Pakistan PM discusses investment opportunities with UAE’s International Free Zones Authority

In this handout photo, released by Pakistan Prime Minister Office on March 5, 2025, a delegation of Aleria and International Free Zones Authority UAE gesture during a meeting with Pakistan Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif in Islamabad on March 5, 2025. (Photo courtesy: Handout/PMO)
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Updated 05 March 2025
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Pakistan PM discusses investment opportunities with UAE’s International Free Zones Authority

  • UAE’s IFZA to invest in several existing projects of Pakistan’s special economic zones, says Prime Minister’s Office
  • UAE delegation expresses keen interest in further expanding investment footprint in Pakistan, says Sharif’s office

ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif on Wednesday met a delegation of the UAE’s International Free Zones Authority (IFZA) to discuss investment opportunities in Pakistan’s special economic zones (SEZs), a statement from Sharif’s office said. 
Pakistan has attempted to attract foreign investment from regional partners such as China and the UAE through its SEZs. These zones are intended to function as zones of rapid economic growth by using tax and business incentives to attract foreign investment and technology.
Sharif met an eight-member delegation of the IFZA, a UAE business setup authority that provides licensing and regulatory services for companies operating within its jurisdiction, and Aleria in Islamabad, the Prime Minister’s Office (PMO) said. The meeting was attended by IFZA Chairman Martin Gregers Pederson and Ilaria Managing Partner Mana Ali Muhammad Hammad Al Shamsi, along with officials from both organizations.
“Pakistan has vast investment opportunities in several sectors,” Sharif was quoted as saying. “The government is taking steps on a priority basis to provide a business and investment-friendly environment in the country.”




In this handout photo, released by Pakistan Prime Minister Office on March 5, 2025, a delegation of Aleria and International Free Zones Authority UAE gesture during a meeting with Pakistan Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif in Islamabad on March 5, 2025. (Photo courtesy: Handout/PMO)

The delegation praised Pakistan’s economic stability under Sharif’s leadership and said that the country is emerging as the most suitable market for investment in the region, the PMO said.
“The delegation expressed keen interest in further expanding its investment footprint in Pakistan,” the statement added.




In this handout photo, released by Pakistan Prime Minister Office on March 5, 2025, Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif witnesses the MoU exchange between International Free Zones Authority of UAE and Board of Investment of Pakistan in Islamabad on March 5, 2025. (Photo courtesy: Handout/PMO)

After the meeting, a memorandum of understanding (MoU) was also exchanged between Pakistan’s Board of Investment (BoI) and the IFZA on investment in Pakistan’s existing SEZs, the PMO said. 
UAE’s IFZA will invest in several projects in Pakistan’s existing SEZs, the statement said. 
The UAE is Pakistan’s third-largest trading partner after China and the United States and a major source of foreign investment, valued at over $10 billion in the last 20 years, according to the Gulf country’s foreign ministry.
Pakistan and the UAE have stepped up efforts in recent years to strengthen economic relations. Last year the two countries signed multiple agreements exceeding $3 billion for cooperation in railways, economic zones, and infrastructure development.


Pakistan and Kazakhstan sign 37 MoUs to deepen cooperation, set $1 billion trade target

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Pakistan and Kazakhstan sign 37 MoUs to deepen cooperation, set $1 billion trade target

  • Both sides agree to form strategic partnership and discuss enhanced physical connectivity
  • PM Sharif says the two sides should turn these MoUs into implementable agreements

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan and Kazakhstan on Wednesday agreed to establish a strategic partnership, signed 37 memoranda of understanding (MoUs) and set a target of raising bilateral trade to $1 billion within a year, as the two sides agreed to strengthen bilateral cooperation and physical connectivity amid a push for greater regional integration.

The MoUs were signed in the presence of Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif and President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev, who arrived in Islamabad a day earlier on an official visit.

Landlocked Kazakhstan is seeking access to global maritime trade through Pakistan’s ports on the Arabian Sea, while Islamabad has been positioning itself as a regional transit hub linking Central Asia with South Asia, the Middle East and beyond.

“We had very useful and productive meetings since morning, and just now we have had this signing ceremony of 37 MOUs,” Sharif said while addressing the gathering at the PM House, expressing hope that the understandings would soon be converted into binding agreements and implemented.

The two countries agreed to expand cooperation across transport and logistics, including rail, road and multimodal corridors, with Sharif offering Kazakhstan access to Pakistan’s transit infrastructure and seaports as part of broader efforts to enhance regional connectivity through Central Asia and Afghanistan.

Sharif acknowledged that current bilateral trade levels remained well below potential.

“Unfortunately, our trade volume is just meager $250 million during the last year,” he said. “This does not reflect not only the strength of our friendship, but also the potential of the two countries ... Let us make a commitment that we will take up our trade volume to $1 billion in the next one year.”

Speaking at the ceremony, Tokayev described Pakistan as a key partner for Kazakhstan.

“Pakistan is a reliable and important partner of Kazakhstan in South Asia and beyond,” he said. “Our peoples are united by centuries-old ties rooted in the legacy of the Great Silk Road, as well as by deep cultural and spiritual affinity.”

Beyond connectivity, the MOUs cover cooperation in energy, agriculture, mining and minerals, pharmaceuticals, defense production, digital technologies and artificial intelligence.

The two sides also agreed to promote joint ventures, particularly in food processing, agriculture value chains and industrial production.

Investment cooperation featured prominently, including the launch of a joint investment platform involving Kazakhstan’s sovereign wealth entities and Pakistani partners to identify bankable projects in mining, energy and infrastructure.

The talks also addressed collaboration in education, science and culture, with both sides agreeing to expand academic exchanges, institutional linkages between universities and people-to-people contacts through cultural and sporting initiatives.

This is the first visit of a Kazakhstan president to Pakistan in 23 years.

The two countries are also scheduled to hold the joint business forum in which more than 250 companies from both sides will come together and are expected to sign commercial agreements.