Pakistani father-son duo make Guinness world record for ‘fastest time to climb around a person’

Pakistan’s five-year-old Sufyan Khan shows Guinness World Record certificate for ‘fastest time to climb around a person’ record in Dera Ismail Khan. (Photo courtesy: Irfan Mehsud)
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Updated 22 August 2024
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Pakistani father-son duo make Guinness world record for ‘fastest time to climb around a person’

  • Multi Guinness World Records title holder Irfan Mehsood made new record with son Sufiyan 
  • MMA athlete Mehsood holds the title of first Pakistani to hold 100 Guinness World Records

PESHAWAR: Pakistani Multi Guinness World Records title holder Irfan Mehsood and his son Sufiyan Mehsood have made a new record this year for fastest time to climb around a person, the website for the awards said. 
Mehsood, a mixed martial arts athlete from the northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, this month attained the title of becoming the first Pakistani to hold 100 Guinness World Records.
This June, he also made a new record with his son Sufiyan, breaking the record of India’s K. Gokulnath and MV Arjun Priyan. 
“The fastest time to climb around a person is 7.87 seconds and was achieved by Irfan Mehsood and Sufiyan Mehsood (both Pakistan) in Dera Ismail Khan, Pakistan, on 19 June 2024,” the Guinness World Records website said. “Irfan is a multiple Guinness World Records title holder.”

“At such a young age, Sufiyan Mehsood has made a Guiness World Record, making the name of his parents and his country proud,” Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif said in a message on Thursday. 
“Talented children like Sufiyan Mehsood are a guarantee of Pakistan’s bright future.” 
Mehsood, a 33-year-old native of the South Waziristan tribal district, holds records for the most push-ups, squats, jumping jacks, squat thrusts, step-ups, knee strikes, elbow strikes, side jumps and high jumps.
Italian weightlifter Marcello Ferri had set a world record by lifting a 40-pound weight with his toe for a minute and 32 seconds. This was broken by Mehsood by lifting the same weight for three minutes and 20 seconds.
Mehsood has broken the records of 16 countries so far including the United States, Britain, India, China, Norway, Germany, France, Finland, Philippines, Spain, Italy, Lebanon, Egypt, Iraq, Pakistan and Syria. He also received a presidential award in 2023.
“Irfan Mehsud is the first Pakistani athlete to achieve 100 Guinness World Records,” All Pakistan MMA President Babar Raja told Arab News earlier this month. “There is no limelight in the district he hails from but he is still able to get widespread fame in MMA as an athlete.”
Raja said the All Pakistan MMA Federation was working to award Mehsood a senior role in the body so that others could benefit from his experience.


Pakistan eyes Iran route for potato exports as price slump persists amid Afghan border closure

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Pakistan eyes Iran route for potato exports as price slump persists amid Afghan border closure

  • Pakistan closed land borders with Afghanistan in October 2025, leading to oversupply of potatoes in markets 
  • Pakistan exports vegetables, particularly potatoes, a big chunk of which goes to Central Asian states via Afghanistan

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan is considering using the Iran corridor to export the surplus quantity of potatoes it has produced to Central Asian countries, Food Security Minister Rana Tanveer Hussain said on Monday as Islamabad grapples with a potato price glut triggered by the Afghan border closure. 

Potato prices in Pakistan fell sharply as Islamabad closed its Chaman and Torkham border crossings with Afghanistan in October 2025 after fierce clashes between both countries left dozens dead. 

Afghanistan is a huge market for Pakistani potatoes. The suspension of trade with Kabul has created an oversupply of the vegetable in Pakistan, leading to a sharp decline in its prices. Pakistani farmers have complained of suffering heavy losses as the border crossings remain closed. 

Speaking at a meeting of the National Assembly Standing Committee on Food Security, Hussain said the border closures had initially caused problems but Islamabad has identified an alternative route to export potatoes to Central Asian countries.

“Authorities are considering the Zahedan-Taftan land route,” Hussain told participants of the meeting. 

Hussain said Pakistan generally stores 7 to 8 million metric tons of potatoes annually, adding that the country does not have the capacity to store more than that. 

“However, this year 13 million metric tons of potatoes were cultivated, which has caused the market to crash,” he explained.

Pakistan exports vegetables, particularly potatoes, a big chunk of which goes to Tajikistan, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan and beyond via Afghanistan.

Hussain said another alternative trade route, one to China, was even shorter but the multiple visa requirement there would create complications for Pakistani exporters. 

He said due to the mountainous terrain in China, fuel and other transportation costs would also be higher. 

The Commerce Division officials present at the meeting said the route through Iran is longer compared to Afghanistan. 

“The prime minister is personally looking into the issue,” Hussain assured members of the committee. 

The minister said Russia was not importing Pakistan’s potatoes as it had imposed restrictions due to quality issues a few years earlier. 

Pakistan’s agriculture sector accounted for 24 percent of the country’s gross domestic product (GDP) and employed more than 37 percent of its labor force in 2024, according to the Economic Survey 2024-25.

Landlocked Afghanistan has also leaned more heavily on trade routes via Iran and Central Asia since the border closures last year, as it aims to reduce its dependence on Pakistan amid surging tensions between the neighbors.