Pakistan’s IT minister leads tech companies’ delegation to Kingdom for investment talks

In this file photo, taken on August 31, 2023, Pakistan's caretaker IT minister, Dr. Umar Saif, speaks during the International IT & Telecom show in Karachi, Pakistan. (Photo courtesy: X/@umarsaif/File)
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Updated 30 September 2023
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Pakistan’s IT minister leads tech companies’ delegation to Kingdom for investment talks

  • IT minister hopes visit attracts investment to Pakistan, ‘big business’ for Pakistani companies in Kingdom
  • Earlier this week, Saif said Pakistan has ‘great investment opportunities’ for Gulf region’s large companies

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s Caretaker IT Minister Umar Saif announced he was heading to Saudi Arabia on Saturday with a delegation of IT companies, hoping the visit would materialize in investments and “big business” for Pakistani companies operating in the Kingdom.
The delegation will represent the country’s Special Investment Facilitation Council (SIFC), a civil-military forum established in June to attract foreign funding, especially from Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries, by streamlining bureaucratic procedures for businesses looking to set up operations in Pakistan.
The SIFC has pinpointed five key sectors for attracting investment: agriculture, mining, information technology, defense production, and energy.
“Taking Pakistan’s delegation of IT companies to KSA,” the minister announced on social media platform X, formerly known as Twitter.
“InshAllah this will result in investments in Pakistan and big business for Pakistani IT companies in Saudia,” he added.

During an exclusive interview with Arab News earlier this week, Saif said the GCC market was a highly attractive one for Pakistani IT firms, many of whom were already engaged in projects in the region.
“We are working to market Pakistan as a place from where a lot of technical expertise can come for projects in the GCC region,” he had said.
The minister added that during his visit to the Kingdom, the Pakistani delegation will also receive updates on the $100 million Saudi-Pakistan Tech House project announced earlier this year, which aims to strengthen strategic partnerships between IT firms in both countries.
The initiative, initially introduced by Prince Fahad bin Mansour at the Future Fest 2023 in Pakistan in January, perfectly aligns with Saudi Arabia’s Vision 2030, focusing on economic diversification, reduced oil dependency, and the establishment of a global investment hub with a robust digital infrastructure.
Saif also said Pakistan had a whopping 194 million cellphone users and 70 million broadband users, saying that it reflected the country’s potential in the IT sector. He, however, admitted that Pakistan lacked adequate fiber infrastructure and data connectivity.
“All these things offer great investment opportunities to big companies in the GCC region and Saudi Arabia to come and invest in these large projects that will certainly move Pakistan’s economy forward and offer very good investment opportunities to people outside this country,” the minister said.
Earlier this month, Pakistan’s Caretaker Prime Minister Anwaar-ul-Haq Kakar announced that Saudi Arabia and the UAE had pledged to invest $25 billion each over the next two to five years, in various projects under the SIFC’s umbrella.
 


Sri Lanka seal gritty T20 win over Pakistan to level series

Updated 11 January 2026
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Sri Lanka seal gritty T20 win over Pakistan to level series

  • In a contest trimmed to 12 overs a side, Sri Lanka scored 160 runs before choking Pakistan to 146-8
  • The series saw the visitors clinch the opener by six wickets before rain washed out the second game

Dambulla: Sri Lanka eked out a hard fought 14-run victory over Pakistan in the third T20 at rain-hit Dambulla on Sunday, easing their batting jitters and squaring the three-match series 1-1.

The series, a warm-up for the T20 World Cup with Pakistan set to play all their matches in Sri Lanka due to political tensions with nuclear-armed neighbors India, saw the visitors clinch the opener by six wickets before rain washed out the second game.

“We were a bit worried about our batting and I’m glad we addressed that today,” said Wanindu Hasaranga, who walked away with both Player of the Match and Player of the Series honors.

“The bowlers did a good job too. The ball was wet and it wasn’t easy. We tried to bowl wide and slow and asked them to take risks.”

Hasaranga took four wickets in the game and in the process completed 150 wickets in T20Is.

In a contest trimmed to 12 overs a side, Sri Lanka muscled their way to a competitive 160 before choking Pakistan to 146-8.

Having been bowled out inside 20 overs in the series opener, Sri Lanka needed a statement with the bat and duly ticked every box after being put in.

The top order laid the platform and the middle order applied the finishing touches.

Wicket-keeper Kusal Mendis made hay under the Power Play, blasting 30 off 16 balls while Dhananjaya de Silva (22 off 15) and Charith Asalanka (21 off 13) kept the scoreboard ticking.

Skipper Dasun Shanaka then swung the momentum decisively, clubbing 34 off just nine deliveries, peppered with five towering sixes.

The sixth-wicket stand between Shanaka and Janith Liyanage produced 52 runs in just 15 balls and proved the turning point, shifting the game firmly Sri Lanka’s way.

Pakistan came out swinging in reply, racing to 50 in just 19 balls with captain Salman Agha hammering 45 off 12 balls, including five fours and three sixes.

But once the field spread, Sri Lanka tightened the screws, applied the choke and forced the asking rate to spiral.

“It was a good game of cricket,” Agha said.

“We conceded too many runs, but our batting effort was good. Unfortunately, we fell short. We know we are going to play all our World Cup games in Sri Lanka and it’s important that we played in similar conditions,” he added.