Two Pakistani high-altitude climbers successfully summit Broad Peak

The combination of file photos shows Pakistani mountaineers Naila Kiani, left, and Sajid Ali Sadpara. (Photo courtesy: @naila._.kiani and @sajidalisadpara/Instagram)
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Updated 20 July 2023
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Two Pakistani high-altitude climbers successfully summit Broad Peak

  • Sajid Ali Sadpara conquered the world’s 12th tallest mountain without using supplemental oxygen or porter
  • Naila Kiani became the first Pakistani woman to achieve the feat and summit eight peaks taller than 8,000 meters

ISLAMABAD: Two Pakistanis on Thursday successfully climbed Broad Peak, the world’s 12th tallest mountain, with Sajid Ali Sadpara achieving the feat without using supplemental oxygen or porter assistance and Naila Kiani becoming the first Pakistani woman to conquer the summit.

Broad Peak stands as one of the 14 independent mountains on Earth, collectively known as the "8,000-ers," owing to their elevation surpassing 8,000 meters (26,247 ft) above sea level. These majestic peaks are situated in the Karakoram and Himalaya ranges, spanning across Pakistan's Gilgit-Baltistan, Nepal, and China's Xinjiang province.

“Broad Peak summited without the use of supplemental oxygen and assistance,” Sadpara announced in a Twitter post on Wednesday evening.

 

 

 

Sadpara, the son of Pakistan’s late iconic high-altitude climber Muhammad Ali Sadpara, earlier became the first Pakistani to scale Mount Everest without supplemental oxygen and personal sherpa. Prior to that, he had twice summited K2 (8,611 meters) and scaled several other treacherous peaks including Mount Manaslu (8,163 meters) and Mt Annapurna (8,091 meters) in Nepal.

Kiani, meanwhile, is a Dubai-based Pakistani climber who also became the first woman from her country to climb eight 8,000-ers after successfully summitting Broad Peak.

“Naila has successfully ascended Pakistan’s fifth and final 8,000-meter peak at 2:03 AM today (Thursday),” the Secretary of the Alpine Club of Pakistan (ACP), Karrar Haidri, said in a statement.

“She is the first Pakistani woman to ascend Broad Peak, complete the climb of all five 8,000-meter peaks in Pakistan, and scale eight 8,000-meter peaks worldwide,” he added.


Pakistan launches digital cash aid for low-income families during Ramadan, PM says

Updated 19 February 2026
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Pakistan launches digital cash aid for low-income families during Ramadan, PM says

  • Ramadan relief moves from state-run Utility Stores to targeted digital wallet transfers
  • Government to transfer financial assistance through wallets to support sehri, iftar expenses

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan will provide financial assistance to low-income households through digital wallets during the fasting month of Ramadan, Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif said on Thursday, announcing a government relief initiative aimed at helping families afford daily meals.

The support program comes as many Pakistanis continue to face elevated food and utility costs despite easing inflation, with Ramadan traditionally increasing household spending on staple foods, fruits and energy consumption.

For decades, government-run Utility Stores Corporation outlets were central to Ramadan relief in Pakistan, selling subsidized flour, sugar, ghee and pulses through special “Ramzan packages” that drew long queues in low-income neighborhoods. In recent years, however, authorities have steadily scaled back the system amid mounting losses, corruption complaints and logistical inefficiencies, shifting instead toward targeted cash transfers delivered through digital wallets and banking channels. 

The change reflects a broader policy move away from state-managed commodity distribution toward direct financial assistance intended to give households flexibility while reducing leakages in subsidy programs.

“The Government of Pakistan has launched a Ramadan package under which financial assistance will be transferred to deserving individuals through digital wallets so that households can maintain sehri and iftar meals,” Sharif said in a message issued by his office.

The prime minister said Ramadan encourages compassion and collective responsibility toward vulnerable segments of society, adding that welfare support was part of the state’s duty during the holy month.

Officials say the digital cash transfers approach improves transparency and reduces corruption risks while enabling faster payments nationwide, particularly in urban low-income communities.

But the shift to fully digital assistance also brings challenges. 

Access to smartphones and reliable mobile Internet remains uneven, particularly in rural areas and among older recipients, while many low-income households use SIM cards registered to someone else, complicating verification.