Shawwal crescent sighted in Pakistan, Eid Al-Fitr to be celebrated on Wednesday

A Muslim scholar (4L) looks through a telescope for sighting of the new moon in Peshawar on March 11, 2024. (AFP/File)
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Updated 09 April 2024
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Shawwal crescent sighted in Pakistan, Eid Al-Fitr to be celebrated on Wednesday

  • Eid Al-Fitr begins on the first day of the month of Shawwal in the Islamic lunar calendar
  • It is one of two major Muslim festivals that marks end of holy fasting month of Ramadan

ISLAMABAD: The crescent for the month of Shawwal was sighted in Pakistan on Tuesday and consequently, Eid Al-Fitr will be celebrated on Wednesday, April 10, the Central Ruet-e-Hilal Committee announced.

The three-day Eid Al-Fitr festival starts on the first day of the month of Shawwal in the Islamic lunar calendar. The festival marks the end of the holy fasting month of Ramadan.

The Central Ruet-e-Hilal Committee, the country’s apex moon-sighting body, met in Islamabad. The committee’s chairman, Maulana Abdul Khabir Azad, presided over the meeting.

“Testimonies were received from various of areas of Pakistan about the sighting of the moon of the month of Shawwal, which included Karachi, Dir, Faisalabad, Mohmand Agency, Skardu and others, where the moon has been sighted,” Maulana Azad said at a press conference on Tuesday evening.

“Hence, it was unanimously decided that the first of Shawwal, 1445 Hijri, will fall on Wednesday, April 10, 2024.”

Pakistan’s government on Thursday announced three-day holiday from April 10 till April 12 for offices observing five working days and four-day holidays from April 10-13 for offices observing six working days.

Meanwhile, the Shawwal crescent was not sighted in Saudi Arabia on Monday evening, Ramadan 29, the Kingdom’s Supreme Court announced. Eid Al-Fitr celebrations will commence throughout the Kingdom on Wednesday, April 10.


Pakistan opens real-time digital payment system to exchange companies as reserves edge up

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Pakistan opens real-time digital payment system to exchange companies as reserves edge up

  • Raast enables low-cost transfers between banks, microfinance firms and electronic money wallets
  • Pakistan’s overall foreign reserves stand at $21.25 billion as central bank holdings rise $16 million

KARACHI: Pakistan’s central bank on Thursday allowed exchange companies to route home remittances through its instant payment system, Raast, saying the move aims to promote digital transactions and improve the efficiency of inflows, as the country’s foreign exchange reserves rose modestly in the latest week.

The State Bank of Pakistan (SBP) said in a statement that the country's total liquid foreign reserves stood at $21.25 billion as of Jan. 9, while the central bank’s own reserves rose $16 million to $16.07 billion.

The statement said the decision to extend Raast to exchange companies forms part of the central bank’s broader push to strengthen digital payments infrastructure and support a shift toward a cashless economy.

“Building an innovative and inclusive digital financial services ecosystem is one of the key objectives of State Bank of Pakistan under its Strategic Plan 2023-2028,” the SBP said.

“In furtherance of this vision, SBP has now allowed Exchange Companies (ECs) to utilize ‘Raast,’ a state-of-the-art payment system launched by SBP in 2021, to facilitate remitters and beneficiaries of home remittances,” it added.

Raast, a real-time digital payment system, allows instant and low-cost transfers between banks, microfinance institutions and electronic money wallets.

“Through this enablement, the beneficiaries receiving remittances through ECs can receive their funds in their accounts and wallets ... in a safe and efficient manner,” the statement said.

Pakistan relies heavily on workers’ remittances from abroad and has been seeking to channel more inflows through formal banking systems by strengthening digital and regulated payment networks, as authorities try to curb informal mechanisms such as hawala and hundi, underground value transfer systems that move money outside the banking sector.