Pakistan’s record gold exports set to suffer after government moves to curb outflows to India — analysts

A man displays gold bangles at a jewelry shop in Karachi, Pakistan, on November 24, 2009. (Reuters/File)
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Updated 14 May 2025
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Pakistan’s record gold exports set to suffer after government moves to curb outflows to India — analysts

  • Commerce ministry banned import and export of gold on May 6, just a day before Indian strikes on Pakistan
  • Experts says the ban will impact nation’s jewelry exports that rose by record 58 percent this year through March

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s increasing gold exports are likely to take a hit due to a ban on the import and export of precious metals introduced amid last week’s military standoff with India, analysts said on Wednesday.

On May 6, the government enforced a 60-day ban on the import and export of precious metals, jewelry and gemstones to stabilize its foreign exchange reserves, just one day before India attacked Pakistan.

The deadly escalation followed an attack in Indian-administered Kashmir on April 22 that killed 26 tourists, which New Delhi blamed on Pakistan despite Islamabad’s denial of any involvement.

Nearly two weeks after the incident, the nuclear-armed neighbors exchanged ballistic missiles and artillery fire after India targeted what it called “terrorist infrastructure” inside Pakistan.

Gold remains a traditional store of value in the country, which primarily sources its imports of the metal from the United Arab Emirates, Switzerland, Turkiye and other major gold-trading global centers.

“This ban is expected to be lifted,” Ahsan Mehanti, the Chief Executive Officer at Arif Habib Commodities Ltd, told Arab News. “However, it is negatively impacting the country’s gold exports that were increasing to a record level.”

According to the Pakistan Bureau of Statistics, the country’s jewelry exports rose by 58 percent to Rs3 billion ($11 million) in March this year, matching the total for the entire previous year.

“This 58 percent surge is a record,” Mehanti said, adding the ban will have a short-term impact on gold exports this year, which are bound to increase later when the ban is lifted in July.

“The ban was imposed when the [Pakistan-India] border tensions started intensifying,” he continued. “This military escalation could have led to an increase in the circulation and prices of gold in Pakistan, but no such thing happened because of the government’s ban.”

He maintained the ban helped the gold market avoid speculative trading that kept the prices in check.

Mehanti said since international gold prices have declined on the back of the US-China trade war’s settlement, “we expect the surge [in Pakistan’s gold exports] to be higher than the previous record surge of 58 percent.”

Pakistan’s Dawn newspaper reported on May 8 the export curb aimed to limit the flow of gold and other precious metals to India via Dubai, citing unnamed government officials.

It added the ban was also intended to restrict the outflow of dollars from the cash-strapped country, which has spent over $28 million on importing 368 kilograms of gold so far this year.

However, the commerce ministry spokesperson, Muhammad Ashraf, denied the ban had any “relevance to the Pak-India conflict.”

A member of the managing board of Karachi Sarafa & Jewellers Group, M. Iqbal, said Pakistan’s gold market was linked to the international gold market, which is mainly driven by the dollar.

“Gold would take a hit when the United States faces an issue like what we saw during the US-China tariffs war,” he explained.

The cash-strapped country also exported $4.1 million worth of gems in the first nine months of FY25 ending in June.

Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif’s administration is relying mainly on the International Monetary Fund’s (IMF) $7 billion loan program to keep debt-ridden Pakistan’s balance of payments in check, as exports have grown only six percent this year while foreign direct investment has remained stagnant for decades.

The government has incentivized jewelry exporters through duty drawbacks and zero-rating for specific inputs, which helped the country’s jewelry exports rise 43 percent last year.

Gold prices in Pakistan hit a record high late last month but have been declining since the US and China resolved their trade tariff dispute. 

On Tuesday, 12 grams of the yellow metal were priced at $1,222 (Rs344,200).

In 2023, Pakistan relaxed several gold import regulations to promote transparency, minimize smuggling and establish computerized customs valuation and tracking systems.
 


UN experts slam Pakistan lawyer convictions

Updated 04 February 2026
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UN experts slam Pakistan lawyer convictions

  • Imaan Mazari, husband Hadi Ali Chattha were sentenced to 10 years last month for “anti-state” social media posts
  • Five UN special rapporteurs say couple jailed for exercising rights guaranteed by international human rights law

GENEVA, Switzerland: Five UN special rapporteurs on Wednesday condemned the conviction and lengthy jail sentences imposed on a prominent rights activist and her fellow lawyer husband in Pakistan over “anti-state” social media posts.

Imaan Mazari, a 32-year-old lawyer and vocal critic of Pakistan’s military, “disseminated highly offensive” content on X, according to an Islamabad court.

She and her husband Hadi Ali Chattha were jailed on January 25, with a court statement saying they “will have to remain in jail for 10 years.”

The UN experts said they had been jailed for “simply exercising rights guaranteed by international human rights law.”

“Lawyers, like other individuals, are entitled to freedom of expression. The exercise of this right should never be conflated with criminal conduct, especially not terrorism,” they said in a joint statement.

“Doing so risks undermining and criminalizing the work of lawyers and human rights defenders across Pakistan and has a chilling effect on civil society in the country.”

Mazari shot to prominence tackling some of Pakistan’s most sensitive topics while defending ethnic minorities, journalists facing defamation charges and clients branded blasphemers.

As a pro bono lawyer, Mazari has worked on some of the most sensitive cases in Pakistan, including the enforced disappearances of ethnic Balochs, as well as defending the community’s top activist, Mahrang Baloch.

Mazari and her husband have been the subject of multiple prosecutions in the past, but have never previously been convicted of wrongdoing.

“This pattern of prosecutions suggests an arbitrary use of the legal system as an instrument of harassment and intimidation in order to punish them for their work advocating for victims of alleged human rights violations,” the UN experts said.

“States must ensure lawyers are not subject to prosecution for any professional action, and that lawyers are not identified with their clients.”

The statement’s signatories included the special rapporteurs on human rights defenders, the independence of judges, freedom of opinion, freedom of association and on protecting rights while countering terrorism.

UN special rapporteurs are independent experts mandated by the UN Human Rights Council to report their findings. They do not speak in the name of the United Nations itself.

The UN experts have put their concerns to Islamabad.