Pakistan, UAE to collaborate on Karachi-Peshawar railway upgrade, says envoy

Pakistan's Minister of State for Finance and Railways, Bilal Azhar Kiyani (center) in conversation with CEO Etihad Rail, Shadi Malak (left) in Abu Dhabi, UAE, on October 2, 2025. (@BilalAKayani/X)
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Updated 02 October 2025
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Pakistan, UAE to collaborate on Karachi-Peshawar railway upgrade, says envoy

  • ML-1 project to modernize and dual-track 1,872 km Karachi-Peshawar line for freight, passengers
  • Pakistan’s railways minister is in Abu Dhabi for Global Rail 2025, meeting his regional counterparts

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s envoy to the United Arab Emirates (UAE) said on Thursday Pakistan and the UAE plan to collaborate and share expertise in the railway sector, adding that the Gulf state is already involved in the Main Line-1 (ML-1) project and that Islamabad is in contact with Etihad Rail in this connection.

The ML-1 project is Pakistan’s largest railway infrastructure upgrade involving the modernization and dual-tracking of the 1,872 km Karachi-Peshawar railway line, including signaling upgrades, bridges, stations and speed enhancements.

Together with ML-3, which links Quetta to Kotri via Jacobabad, the two railway lines are viewed as pivotal for regional connectivity by expanding freight capacity and shortening travel time.

The Pakistani envoy’s statement came as a delegation from his country, led by Minister of State for Finance and Railways Bilal Azhar Kiyani, participated in the Global Rail Conference and Exhibition 2025, which started in Abu Dhabi on Sept. 30 and concluded on Oct. 2.

“This was a great opportunity for Pakistan to showcase its central position between Central Asia, South Asia and the Middle East,” Faisal Niaz Tirmizi, Pakistan’s ambassador to the UAE, told Arab News.

“Both countries will share experiences and best practices, as the UAE is already involved in the ML-1 section and the government of Pakistan is in touch with Etihad Rail in this regard,” he said while sharing the details of Kiyani’s visit.

The global transport summit has brought together over 24 ministerial delegations, more than 60 global CEOs and 200 international speakers from across the world under the theme “Driving the Future of Transport and Global Connectivity.”

Hosted by Etihad Rail in collaboration with the UAE Ministry of Energy and Infrastructure, the event featured over 200 exhibiting companies and attracted more than 20,000 participants, serving as a global platform for strategic dialogue, project showcases and shaping the future of rail and infrastructure.

“Now, it’s an opportunity for all countries to look for connectivity and the cheapest mode of transportation of goods in the world after sea freight, which is railway,” the envoy said, adding that railway is also environmentally friendly.

He said the Pakistani state minister also had an opportunity to take a ride on the fast track which was set up between Abu Dhabi and Dubai and will become operational in 2026.

“It took him 35 minutes to travel from Abu Dhabi to Dubai on the new railway track,” he added.

Tirmizi said Kiyani also chaired a session attended by railway ministers from several friendly nations, including Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Oman, Bahrain, Jordan, Afghanistan, Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan.

The ambassador said the Pakistani minister also held a meeting with UAE President Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nahyan during which he emphasized the need for greater collaboration between the two countries in governance, electricity, railways and investment.

“Overall, this [event] has had a tremendous impact not only on bilateral relations but also on regional connectivity,” he added.

In a separate statement, Pakistan’s diplomatic mission in the UAE said Kiyani highlighted his country’s vision for transforming its railway sector into an efficient, reliable and environmentally sustainable backbone of national transport.

He particularly emphasized the upgradation of two major railway corridors, ML-1 and ML-3, while aligning Pakistan’s rail network with international standards.

“Pakistan’s active presence at the Global Rail Conference 2025 reflects its strong commitment to advancing sustainable transport solutions and forging strategic international partnerships that support long-term economic development and connectivity,” the statement added.

On the sidelines, the Pakistani minister also met Etihad Rail CEO Shadi Malak to discuss potential cooperation in freight logistics, technology exchange and network development.

He also visited Etihad Rail and Hafeet Rail exhibition stalls to review regional innovations in rail systems.


Pakistan’s latest airstrikes on militant targets inside Afghanistan risk further escalation — analysts

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Pakistan’s latest airstrikes on militant targets inside Afghanistan risk further escalation — analysts

  • The strikes followed a series of suicide attacks in Pakistan, amid a surge in militancy in its western regions bordering Afghanistan
  • With negotiations stalled, analysts say military signalling may deliver short-term deterrence but would do little to address mistrust

ISLAMABAD: Continued military action by Pakistan and Afghanistan against each other risks entrenching a “cycle of retaliation” rather than curbing militancy, analysts warned on Sunday, following Pakistan’s latest cross-border airstrikes in Afghanistan.

