visa, costs far beyond the means of a daily wage laborer.

For Khan’s mother-in-law, Husn Pari, who raised him for decades as her own son, the prospect is devastating.

“When I am not able to meet [Khan] for one day, my day does not pass,” she said. “His own mother, how much pain must she be in?”

For Khan, the fear of deportation echoes the trauma of his childhood.

“Before I was separated from my first mother,” he said. “The second time I will be separated from my second mother. This is very difficult for me.”