PM Sharif wishes Kate Middleton speedy recovery after cancer diagnosis

The still image taken from a video shows Catherine Middleton, the Princess of Wales, as she reveals she was diagnosed with cancer and is undergoing chemotherapy, in a video on March 22, 2024. (Courtesy: BBC studio)
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Updated 24 March 2024
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PM Sharif wishes Kate Middleton speedy recovery after cancer diagnosis

  • Catherine Middleton, princess of Wales, announced her cancer diagnosis in a video message on Friday
  • Pakistan is a member of the Commonwealth, an association of countries formerly part of the United Kingdom

ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif on Sunday wished Kate Middleton, the princess of Wales, a speedy recovery after she revealed earlier this week that she had been diagnosed with cancer. 

Kate, 42, the wife of heir to the throne Prince William, spent two weeks in hospital in January after undergoing what her office said at the time was successful, planned surgery for an unspecified but non-cancerous condition. 

However, in a video message on Friday, Kate said subsequent tests had revealed cancer had been found. She said she was well and getting stronger. The news is the latest major health blow for the British royal family after King Charles revealed in February that he too was to have cancer treatment, meaning he has had to postpone his public royal duties.

“We pray for the full and speedy recovery of His Majesty King Charles III and Her Royal Highness Princess Catherine,” Sharif wrote on social media platform X. 

“The Royal Family is widely respected & revered in Pakistan. We stand with them in these difficult times.”

Kate’s office, Kensington Palace, said it would give no further details about the type of cancer that had been found, saying the princess had a right to medical privacy. It said she was on a recovery pathway and the preventative chemotherapy had begun in February.

After her operation, the palace said the princess, still popularly known by her maiden name Kate Middleton, would not return to official duties until after Easter, which falls at the end of this month. But her absence from public life has provoked intense speculation and wild rumors on social media.

Sharif, who was also Pakistan’s prime minister in 2022, attended the funeral of Queen Elizabeth II in the United Kingdom in September 2022. 

Pakistan is a member of the Commonwealth, an association of sovereign states comprising the UK and a number of its former territories that have chosen to maintain ties of friendship and cooperation with the UK. 

Commonwealth countries acknowledge the British monarch as the symbolic head of their association. 


Pakistan, ADB reaffirm commitment to ML-1 rail project amid economic reforms

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Pakistan, ADB reaffirm commitment to ML-1 rail project amid economic reforms

  • Flagship railway upgrade tied to IMF-backed stabilization, multilateral financing
  • ADB, World Bank working with Pakistan to address project delays, readiness gaps

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan and the Asian Development Bank (ADB) have reaffirmed their commitment to advancing the long-delayed Main Line-1 (ML-1) railway modernization project, a flagship infrastructure upgrade central to the country’s economic reform and connectivity agenda, the information ministry said on Thursday. 

The renewed focus on ML-1 follows meetings this week between senior Pakistani ministers and ADB officials in Islamabad, as the government seeks to revive large-scale infrastructure investment while maintaining fiscal discipline under an International Monetary Fund (IMF) program.

ML-1 is Pakistan Railways’ busiest north–south corridor, linking the southern port city of Karachi with major population and industrial centers in Punjab and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa. The project aims to modernize tracks, signaling and rolling stock to improve safety, cut travel times and lower transport costs. 

Originally envisioned as a flagship transport upgrade under the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC), ML-1 has struggled to reach financial close amid cost concerns, debt sustainability debates and implementation challenges. Pakistan has since sought broader multilateral engagement, with institutions including the Asian Development Bank now playing a central role in project structuring, financing discussions and efforts to address execution bottlenecks.

During a meeting with Leah Gutierrez, Director General for Central and West Asia at the ADB, Federal Minister for Economic Affairs Ahad Cheema underscored the government’s reform priorities and the importance of the project’s timely execution.

“The Minister underscored the Government’s strong commitment to the timely implementation of the Main Line–1 (ML-1) railways project and emphasized that ADB’s continued support would be critical to achieving this milestone,” the information ministry said in a statement.

The ministry said Cheema also highlighted coordination with provincial governments and welcomed joint efforts by the ADB and the World Bank to identify implementation bottlenecks and improve project readiness to ensure timely disbursements.

Gutierrez commended Pakistan’s reform agenda and acknowledged the government’s focus on macroeconomic recovery and fiscal consolidation, reaffirming that ADB teams were working closely with Pakistani authorities on ML-1, according to the statement.

Separately, Federal Minister for Railways Muhammad Hanif Abbasi told Defense Secretary Lt. Gen. Muhammad Ali in a meeting that an agreement for the ML-1 project had been finalized with the ADB and that steps were being taken to move the project forward.

“Concrete steps are being taken to complete the project at the earliest,” the statement quoted Abbasi as telling Ali. “The ML-1 project will serve as a milestone in modernizing Pakistan Railways.”

Abbasi also briefed participants on parallel reform measures at Pakistan Railways, including the launch of an artificial intelligence-based monitoring system at Rawalpindi Railway Station, real-time tracking of trains and rolling stock through digital tagging, and the installation of a weigh bridge in Karachi to address overloading and improve safety.

Pakistan Railways has long struggled with aging infrastructure, safety challenges and financial losses, even as rail transport remains vital for passenger movement and freight. Multilateral lenders have repeatedly stressed the need for stronger execution capacity and governance reforms to translate infrastructure commitments into economic gains.