Pakistan’s information ministry said the overnight strikes involved “intelligence-based selective targeting of seven terrorist camps” and described them as a retributive response to recent militant attacks inside Pakistan.

While a Pakistani security official said the airstrikes killed more than 80 militants, Afghan government spokesperson Zabihullah Mujahid said the incursions killed and injured “dozens of people, including women and children.”

The exchange marks a further deterioration in ties that have frayed since the Taliban returned to power in Kabul in 2021. Diplomatic efforts to ease tensions, including mediation attempts involving Qatar, Turkiye and other countries, have failed to yield results.

Abdul Sayed, an independent researcher on security and foreign affairs in the Afghanistan-Pakistan region, said Islamabad could conduct more strikes if militant attacks continued inside Pakistan.

“In the context of Pakistan’s prevailing policy of prioritizing military force over negotiations, it appears that the continuation of such aerial strikes in Afghanistan is likely, particularly as militant attacks are escalating rather than declining,” he told Arab News.

Pakistani authorities have not publicly endorsed such a policy, while its information ministry said Islamabad conducted the strikes in response to recent attacks, particularly by the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), inside Pakistan.

Pakistan says militant violence has surged since the return of the Afghan Taliban to power and accuses the Afghan authorities of failing to act against the TTP, also known as the Pakistani Taliban, which it says operates from Afghan sanctuaries. The Taliban deny allowing Afghan soil to be used for attacks against any country.

Asif Durrani, a former Pakistani special representative to Afghanistan, said the latest operation had been anticipated for weeks.

“The current Taliban regime is not serious about controlling the TTP or its leadership,” he said. “The regime is in a denial mode about the TTP activities inside Pakistan and is behaving as a militia organization. This is not responsible governance.”

He said the strikes had conveyed a “calibrated but unmistakable message” that cross-border sanctuaries would no longer be accepted.

Hours before the Saturday’s airstrikes, a suicide bomber targeted a security convoy in the border district of Bannu in Pakistan’s northwest, killing two soldiers, including a lieutenant colonel. Another suicide bomber, backed by gunmen, rammed an explosives-laden vehicle last week into the wall of a security post in Bajaur district, which borders Afghanistan, killing 11 soldiers and a child. Pakistani authorities later said the attacker was an Afghan national.

Information Minister Attaullah Tarar said Pakistan had “conclusive evidence” that the recent attacks, including a suicide bombing that targeted a Shiite mosque in Islamabad and killed 32 worshippers this month, were carried out by militants acting on the “behest of their Afghanistan-based leadership and handlers.”

While Pakistan’s military has conducted such cross-border operations in the past as well, analysts say the recurrence of such airstrikes risks normalizing a tactic that could further inflame anti-Pakistan sentiment in Afghanistan.

“Unless there is a substantive shift, either in Pakistan’s demand for concrete action or in Kabul’s approach toward the alleged presence of militants, such incidents risk becoming a recurring feature of the bilateral relationship,” Tameem Bahiss, a Kabul-based analyst, told Arab News, describing the current trajectory of bilateral ties as “deeply concerning”.

“From Pakistan’s perspective, the frustration is understandable given the rise in militant violence inside its territory,” he said. “However, aerial strikes inside Afghanistan risk widening the diplomatic divide and fueling anti Pakistan sentiment within Afghanistan. That in turn could make it even more politically difficult for Kabul to take visible or forceful action against groups that Pakistan accuses of operating there.”

The Taliban’s Ministry of National Defense has warned of an “appropriate and measured response” to what it called a violation of Afghan sovereignty, raising concerns about a potential retaliation to Pakistani airstrikes.

Based on trends since 2022, Sayed said, Pakistan’s aerial operations may have carried domestic political utility but produced “net strategic losses”.

“These operations are, in the long term, undermining Pakistan’s own objectives, serving not to diminish the threat of militancy but to further reinforce it,” he said, arguing that they have bolstered popular support for the Afghan Taliban while militant attacks inside Pakistan have continued to rise.

The core dispute centers on Islamabad’s insistence that Kabul honor commitments under the 2020 Doha Agreement to prevent Afghan territory from being used by militant groups against other states. The Taliban say they are committed to regional stability and reject accusations of harboring militants.

With negotiations stalled and mounting allegations by either side, analysts say military responses would do little to address deeper mistrust between the neighbors.

“In my view, the conduct of both Pakistan and Afghanistan has been escalatory,” Bahiss said. “Military responses may deliver short-term signaling, but they do not address the underlying mistrust.”