Number of investment deals to be signed with GCC countries this month — Pakistan foreign minister

Flags of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries fly in the streets before the 40th GCC summit in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, on 9 December 2019. (REUTRES/File)
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Updated 21 September 2023
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Number of investment deals to be signed with GCC countries this month — Pakistan foreign minister

  • Jalil Abbas Jillani says GCC country reps expected to visit Pakistan this month to sign agreements 
  • Pakistan set up SIFC in June to attract foreign investment in energy, agriculture, mining, IT, defense

ISLAMABAD: Caretaker Foreign Minister Jalil Abbas Jillani said on Thursday Pakistan would sign a “number of MOUs and agreements” with representatives of GCC countries who were set to visit Pakistan this month.

In June, Pakistan set up a Special Investment Facilitation Council (SIFC) — a civil-military hybrid forum — to attract foreign funding, particularly from GCC nations, in agriculture, mining, information technology, defense production and energy as the South Asian country deals with a balance of payments crisis and requires billions of dollars in foreign exchange to finance its trade deficit and repay its international debts in the current financial year.

Earlier this month, caretaker Prime Minister Anwaar-ul-Haq Kakar said Saudi Arabia and the UAE would invest up to $25 billion each in Pakistan over the next five years in the mining, agriculture and IT sectors.

“We are expecting representatives of GCC countries to visit Pakistan within this month, from Saudi Arabia, from UAE, from other countries and a number of MOUs and agreements are likely to be signed with GCC countries,” Jillani said in an interview to TRT, without divulging details of the deals. 

“It’s certainly going to be a great partnership between Pakistan and GCC countries.”




Pakistan's Foreign Minister, Jalil Abbas Jilani, during an interview with Turkish news organization, TRT world, in New York, USA on September 21, 2023. (Photo courtesy: @PakistanUN_NY/X)

He said Saudi Arabia, UAE, Qatar, Bahrain and other GCC nations were “great partners of Pakistan.”

“There are several layers of this cooperation, economic, people to people contacts, defense, we have very strong political cooperation with members of the GCC countries,” the foreign minister said.

He said the SIFC would focus on five major areas, namely agriculture, IT, mines, minerals and energy.

“As a matter of fact, we have already received expressions of interest from GCC countries about investment in energy and mines and minerals,” Jillani added.

Pakistan is embarking on a tricky path to economic recovery under a caretaker government after a $3 billion loan program, approved by the International Monetary Fund (IMF) in July, averted a sovereign debt default.

Last month Barrick Gold Corp. said it was open to bringing in Saudi Arabia’s wealth fund as one of its partners in Pakistan’s Reko Diq gold and copper mine.
Barrick considers the Reko Diq mine one of the world’s largest underdeveloped copper-gold areas and it owns a 50 percent stake, with the remaining 50 percent owned by the governments of Pakistan and the province of Balochistan.

Pakistan’s untapped mineral deposits are conservatively valued at about $6 trillion, Caretaker Prime Minister Anwaar-ul-Haq Kakar said earlier this month.


Pakistan to send over 10,000 workers to Italy over three years after securing employment quota

Updated 27 December 2025
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Pakistan to send over 10,000 workers to Italy over three years after securing employment quota

  • Government says Italy will admit 3,500 workers annually under seasonal and non-seasonal labor schemes
  • It calls the deal a 'milestone' as Italy becomes the first European country to allocate job quota for Pakistan

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan has secured a quota of 10,500 jobs from Italy over the next three years, an official statement said on Saturday, opening legal employment pathways for Pakistani workers in Europe under Italy’s seasonal and non-seasonal labor programs.

Under the arrangement, 3,500 Pakistani workers will be employed in Italy each year, including 1,500 seasonal workers hired for time-bound roles, and 2,000 non-seasonal workers for longer-term employment across sectors.

The Ministry of Overseas Pakistanis and Human Resource Development said Italy is the first European country to allocate a dedicated labor quota to Pakistan, describing the move as a milestone in Pakistan’s efforts to expand overseas employment opportunities beyond traditional labor markets in the Middle East.

“After prolonged efforts, doors to employment for the Pakistani workforce in Italy are about to open,” Federal Minister for Overseas Pakistanis Chaudhry Salik Hussain said, calling the quota allocation a “historic milestone.”

The jobs will be available across multiple sectors, including shipbreaking, hospitality, healthcare and agriculture, with opportunities for skilled and semi-skilled workers in professions such as welding, technical trades, food services, housekeeping, nursing, medical technology and farming.

The agreement comes as Pakistan seeks to diversify overseas employment destinations for its workforce and increase remittance inflows, which remain a key source of foreign exchange for the country’s economy.

The ministry said a second meeting of the Pakistan-Italy Joint Working Group on labor cooperation is scheduled to be held in Islamabad in February 2026, where implementation and future cooperation are expected to be discussed.