History-making Arooj Aftab becomes first Pakistani artist to perform at Grammys

Pakistani musician Arooj Aftab, right, with British-American sitar player Anoushka Shankar during their performance at the prestigious Grammy awards in Los Angeles on February 5, 2023. (Photo courtesy: @RecordingAcademy/YouTube)
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Updated 06 February 2023
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History-making Arooj Aftab becomes first Pakistani artist to perform at Grammys

  • Arooj Aftab performs "Udhero Na" with singer Anoushka Shankar
  • Last year, she became the first Pakistani to bag a Grammy award

ISLAMABAD: Arooj Aftab made history on Sunday when she became the first Pakistani artist to perform at the prestigious Grammy awards in Los Angeles, when the singer teamed up with British-American artist Anoushka Shankar to perform their song "Udhero Na." 

The Brooklyn-based vocalist became the first Pakistani artist to win a Grammy award when she bagged the Best Global Performance award for her song "Mohabbat" in April 2022. 

In November last year, the critically acclaimed "Udhero Na" received a Grammy nomination for the same category. Aftab earlier said she wrote the song when she was 15 years old. She recorded it with Shankar, who was nominated this year in the Best Global Music Performance and Best Global Music Album categories. 

"Soundcheck, it's todayyy, live.grammy.com," Aftab wrote along with a picture she shared on her Instagram Stories. She can be seen performing live on the Grammys stage as Shankar strums a sitar beside her. 

The 37-year-old, who has lived in New York for some 15 years, has been steadily gaining global attention for her work that fuses ancient Sufi traditions with inflections of folk, jazz and minimalism.

Born to Pakistani parents in Saudi Arabia, Aftab spent her teenage years in Lahore before relocating to Boston’s prestigious Berklee School of Music to study musical production and engineering.

She released her third studio album “Vulture Prince” to critical acclaim, and gained even more attention after former US president Barack Obama included the track “Mohabbat” on his 2021 summer favorites list.


Pakistan, China to sign multiple MoUs at major agriculture investment conference today

Updated 18 January 2026
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Pakistan, China to sign multiple MoUs at major agriculture investment conference today

  • Hundreds of Chinese and Pakistani firms to attend Islamabad event
  • Conference seen as part of expanding CPEC ties into agriculture, trade

KARACHI: Islamabad and Beijing are set to sign multiple memorandums of understanding (MoUs) to boost agricultural investment and cooperation at a major conference taking place in the capital today, Monday, with hundreds of Chinese and Pakistani companies expected to participate.

The conference is being billed by Pakistan’s Ministry of National Food Security and Research as a platform for deepening bilateral agricultural ties and supporting broader economic engagement between the two countries.

“Multiple memorandums of understanding will be signed at the Pakistan–China Agricultural Conference,” the Ministry of National Food Security said in a statement. “115 Chinese and 165 Pakistani companies will participate.”

The conference reflects a growing emphasis on expanding Pakistan-China economic cooperation beyond the transport and energy foundations of the flagship China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) into agriculture, industry and technology.

Under its first phase launched in 2015, CPEC, a core component of China’s Belt and Road Initiative, focused primarily on transportation infrastructure, energy generation and connectivity projects linking western China to the Arabian Sea via Pakistan. That phase included motorways, power plants and the development of the Gwadar Port in the country's southwest, aimed at helping Pakistan address chronic power shortages and enhance transport connectivity.

In recent years, both governments have formally moved toward a “CPEC 2.0” phase aimed at diversifying the corridor’s impact into areas such as special economic zones, innovation, digital cooperation and agriculture. Second-phase discussions have highlighted Pakistan’s goal of modernizing its agricultural sector, attracting Chinese technology and investment, and boosting export potential, with high-level talks taking place between planning officials and investors in Beijing.

Agri-sector cooperation has also seen practical collaboration, with joint initiatives examining technology transfer, export protocols and value-chain development, including partnerships in livestock, mechanization and horticulture.

Organizers say the Islamabad conference will bring together government policymakers, private sector investors, industry associations and multinational agribusiness firms from both nations. Discussions will center on investment opportunities, technology adoption, export expansion and building linkages with global buyers within the framework of Pakistan-China economic cooperation.