ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif said on Wednesday that his government is undertaking efforts to improve telecommunication services and ensure Internet access in remote areas, his office said, adding that the move would increase IT exports and freelancers countywide.
Pakistan’s government has been accused of stifling dissent by rights activists and the opposition with what they call restrictive measures. These include the blocking of social media platform X and the banning of virtual private networks (VPNs) last year.
The government also confirmed its move to install a national firewall last year to regulate content online, saying its moves were aimed at regulating content online to make cyberspace safe for people. This caused Internet speeds to slow down considerably across the country, inviting criticism and anger from freelancers and IT experts.
“We are working to increase the number of IT exports and freelancers in the country by improving telecommunication services and providing Internet access to remote areas,” Sharif was quoted as saying by the Prime Minister’s Office (PMO).
The Pakistani premier was chairing a meeting of the Economic Advisory Council, an independent body that advises the prime minister on economic policies and affairs.
Sharif praised his economic team for its efforts to ensure growth in the country, saying that his government is determined to work harder for sustainable economic development.
He said his economic team would take “full advantage” of Pakistan’s current potential for trade in the region and enable local industries to compete in the international market.
“Development of industry, agriculture, IT, generating employment and increasing exports are among the top priorities of the government,” he said.
Participants of the meeting said the country’s economy was heading toward economic stability, adding that Pakistan’s production had increased due to price stability, the PMO said.
The PMO said that the meeting’s participants presented various suggestions to Sharif relating to various sectors.
“The prime minister directed relevant authorities to work with council members to formulate a comprehensive action plan regarding the suggestions,” the PMO said.
Pakistan says improving telecom services to increase IT exports, freelancers countrywide
https://arab.news/5jrzg
Pakistan says improving telecom services to increase IT exports, freelancers countrywide
- Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif chairs Economic Advisory Council meeting in Islamabad
- Rights activists, opposition accuse government of throttling Internet to suppress dissent
Pakistan and Italy mark 70 years of archaeological cooperation in Swat
- Founded in 1955, Italy’s Swat mission has led excavations and conservation work at major Gandhara sites
- Italian archaeologists have also contributed to training Pakistani researchers and museum development
ISLAMABAD: Pakistan and Italy marked 70 years of archaeological cooperation, said an official statement on Sunday, with officials highlighting decades of joint work in preserving ancient sites in the country’s northwest, where Italian researchers have played a central role in documenting and conserving remnants of the Gandhara civilization.
The Italian Archaeological Mission in Swat was established in 1955 by Italian scholar Giuseppe Tucci, a leading expert on Asian art and religions, with the aim of studying, excavating and preserving Buddhist and pre-Islamic sites in what is now Pakistan’s Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province.
Over the decades, the mission has become one of the longest-running foreign archaeological projects in the country, working closely with Pakistani authorities and academic institutions.
“Pakistan is committed to advancing archaeological research, conservation and education, and looks forward to deepening cooperation with Italy in both scope and dimension,” Pakistan’s Minister for National Heritage and Culture Aurangzeb Khan Khichi said while addressing a ceremony in Rome marking the mission’s anniversary.
The event was organized by Italy’s International Association for Mediterranean and Oriental Studies (ISMEO), with support from the Italian Agency for Development Cooperation and the University of Venice, and was attended by Pakistani and Italian academics, diplomats and cultural officials.
The Italian mission was originally conceived to systematically document Buddhist sites in the Swat Valley, once a major center of the ancient Gandhara civilization, which flourished from around the first century BCE and became a crossroads of South Asian, Central Asian and Hellenistic influences.
Since its inception, the mission has led or supported excavations and conservation work at several key sites, including Barikot, believed to be ancient Bazira mentioned by classical sources, as well as Butkara and Saidu Sharif, helping establish chronologies, preserve stupas and monasteries and train generations of Pakistani archaeologists.
Italian researchers have also worked with local authorities on site protection, museum development and post-conflict rehabilitation, particularly after natural disasters and periods of unrest that threatened archaeological heritage in the region.
The anniversary program featured sessions on the history of the mission, its collaboration with the provincial government of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, and future research areas such as archaeobotany, epigraphy and geoarchaeology.
The event was moderated by Professor Luca Maria Olivieri of the University of Venice, who has been associated with archaeological fieldwork in Pakistan for nearly four decades and was awarded Pakistan’s Sitara-e-Imtiaz for his contributions to heritage preservation.
Officials said the mission’s longevity reflected a rare continuity in international cultural cooperation and underscored Pakistan’s efforts to protect its archaeological legacy through partnerships with foreign institutions.










