Belarus, Pakistan sign 15 agreements during Lukashenko’s visit to Islamabad

1 / 2
akistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif and Belarus President Aleksandr Lukashenko shake hands after witnessing the signing of 15 memorandums of agreements in Islamabad on November 26, 2024. (PTV News)
2 / 2
Pakistan Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif (2R) and Belarus President Aleksandr Lukashenko (4L) chair delegation level talks between Pakistan and Belarus, at the Prime Minister Office in Islamabad on November 26, 2024. (Photo courtesy: PMO)
Short Url
Updated 26 November 2024
Follow

Belarus, Pakistan sign 15 agreements during Lukashenko’s visit to Islamabad

  • MoUs span vocational education, disaster management, environmental protection, science and tech and halal trade
  • In February 2025, Sharif and Belarusian president will sign agreements to ensure practical work begins on the MoUs signed today

ISLAMABAD: Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif and Belarus President Aleksandr Lukashenko on Tuesday witnessed the signing of 15 memorandums of agreements in Islamabad for cooperation in disaster management, environmental protection, science and technology and halal trade, among other sectors, Sharif said in a statement. 

Lukashenko arrived in Islamabad on Monday evening as Pakistan seeks foreign investment from allies old and new in a bid to shore up its $350 billion economy while navigating a tough reforms agenda mandated by the International Monetary Fund (IMF).

“Witnessed the signing of 15 pivotal MoUs/agreements between Pakistan and Belarus today,” Sharif said on X. 

“These MoUs/Agreements pave the way for enhanced cooperation in vocational education, disaster management, environmental protection, science and technology, halal trade, exchange of information, among others … Together, we are forging pathways for a stronger, more resilient partnership for the future.”

Addressing a joint press conference with Sharif, Lukashenko offered to transfer technology to Islamabad and import its textiles. 

“In the modern world not just big countries possess high technologies, sometimes mid-range or smaller countries also do just like Belarus,” Lukashenko said.

“We have those technologies and I think Pakistan should develop relations with smaller countries which are ready to share their technologies and on the other hand, we would be very happy to buy from Pakistan what it has to offer to us, including textile and many other things,” he added.

Sharif said he was encouraged by Lukashenko’s “very inspiring” statements on turning memorandums of understanding on trade and investment into real agreements, adding that the two sides would discuss commerce, investment, tourism, defense cooperation and other important issues at delegation-level talks in Islamabad later today, Tuesday.

“And then they will depart to meet again in two weeks’ time in Minsk where the two teams will meet again and finalize and convert all these discussions into practical steps, arrangements ready for agreements,” the Pakistani PM added. 

Following that, in February 2025, Sharif said he and the Belarusian president would sign agreements to ensure practical work began on the MoUs. 

Pakistan and Belarus, the world’s 74th-largest economy by GDP, celebrated thirty years of the establishment of diplomatic relations this year. Pakistan was one of the first countries to recognize Belarus after the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991 and maintained an embassy in Minsk.

The prime minister of Belarus was in Islamabad earlier this year where he met his counterpart as well as the chief of the Pakistan army, among other key leaders.

In September, Pakistan and Belarus discussed different options for a joint venture to establish a tractor plant in the country and reached a consensus on collaborating on a foot-and-mouth disease vaccine to protect cattle, as well as on the capacity building of agricultural engineers in machinery design.

They also agreed to enhance cooperation in the sectors of livestock and seeds and work together on the mechanization of agriculture and on increasing market access for agricultural and livestock products. Belarus also wants to set up a veterinary medicine plant in Pakistan.


Pakistan says multilateralism in peril, urges global powers to prioritize diplomacy over confrontation

Updated 8 sec ago
Follow

Pakistan says multilateralism in peril, urges global powers to prioritize diplomacy over confrontation

  • The country tells the UN international security system is eroding, asks rival blocs to return to dialogue
  • It emphasizes lowering of international tensions, rebuilding of channels of communication among states

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan warned the world community on Monday that multilateralism was “in peril” amid rising global tensions, urging major powers to revive diplomacy and dialogue to prevent a further breakdown in international security.

Speaking at a UN Security Council briefing, Pakistan’s ambassador to the UN, Asim Iftikhar Ahmad, said the world was drifting toward confrontation at a time when cooperative mechanisms were weakening.

His comments came during a session addressed by Finland’s foreign minister Elina Valtonen, chairing the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE), the world’s largest regional security body.

Formed out of the 1975 Helsinki Final Act, the OSCE was designed during the Cold War to reduce tensions, uphold principles of sovereignty and human rights and promote mechanisms for peaceful dispute resolution.

“Today, the foundational ethos of international relations, multilateralism, cooperation and indivisible security, as envisaged in the preamble of Helsinki Final Act, is perhaps facing its biggest challenge in decades,” Ahmed said. “The OSCE, too, is navigating a difficult geopolitical landscape, with conflict raging in the heart of Europe for nearly four years, depletion of trust and unprecedented strains on peaceful co-existence.”

He said a return to the “Helsinki spirit” of dialogue, confidence-building and cooperative security was urgently needed, not only in Europe but globally.

“This is not a matter of choice but a strategic imperative to lower tensions, rebuild essential channels of communication, and demonstrate that comprehensive security is best preserved through cooperative instruments, and not by the pursuit of hegemony and domination through military means,” he said. “Objective, inclusive, impartial, and principle-based approaches are indispensable for success.”

Ahmed’s statement came in a year when Pakistan itself fought a brief but intense war after India launched missile strikes at its city in May following a militant attack in Indian-administered Kashmir. New Delhi blamed Pakistan for the assault, an allegation Islamabad denied while calling for a transparent international investigation.

The Pakistani diplomat said the international system was increasingly defined by bloc politics, mistrust and militarization, warning that such trends undermine both regional stability and the authority of multilateral institutions, including the UN itself.

He urged member states to invest more in preventive diplomacy and the peaceful settlement of disputes as reaffirmed by the Council in Resolution 2788.

Ahmad said Pakistan hoped the OSCE would continue reinforcing models of cooperative security and that the Security Council would back partnerships that strengthen international law and the credibility of multilateral frameworks.

The path forward, he added, required “choosing cooperation over confrontation, dialogue over division, and inclusive security over bloc-based divides.”