Pakistan gets offers in 100,000 metric ton sugar tender, traders say

Laborers unload bags of sugar from a delivery truck to a wholesale market in Karachi, Pakistan, on May 24, 2023. (Reuters/File)
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Updated 23 September 2025
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Pakistan gets offers in 100,000 metric ton sugar tender, traders say

  • Lowest price offered in tender from Pakistan to buy 100,000 metric tons of sugar $537.75, say traders
  • Pakistan has approved import of 500,000 tons of sugar to help maintain price stability amid price surge 

HAMBURG: The lowest price offered in the international tender from Pakistan to buy 100,000 metric tons of white sugar on Tuesday was believed to be $534.75 a metric ton cost and freight included, European traders said in initial assessments.

Offers in the tender from the state trading agency Trading Corporation of Pakistan are being considered and no purchase has yet been reported, they said. The TCP can negotiate for several days in tenders before deciding whether to purchase.

Pakistan’s government has approved plans to import 500,000 tons of sugar to help maintain price stability after retail sugar prices in the country rose sharply. The tender is the latest in a series held by the TCP to buy sugar in July, August and September.

The TCP’s latest tender seeks price offers for fine, small and medium-grade sugar, with shipment arranged to achieve arrival of all the sugar in Pakistan by November 7.

The lowest offer was said to have been submitted by trading house Dreyfus for 25,000 tons of small grade sugar.

Three other trading houses also tender participated, all offering all per ton c&f, traders said.

Al Khaleej Sugar offered 30,000 tons of medium grade at around $568.50 and also 60,000 tons of small grade at $558.50, traders said.

Sucden Middle East offered 25,000 tons of small grade at $544.00 and ED&F Man 50,000 tons of small grade at $559.00.

Reports reflect assessments from traders and further estimates of prices and volumes are still possible later.

The TCP’s tender seeks sugar sourced from any worldwide origin excluding India and Israel or other countries under sanctions.


Pakistan offloads three passengers bound for Saudi Arabia, UAE over forged documents

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Pakistan offloads three passengers bound for Saudi Arabia, UAE over forged documents

  • The passengers at Karachi airport were found carrying fake visas, a driver’s license and residency papers
  • Pakistan has arrested over 1,700 human smugglers, reported a 47 percent drop in illegal immigration to Europe

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s Federal Investigation Agency (FIA) on Tuesday said it offloaded three passengers at Karachi airport who were attempting to travel to Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates (UAE) on forged documents.

The development is part of the continued crackdown undertaken by Pakistani authorities on illegal immigration and human smuggling. Pakistan reported a 47 percent drop in illegal immigration to Europe this year, with more than 1,700 human smugglers arrested.

The country intensified action against illegal migration in 2023 after hundreds of people, including its own nationals, lost their lives while trying to cross the Mediterranean to reach European shores in an overcrowded vessel that sank off the Greek coast.

“The passengers were identified as Aamir, Ali Hussain, and Ijaz,” the FIA spokesperson said in a statement.

“The passengers have been handed over to the FIA Anti-Human Trafficking Circle, Karachi, for further legal action.”

The FIA added that Aamir was attempting to travel to the UAE on a visit visa using a fake Ukrainian resident card he paid Rs1 million ($3,571) to obtain.

Hussain was traveling to Saudi Arabia on a work permit using a fake driving license he paid a huge sum of money for, it continued.

The agency added Ijaz was also traveling to Saudi Arabia with a fake Qatari visa on his passport for which he paid Rs300,000 ($1,071).

The issue of illegal immigration and its consequences have gained significant attention in Pakistan following the arrest of several Pakistani and foreign nationals at airports with forged documents in recent years.

In September, the FIA released a list of more than 100 of the country’s “most wanted” human smugglers and identified major trafficking hubs across the country’s most populous Punjab province and Islamabad.

Earlier in December, Pakistan announced it would roll out an Artificial Intelligence-based immigration screening system in Islamabad from January next year to detect forged travel documents and prevent illegal departures.