At COP27 in Egypt, PM Sharif requests world for additional financial aid, not loans

Pakistan Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif (center, front row) speaks at Roundtable titled 'Climate Change and the Sustainability of Vulnerable Communities' in COP27, Egypt on Nov. 8, 2022. (Photo courtesy: Govt. of Pakistan)
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Updated 08 November 2022
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At COP27 in Egypt, PM Sharif requests world for additional financial aid, not loans

  • Pakistani prime minister says this year’s UN Climate Summit rings an alarm bell for humanity
  • Shehbaz Sharif urges countries gathered in Egypt to boost their efforts to tackle climate change or risk more devastation in future

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif on Tuesday called on the world to provide his country additional financial aid, not loans, to build a resilient and adaptive infrastructure as Pakistan reels from the damages of catastrophic floods that have killed over 1,700 this year. 

Sharif concluded his three-day trip to Egypt on Tuesday, where he attended the Sharm El-Sheikh Climate Implementation Summit at the United Nations Climate Change Conference (COP-27). During his visit to Sharm El-Sheikh, he participated in several high-level events, held bilateral meetings with counterparts from other states and heads of multilateral institutions. 

His high-powered delegation comprised of ministers for foreign affairs, climate change, information and other high officials. 

At the climate summit, Sharif co-chaired, together with the Norwegian prime minister, a high-level roundtable discussion on ‘Climate Change and the sustainability of vulnerable communities.’ He attended the “Middle East Green Initiative Summit” hosted by Saudi Arabia’s Crown Prince and Prime Minister Mohammed bin Salman. 

Sharif also participated in a breakfast event that was co-hosted by the German chancellor and president of Ghana. He also delivered the national statement at the climate summit. 

“This COP rings an alarm bell for humanity but it is the only platform where the survival of the human race as a goal still holds promise,” Sharif said in his national statement at the COP-27 summit. 

He said COP-27 was a forum for vulnerable countries to take their case to the rich and those with resources to build a common purpose for justice, carbon neutrality and a roadmap to crucial policy reset. 

He said this was needed in a world that was burning up faster than its capacity for recovery. 

“We have to fight and rebuild a resilient and adaptive infrastructure which can only be done through additional funding, not loans and debt as further debts would be a financial death trap,” he said. 

But the gap was widening by the day, he said, adding that it was the duty of the global community to understand the plight of his country. 

He urged countries gathered in Egypt to boost their efforts to tackle climate change or risk more devastation in the future and presented a set of priorities to mitigate the adverse impact of climate change. 

“First, the global goal on adaptation needs to be prioritized both in terms of financing and timelines as we are yet to see the promised 50:50 balance in adaptation and mitigation finance,” he said, adding that the current financing gap was too high to sustain any real recovery needs of those on the frontlines of climate catastrophe. 

Secondly, he said the loss and damage needed to be part of the core agenda of COP-27 to meet pressing humanitarian needs of those who were trapped in a crisis of public financing fueled by debt and yet have to fund climate disasters on their own. 

“Thirdly, climate finance must be clearly defined as new, additional and sustained resources with a transparent mechanism that meets the needs of developing and vulnerable countries with the speed and scale that is required,” he said, adding that there should now be total clarity on what actually counts as climate transfers, and what counts as development finance. 

He also highlighted that the pledges made at the Copenhagen COP-15 in 2009 for mobilizing $100 billion per annum by 2020 had still not been realized. 

“Fourth, a Global Climate Risk Index of all parties of the UNFCCC must be created under the auspices of the UN system and the projects from the most vulnerable countries on this Index must get prioritized and speedy approvals for climate finance,” he said. 

“Fifth, mitigation ambition needs to be revived in a clear burden-share formula”. Sharif said, adding that unless there was a transformational shift in the flow of capacities, finances, and technology that reverses the pyramid of climate capital, the bargain between the North and the South parts of the world would not work. 

“It is now or never. For us there is indeed no Planet B,” the premier added. 


Pakistan police tighten New Year’s Eve security in capital, warn of jail time for aerial firing

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Pakistan police tighten New Year’s Eve security in capital, warn of jail time for aerial firing

  • More than 350 traffic policemen have been deployed to ensure public safety and smooth traffic flow
  • New Year celebrations in Pakistan witness heightened security to prevent one-wheeling, rash driving

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s capital police warned on Wednesday anyone engaging in aerial firing on New Year’s Eve in Islamabad could face jail time, as authorities deployed more than 350 traffic officers to ensure public safety and smooth traffic flow.

Around eight special traffic squads have been formed to curb one-wheeling and rash driving, according to Pakistani state media. The report quoted an Islamabad traffic police spokesperson urging parents to prevent minors from underage driving.

New Year’s Eve in Pakistan sees heightened security in major cities such as Islamabad, Lahore and Karachi, with authorities increasing police presence to control incidents like aerial firing that have caused deaths in the past.

“Whoever fires in the air will go straight to jail,” said the law enforcement department in a post on X. “Islamabad Police will take strict action against those who fire in the air.”

The post said the police were “determined to ensure security and traffic flow on the occasion of the New Year.”

“One-wheeling is a crime that inevitably results in lifelong disability or loss of precious lives,” it added.

According to a report by the Associated Press of Pakistan (APP), heavy vehicles will be barred from entering Islamabad between 7 p.m. and 3 a.m. It added that parking on roads will be prohibited, and police will remain on duty throughout the night.

Aerial firing is a common but dangerous practice in Pakistan during celebrations, and it has caused several fatalities in the past.

More than 20 people including two women were injured in multiple incidents of aerial firing in Pakistan’s southern port city of Karachi on the last New Year’s Eve.

According to data compiled by Karachi Police Surgeon Dr. Summaiya Syed, 19 people were injured due to aerial firing in 2020, 11 in 2021, 20 in 2022, 40 in 2023 and 26 in 2024.