Pakistan’s Sindh, Punjab provinces announce prison sentence remissions ahead of Eid

Prisoners stand behind a door, locked up with a pair of handcuffs, inside Malir Jail, after dozens of prisoners escaped from the jail, on the outskirts of Karachi, Pakistan, June 3, 2025. (REUTERS/File)
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Updated 07 June 2025
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Pakistan’s Sindh, Punjab provinces announce prison sentence remissions ahead of Eid

  • Punjab grants 90-day sentence remission to 450 prisoners ahead of Eid Al-Adha
  • Sindh chief minister approves special remission of 120 days for convicted prisoners

KARACHI: The provincial governments in Pakistan’s Sindh and Punjab provinces have announced remission in sentences for prisoners as a special concession on account of the upcoming Eid Al-Adha festival, official notifications released this week said. 

Pakistani leaders traditionally announce sentence remissions for prisoners on religious festivals and other special occasions like the two Eid festivals and Independence Day. The remissions are intended as goodwill gestures to promote rehabilitation and allow selected inmates to reunite with their families during important national and religious holidays.

“Sindh Chief Minister Syed Murad Ali Shah, on the occasion of Eid-ul-Azha-1446 (2025), has approved a special remission of 120 days for convicted prisoners confined in various prisons and correctional facilities across Sindh Province,” the CM’s office said in a statement. 

The special remission applies to all convicted prisoners “except for condemned prisoners and those convicted of serious offenses including murder, espionage, subversion, anti-state and terrorist activities, rape, kidnapping, robbery, dacoity, offenses, and financial embezzlement causing loss to the national exchequer.”

In Punjab, a special 90-day sentence remission was announced for 450 inmates.

The statement said 270 of the 450 prisoners would be released from Punjab’s jails and celebrate Eid with their families. 

However, prisoners convicted of militancy, sectarianism, espionage, treason, anti-state activities, murder, rape, drug trafficking, robbery, kidnapping, financial embezzlement or causing loss to the national treasury, as well as those punished for violating jail rules within the past year, would not be eligible for the sentence remission.

Eid Al-Adha will be celebrated in Pakistan on Saturday, June 7.


Pakistan urges developed nations, global institutions to expand role in climate financing

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Pakistan urges developed nations, global institutions to expand role in climate financing

  • Pakistan is recognized among countries worldwide most affected by climate-induced disasters
  • Planning minister stresses redesigning global financial system on principles of responsibility, equity

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s Planning Minister Ahsan Iqbal this week called on developed nations and international financial institutions to play a greater role in helping developing countries adopt green technologies at lower costs, state-run media reported. 

Pakistan has suffered frequent climate change-induced disasters over the past couple of years, ranging from floods, droughts, heatwaves, cyclones and other irregular weather patterns. 

This year the South Asian country reported over 1,000 deaths from floods and landslides triggered by heavy rains and the melting of glaciers. 

“He [Iqbal] said Pakistan has urged developed countries and international financial institutions to expand their role in climate financing to enable developing nations to adopt green technologies at lower costs,” state-run Associated Press of Pakistan (APP) reported on Saturday. 

The minister was speaking at the Second Asia Energy Transition Summit held at Pakistani university LUMS on Saturday. 

Iqbal warned that climate change is intensifying emergencies and increasing economic burdens on vulnerable countries, adding that financial incentives and concessional financing have become indispensable for sustainable climate action.

“He further emphasized the need to redesign the global financial system based on the principles of collective responsibility and equity,” APP said. 

The minister noted that Pakistan has been introducing comprehensive reforms in its development agenda to promote renewable energy, solar power and green technological solutions. 

The country, he said, possesses “strong solar potential,” a robust renewable energy market, a wide talent pool in engineering and science and an enabling environment for green innovation.

Pakistan has regularly urged developed countries to fulfill past pledges and provide easy access to climate funding without attaching conditions, especially at Conference of Parties (COP30) climate summits. 

Islamabad was instrumental in getting the Fund for Responding to Loss and Damage (FRLD) established at the COP27 climate summit in Egypt in 2022. The Loss and Damage Fund aims to help developing and least developed countries cope with both economic and non-economic impacts of climate change, such as extreme weather events and slow-onset crises like sea-level rise and droughts.