UN agency warns over half a million Pakistani women need maternal services in flood-hit regions

Displaced people prepare for breakfast in their tents at a makeshift camp after fleeing from their flood hit homes following heavy monsoon rains in Charsadda district of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa on August 29, 2022. (AFP)
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Updated 31 August 2022
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UN agency warns over half a million Pakistani women need maternal services in flood-hit regions

  • The United Nations Population Fund says nearly 73,000 women are likely to deliver next month, need skilled attendants
  • A top UN official says ‘pregnancies and childbirth cannot wait for emergencies or natural disasters to be over’

ISLAMABAD: The United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) has estimated that nearly 650,000 pregnant women require maternal health services in Pakistan’s flood-affected areas, adding that about 73,000 of them are expected to deliver in the coming month and will need skilled birth attendants, newborn care, and support.

Pakistan has witnessed torrential rains and floods since the beginning of monsoon in June that have affected about 33 million people, according to official estimates.

UNFPA says that 6.4 million people in the country require humanitarian assistance following the monsoon rains, floods, and landslides in Pakistan, and more than 1.6 million of them are women of childbearing age.

“Pregnancies and childbirth can’t wait for emergencies or natural disasters to be over,” the UN agency’s Pakistan representative Dr. Bakhtior Kadirov said in a statement released by his office. “This is when a woman and baby are vulnerable and need the most care.”

He said UNFPA was trying to ensure that pregnant women and new mothers continued to receive life-saving services even under the most challenging conditions.

According to the statement, UNFPA has scaled up its emergency response to provide life-saving reproductive health services and commodities, including dignity kits, for women and girls.

It has, so far, procured 8,311 dignity kits, 7,411 Newborn Baby Kits, and 6,412 Clean Delivery Kits for immediate distribution in Sindh, Balochistan, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, and Punjab provinces.

“We will continue supporting health facilities with the equipment and human resources to be fully operational despite the challenging humanitarian conditions,” Kadirov informed.

The UN agency is also prioritizing gender-based violence (GBV) prevention and response services, including medical and psychosocial support to GBV survivors.


Pakistani companies likely to raise over $89 million in new stock listings this year

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Pakistani companies likely to raise over $89 million in new stock listings this year

  • Farrukh H. Sabzwari says approvals for two listings already granted while 10 more Initial Public Offerings are expected over next 12 months
  • Economists expect KSE-100 index to reach 208,000 points by Dec., reflecting pent-up demand, strategic expansions and broader investor appetite

KARACHI: The Pakistan Stock Exchange (PSX) expects at least a dozen new listings this year, the PSX chief executive officer said on Monday, with the new entrants likely to raise as much as Rs25 billion ($89.3 million) in funding through the equity market.

Pakistan’s benchmark KSE-100 index has rallied to new highs and recorded returns of around 50 percent in Calendar Year (CY) 2025. The market closed at 182,384 points on Monday.

Around 135,000 new investors have also joined the PSX over the last 18 months, according to Pakistani state media.

“Continuing with the momentum, in CY2026, approvals for two Main Board listings have been granted,” PSX CEO Farrukh H. Sabzwari, who has previously served as a local partner of BoA Merrill Lynch and country head of CLSA Emerging Markets in Pakistan, told Arab News.

“PSX is expecting 10 more IPOs (Initial Public Offerings) over next 12 months across various sectors.”

Pakistan’s growing stocks mirror the country’s stabilizing economy which Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif’s government expects would expand 3.9 percent this fiscal year through June with the help of the International Monetary Fund’s reforms-oriented $7 billion loan program.

The new IPOs would cover food, pharmaceutical, real estate investment trust (REIT), engineering, technology, oil and gas marketing, insurance, auto parts, manufacturing and energy sectors of the economy, according to Sabzwari.

Last year, the PSX listed Zarea Limited, Barkat Frisian Agro Limited, Image REIT, Pak Qatar Family Takaful, Blue-Ex Limited, Nets International Communication Limited and the Pakistan Credit Rating Agency Limited. These listings helped companies raise Rs4.3 billion ($15.4 million) of funding.

In addition, the PSX debt market witnessed seven issuances, valuing Rs10.5 billion ($37.5 million). Pakistan’s finance ministry raises funds through PSX by selling borrowing instruments like Islamic sukuk.

The PSX recorded the highest eight IPOs in a single year in 2021, according to Shankar Talreja, head of research at Topline Securities Ltd. It would be a record if the market lists 12 new entrants this year.

Sana Tawfiq, an economist at Karachi-based brokerage research firm AHL, described the market performance last year as “exceptional.”

“With projected fundraising of up to Rs25 billion ($89.3 million), the upcoming pipeline reflects pent-up demand, strategic expansions, and a broader investor appetite,” she said.

Tawfiq expects the KSE-100 index to reach 208,000 points by Dec. this year.

“As we look toward 2026, Pakistan’s equity market is entering a phase defined by stability, depth, and sustainable growth,” the economist said.

“The market is now transitioning toward a more measured trajectory.”

Key drivers in 2026 would likely include sustained domestic liquidity in equities, strengthening foreign reserves and a contained current account deficit, successful completion of the Pakistan International Airlines (PIA) privatization alongside accelerating progress on privatization and restructuring of power distribution companies (DISCOs), continued efforts to resolve circular debt in both power and gas sectors, and supportive global commodity prices, according to Tawfiq.

In a recent note to its clients, Topline Securities said the current IPO momentum was driven by macroeconomic stability under the IMF program, improving investor confidence and a declining interest rate environment.

Pakistan’s central bank last month cut its interest rate by 50 basis points to 10.5 percent in a surprising move aimed at boosting economic growth in the inflation-hit country.

“Despite ongoing geopolitical and macroeconomic uncertainties, investor sentiment continues to improve,” it said.