Largest-ever container ship docks in Karachi, marking record for Pakistani ports

The photo shared on October 12, 2025, shows a container ship docked at Pakistan’s Hutchison Ports terminal in Karachi. (Photo courtesy: Hutchison Ports)
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Updated 12 October 2025
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Largest-ever container ship docks in Karachi, marking record for Pakistani ports

  • Karachi’s deep-water terminal hosts 400-meter MSC Micol, new class of ultra-large container ship
  • Arrival of ship signals rising investor confidence in Pakistan’s trade routes and maritime infrastructure

KARACHI: Pakistan’s Hutchison Ports terminal in Karachi has received the largest container ship in the country’s history, a 400-meter-long vessel operated by Mediterranean Shipping Company (MSC) with a capacity for more than 24,000 containers, in a move officials say underscores growing global confidence in Pakistan’s maritime and logistics potential.

The arrival of the MSC Micol, one of the world’s most advanced container ships, marks a major milestone for Pakistan’s shipping industry, which has long lagged behind regional competitors such as India and the United Arab Emirates in handling ultra-large vessels. 

Hutchison Ports Pakistan, a subsidiary of the Hong Kong-based Hutchison Ports group and the country’s only deep-water terminal, said the berthing of the MSC Micol demonstrates that Pakistan now has the infrastructure to accommodate next-generation vessels that dominate global trade routes between Asia and Europe.

“Hutchison Ports Pakistan, the country’s only deep-water container terminal, has berthed the largest vessel in the nation’s history,” the company said in a statement. “MSC Micol, a next-generation container ship measuring 400 meters in length with a capacity of 24,070 TEUs, is among the world’s most advanced vessels and the largest ever to call at a Pakistani port, marking a historic milestone for Pakistan’s maritime industry.”

The terminal operator said the development underscores “the growing confidence of global shipping lines in Pakistan’s maritime potential” and highlights its “world-class capability” to handle vessels of this scale. 

It added that the ability to berth ultra-large container ships will help reduce freight costs and improve trade efficiency, benefits that could make Pakistan’s exports more competitive and imports more cost-effective.

Pakistan’s main seaports, Karachi and nearby Port Qasim, have traditionally handled smaller ships due to draft limitations, restricting their ability to compete with regional deep-water hubs such as Dubai’s Jebel Ali or India’s Mundra Port. The opening of Hutchison Ports Pakistan in 2018 gave the country its first facility capable of receiving vessels up to 400 meters long, a key requirement for the latest generation of global shipping fleets.

Located in Karachi’s Keamari district, the terminal is part of Hutchison Ports’ global network of 53 ports across 24 countries. Its expansion comes as Pakistan seeks to boost exports, streamline logistics, and strengthen trade corridors linked to the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC). 

Industry analysts say the arrival of ultra-large vessels could also lower per-container handling costs and encourage major shipping lines to include Pakistan in their mainline Asia–Europe routes, rather than relying on feeder services via Gulf ports.


Pakistan urges ‘time-bound and irreversible’ path to Palestinian statehood at UN

Updated 17 December 2025
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Pakistan urges ‘time-bound and irreversible’ path to Palestinian statehood at UN

  • Pakistan warns the Security Council Israeli settlement expansion has reached its highest level in the West Bank
  • It says Islamabad backs sustained ceasefire, expanded humanitarian access, protection of UNRWA’s role in Gaza

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan on Tuesday called for a time-bound and irreversible political process leading to the establishment of a sovereign Palestinian state, urging the international community to move beyond declarations and turn long-standing commitments into concrete action.

Addressing a Security Council briefing on the Middle East, Pakistan’s ambassador to the United Nations said repeated diplomatic initiatives had underscored that the status quo was untenable and that only a credible political horizon, grounded in international law, could deliver durable peace.

His remarks came as the Security Council reviewed the implementation of Resolution 2334, which calls on Israel to halt settlement activity in occupied Palestinian territory.

Pakistan said recent diplomatic efforts — including a high-level conference in July and the General Assembly’s endorsement of the New York Declaration reaffirming the two-state framework — had sought to preserve the possibility of a negotiated settlement between Israelis and Palestinians.

It said follow-up meetings at Sharm El-Sheikh, along with US-led initiatives under President Donald Trump aimed at halting the fighting, were intended to reopen a political process toward Palestinian statehood.

“A time-bound and irreversible political process, anchored in relevant UN resolutions must lead to the establishment of a sovereign, independent and contiguous State of Palestine on the basis of pre-1967 borders, with Al-Quds Al-Sharif as its capital,” Pakistan’s Permanent Representative Asim Iftikhar Ahmad told the council.

“It is high time to turn promises into action and speed up this process,” he added.

Ahmad said Pakistan backed Security Council Resolution 2803, which calls for efforts to sustain the ceasefire, expand aid access and restart a political track toward Palestinian statehood.

He said settlement activity in the occupied West Bank, including East Jerusalem, had reached its highest levels since the United Nations began systematic monitoring, citing UN findings that more than 6,300 housing units were advanced during the reporting period.

Such actions, he said, had “no legal validity” under international law but continued to undermine the viability of the two-state solution.

Pakistan also defended the role of the UN Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA), saying it remained indispensable for Palestinian refugees and must not be weakened by what it called unfounded criticism.

Ahmad condemned the storming of UNRWA’s headquarters in East Jerusalem earlier this month, calling it a violation of international law and the inviolability of UN premises, and urged full, safe and unimpeded humanitarian access to Gaza, along with the immediate start of reconstruction without annexation or forced displacement.