Pakistan says will finalize Roosevelt Hotel’s privatization this year as it seeks financial adviser

Migrants wait for a ride, with their belongings, in front of the Roosevelt Hotel in New York on February 25, 2025. (AP/File)
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Updated 10 August 2025
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Pakistan says will finalize Roosevelt Hotel’s privatization this year as it seeks financial adviser

  • Global real estate firm JLL resigned as financial adviser for hotel’s partial sale in July over conflict of interest concerns
  • Economists say JLL’s resignation was a setback but would not detail privatization, demand timely decisions

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s government has initiated the process to hire a new financial adviser for the partial sale of its New York-based Roosevelt Hotel, Adviser to the Finance Minister Khurram Schehzad confirmed this week, clarifying that the transaction would be completed this year.

Pakistan plans to sell a majority stake in the century-old Manhattan hotel and is seeking a redevelopment partner as part of a broader effort to offload loss-making state-owned assets under a $7 billion agreement with the International Monetary Fund (IMF). The Roosevelt Hotel, viewed as one of Pakistan’s most valuable foreign holdings, was closed in 2020 and has since operated intermittently, including as a migrant shelter.

Global real estate firm Jones Lang LaSalle (JLL) last month resigned from its role as financial adviser for the hotel’s privatization, citing a conflict of interest due to client interest in the property.

A report in English-language newspaper ‘The News’ on Thursday claimed that if the Privatization Commission accelerates the process of hiring a financial adviser and accomplishing due diligence, it requires at least one-and-a-half years. It said the delay will burden the national exchequer with at least $50 million in the form of debt servicing and maintenance.

“The advertisement for the new financial adviser has already been published and the selection process is underway,” Schehzad told Arab News on Thursday, responding to the report.

Pakistan has said it would not carry out an outright sale of the hotel but has decided to adopt a joint venture model to maximize long-term value.

Schehzad said JLL completed the entire transaction structure for the joint venture, which was approved by the Privatization Commission and the federal cabinet.

He said the new adviser would proceed with the same structure and would only be responsible for finding a development partner for the venture.

“Therefore, there will not be a delay of one-and-a-half years as reported,” the finance official clarified. “Instead, the transaction will be completed within this year as planned.”

Schehzad said JLL resigned from the process as the firm was interested in becoming a partner on the buyer’s side, which would have created a conflict of interest.

“They even committed to returning all the money they had received in their role as the financial adviser,” he said, adding that there were many parties interested in investing in the hotel.

The report had also said that a financial body had sent an official communication to the finance ministry, inquiring about the fate of its loan of $142 million to the Roosevelt Hotel after JLL resigned.

The report said the finance ministry did not respond to the institution, warning that debt servicing would continue to burden the national exchequer. It said the financial body had lent the money to the Roosevelt Hotel in 2020.

Schehzad confirmed the loan had been issued by the National Bank of Pakistan, saying its communication with the finance ministry was “a routine matter.”

“This issue will also be addressed when the partnership agreement is signed,” he said.

‘BETTER PLANNING, BETTER ENGAGEMENTS’

Pakistani economists viewed JLL’s resignation as a setback but said it would not derail the privatization process.

Dr. Sajid Amin, deputy executive director at Islamabad-based think tank Sustainable Development Policy Institute (SDPI), said it was unfortunate authorities were unable to privatize the property despite its prime location.

“We need better planning and better engagements so that we can privatize a prestigious property,” Amin told Arab News.

Amin believed the advisory firm’s withdrawal would not have a significant impact on the IMF reforms agenda that Pakistan had agreed to, since JLL had stepped down over a potential conflict of interest.

“The government will start looking for a new financial adviser firm and it will be sufficient to prove that the IMF commitments are on track,” he added.

Dr. Ali Salman, executive director of the Policy Research Institute of Market Economy (PRIME), an Islamabad-based independent economic policy think tank, said privatization has many models, and a joint venture — instead of a direct sale — was an impressive approach.

He said that the cost of the delay could be recovered through a joint venture deal if it was carried out professionally and transparently, according to the approved structure.

“We need to increase the capacity of the Privatization Commission to ensure timely and well-informed decisions,” Salman added.


Suicide bomber attacks security check post in northwestern Pakistan, kills civilian

Updated 07 March 2026
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Suicide bomber attacks security check post in northwestern Pakistan, kills civilian

  • Sixteen civilians, two security personnel wounded in blast near the Afghan border town of Miran Shah
  • Attack comes amid rising militancy as Pakistan steps up military campaign across the Afghan border

PESHAWAR: A vehicle-borne suicide bomber targeted a security check post in Pakistan’s northwestern district of North Waziristan on Friday, killing at least one civilian and wounding 16 others, several critically, police and hospital officials said.

The attack struck the Chashma Sarband check post on the Bannu–Miran Shah road in Miran Shah, the main town in the restive tribal district bordering Afghanistan, police said.

The blast comes amid a resurgence of militant attacks in Pakistan’s northwestern border regions and growing tensions with neighboring Afghanistan, where Islamabad says armed groups responsible for violence in Pakistan are based.

“Sixteen civilians were among those wounded, four of whom were in critical condition,” said Dr. Asif Iqbal, the medical superintendent at the district headquarters hospital in Miran Shah.

“One person has died at the hospital,” he said, adding that more injured victims were expected to be brought in.

Police spokesman Fazal Khan said the vehicle-borne suicide attack targeted the security checkpoint along the busy highway.

Two members of the security forces were also wounded in the explosion, he said.

Chief Minister of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Sohail Afridi condemned the attack and ordered authorities to submit a report on the incident.

“The incident in which civilians were injured in the Miran Shah Chashma check post explosion is tragic,” he said in a statement.

Afridi directed officials to ensure the best possible medical treatment for the injured and said emergency services and hospital staff had been placed on high alert.

“Cowardly acts of terrorism cannot weaken the resolve of the government and the public,” he added.

Pakistan has witnessed a rise in militant violence in recent months, particularly in regions bordering Afghanistan, where officials say groups such as the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), also known as the Pakistani Taliban, operate from bases across the frontier.

Islamabad accuses Afghanistan’s Taliban authorities of sheltering militants who carry out attacks inside Pakistan, a charge Kabul denies.

The tensions have escalated further after Pakistan launched air strikes inside Afghanistan earlier this year targeting what it described as militant camps, triggering cross-border clashes between the two neighbors and prompting Islamabad to expand military operations along the frontier.

Pakistan says the campaign, dubbed “Ghazab Lil Haq,” will continue until militant threats from across the border are neutralized.