‘We make our own norms’: Pakistan’s first woman racer breaks ground in global motorsport

Pakistani motorsport driver Arshia Akhtar in action during the Formula Race at Road America in Wisconsin, US, on June 27, 2025. (Arshia Akhtar)
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Updated 10 October 2025
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‘We make our own norms’: Pakistan’s first woman racer breaks ground in global motorsport

  • Lahore-born Arshia Akhter went from karting in Riyadh to earning a professional FIA racing license
  • Alongside motorsport, she pursues a career in clinical research with multiple academic publications

ISLAMABAD: When Arshia Akhtar first stepped onto a karting track in Riyadh as a child, she had no idea it would lead her to professional racing.

Nearly two decades later, she has become the first Pakistani woman to receive a professional license from the Fédération Internationale de l’Automobile (FIA) — motorsport’s global governing body — a milestone that places her among the few women competing internationally in formula racing.

Born in Lahore and raised in Saudi Arabia, Akhtar moved to the United States in 2017, where she now works full-time in clinical research while pursuing her motorsport ambitions.

“My mom and my sister, they don’t even have a driver’s license,” she told Arab News in an online interview from Texas. “It has always been my dad and I who are more sports-oriented.”

Akhtar first tried karting at age 11 and returned to it in her teens before transitioning to competitive circuits. She has since raced in the Formula Race Promotions Series and the F4 US Championship, both featuring international drivers.




Pakistani motorsport driver Arshia Akhtar in action during the Formula Race at Road America in Wisconsin, US, on June 27, 2025. (Arshia Akhtar)

Robert Wright, owner of Formula Race Promotions, said Akhtar began competing with their team in early 2025 and showed steady improvement throughout the season.

“Her progress through the season was steady and rewarded her with fourth place in the season points standings,” he said, adding that plans are already underway to further her skills and experience in 2026.

Securing a professional license from the FIA was a demanding process. As a Pakistani woman entering a sport still dominated by men and the West, Akhtar said much of her journey involved learning through trial and error.

She spent months studying regulations, car specifications and race categories while building a resumé that met FIA standards.

“When you’re the first one doing something, you’re figuring it out as you go,” she said.

Akhtar currently holds a Grade C FIA license and is working toward Grade B, a step closer to the elite “super license.”

“Every time I race in the championship, I gain points,” she explained. “You only gain points if you’re in the top ten. You need to build up to a certain number to even qualify for a super license.”




The photograph shared on July 2, 2025, shows Pakistani motorsport driver Arshia Akhtar with her 7-month-old puppy, Ezra, during a test day drive at MSR Houston in Texas, US. (Arshia Akhtar)

Currently, she is competing in Formula E, a category of high-speed electric racing that tests drivers’ reflexes, technical precision and strategy.

Her coach, professional driver Nathan Byrd, described her as “a fast learner with a good attitude, taking all of my feedback well and then immediately executing on-track.”

‘ADRENALINE JUNKIE’

Beyond the racetrack, Akhtar juggles a demanding schedule.

“I wake up early, check emails, handle racing or sponsorship calls and then start my research job by 7:30,” she said. “After work, I take my dogs to the park, work out, practice on the simulator and sometimes I’m working till late.”

Despite the sport’s high costs, Akhtar continues to self-fund her career.

Women remain vastly underrepresented in motorsport. A 2023 study by More Than Equal, an initiative by former Formula 1 driver David Coulthard and entrepreneur Karel Komárek, found that women make up just around 10 percent of global participants.

Against that backdrop, Akhtar’s progress marks both a national milestone and a personal test of endurance. She said she often races on unfamiliar tracks against seasoned competitors.

“Every time I go on a track, that’s my first time on that track, while other people I’m competing against have been there at least 10 or 12 times,” she said.




Arshia Akhtar is having a chat with race engineer Angelo Zarra at Road Atlanta Raceway in Hall County, Georgia, US, on March 20, 2025. (Arshia Akhtar)

To prepare, she spends hours in simulation and track analysis, though she admits that practice can’t replace real racing.

“Once you are on track, the execution part kind of includes dealing with things that are changing,” she said.

Away from motorsport, Akhtar describes herself as an “adrenaline junkie.” She has competed in equestrian events in the US, earning several podium finishes, and enjoys snowboarding, skydiving, and scuba diving.

“My family has just accepted the fact that I’m the weird kid,” she laughed.

Akhtar also excelled academically, staying on the dean’s list and publishing in scientific journals. Now, she hopes her example will inspire more Pakistani women to explore motorsport, not just as drivers, but also in engineering, management and technical roles.

“We make our own norms,” she said. “If you truly believe that something should be normal and you do it... then it will become normal.”


Pakistan says military operation concluded in Balochistan, 216 militants killed 

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Pakistan says military operation concluded in Balochistan, 216 militants killed 

  • Separatist BLA militant group claimed responsibility for coordinated attacks across Balochistan last week 
  • Military says 36 civilians, 22 law enforcement and security forces personnel have been killed in attacks 

PESHAWAR: Pakistani forces have concluded a security operation in the southwestern Balochistan province and killed 216 militants after a series of coordinated attacks by separatist militants last week, the military’s media wing said on Thursday. 

Separatist militant group Baloch Liberation Army (BLA) claimed responsibility for a series of attacks in Balochistan last Friday and Saturday in multiple districts across the province, one of the deadliest flare-ups in the area in recent years. 

Pakistan military’s media wing, the Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR), said security forces launched operations in Panjgur and Harnai district’s outskirts on Jan. 29 based on intelligence confirming the presence of “terrorist elements,” killing 41 militants. 

It said the military launched a broader series of intelligence-based operations in multiple areas of the province after that to dismantle “terrorist sleeper cells,” referring to it as “Operation Radd-ul-Fitna-1.”

“As a result of these well-coordinated engagements and subsequent clearance operations, 216 terrorists have been sent to hell, significantly degrading the leadership, command-and-control structures and operational capabilities of terrorist networks,” the ISPR said in a statement.

The military said 36 civilians, including women and children, were killed by militants while 22 security forces and law enforcement personnel also lost their lives. 

The ISPR said a substantial cache of foreign-origin weapons, ammunition, explosives and equipment were also recovered during the counteroffensive operations. 

“Preliminary analysis indicates systematic external facilitation and logistical support to these extremist proxies,” the statement said. 

The military said Pakistan’s armed forces remain steadfast in their resolve to combat “terrorism,” vowing that counterterror operations will continue until militants are completely eliminated. 

“Operation Radd-ul-Fitna-1 stands as a testament to Pakistan’s and particularly Balochistan’s proud peoples’ unwavering commitment to always prefer peace over violence, unity over division and development over violence,” the ISPR said. 

Pakistan’s government has accused India of being behind the militant attacks in Balochistan, charges that New Delhi has rejected as “baseless.”

Balochistan, Pakistan’s largest province by land area, has long faced a separatist insurgency that has intensified in recent years. Militants frequently target security forces, government officials, infrastructure projects, foreigners and non-local workers.

The province holds vast reserves of minerals and hydrocarbons and is central to the multibillion-dollar China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC), a flagship component of China’s Belt and Road Initiative.

Separatist groups such as the BLA accuse Islamabad of exploiting Balochistan’s natural resources while denying locals a fair share. Pakistan’s civilian and military leadership reject the claim and say they are investing in the province’s development.