Pakistan to host Saudi performers for the first time at World Culture Festival in Karachi

Artists take part in a satirical sci-fi theatre performance "V-Gen - Error 404: Not Found" by a Pakistani director Bazelah Mustafa, at the World Culture Festival in Karachi, Pakistan October 3, 2024. (Reuters/File)
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Updated 15 October 2025
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Pakistan to host Saudi performers for the first time at World Culture Festival in Karachi

  • ‘Biggest festival in the world’ to run from Oct. 31 to Dec. 7, featuring artists from 141 countries
  • Israeli filmmakers also approached the Arts Council of Pakistan to participate in the festival

KARACHI: Cultural groups from Saudi Arabia will participate for the first time in the World Culture Festival hosted by Pakistan from Oct. 31 to Dec. 7, the president of the Arts Council of Pakistan said on Wednesday, adding that it would be “the biggest festival in the world.”

The event, which will be held in Karachi, will host performers from 141 countries, including 37 from Africa, 41 from Asia, 36 from Europe, 13 from North America, 11 from South America and three from Oceania.

The seven-week festival will feature 45 theater productions, 60 music performances, 25 dance shows, six exhibitions, 25 workshops and 15 talks, with 25 international and 30 national artists taking part.

“This year, cultural groups from across the Middle East are participating in the World Culture Festival,” the council’s president, Muhammad Ahmed Shah, told Arab News. “We are grateful to Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman for his remarkable efforts in promoting art and culture in Saudi Arabia.”

“In the future, we look forward to strengthening cultural collaboration with the Kingdom,” he added.

Shah said during a news conference that the festival aimed to promote peace and intercultural understanding, noting that artists from conflict-affected regions will also be represented.

“When people from around the world come here, they will see how peaceful we are,” he said.

Highlighting the response the festival has received, he said that the council had received more than 2,800 films, adding that this is a number unmatched by any other festival in the world.

Shah mentioned that the council was even approached by filmmakers in India and Israel.

Pakistan has tense relations with India after an intense, four-day military conflict between the two South Asian nuclear-armed neighbors.

Pakistan also does not recognize Israel and has always called for an independent state of Palestine with pre-1967 borders and East Jerusalem as its capital.

Shah also praised the Sindh administration for supporting the event, saying the festival will feature Pakistani films alongside international entries.


Pakistan’s top military commander hails Saudi defense pact as ‘historic’ at scholars’ conference

Updated 10 December 2025
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Pakistan’s top military commander hails Saudi defense pact as ‘historic’ at scholars’ conference

  • Asim Munir says Pakistan has a unique bond with the Kingdom, citing the ‘honor’ of helping safeguard the holy sites
  • He says only the state can declare jihad, urging religious scholars to counter extremist narratives and promote unity

ISLAMABAD: Chief of Defense Staff Field Marshal Asim Munir on Wednesday described the country’s joint security pact with Saudi Arabia as a “historic” milestone, telling a gathering of religious scholars that Pakistan and the kingdom share a deep strategic relationship.

Signed in September, the Strategic Mutual Defense Agreement has solidified decades of Saudi–Pakistan defense cooperation, covering intelligence-sharing, counterterrorism and regional stability.

The two nations have long coordinated on defense matters, with Pakistani military personnel deployed in the Kingdom.

“The defense agreement [with Saudi Arabia] is historic,” he said in an address to the conference in the federal capital.

The top military commander said Pakistan regarded its connection with the Kingdom as unique.

“Among all Muslim countries, Allah has given Pakistan the honor of helping safeguard the Haramain,” he continued, referring to the two holiest sites of Islam in Makkah and Madinah.

Munir used his speech to warn against extremism, saying that under the Islamic framework, only the state could declare jihad, a pointed reference to groups such as the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), which claims to act in the name of religion while carrying out attacks on civilians and security forces.

“When nations abandon knowledge and the pen, disorder takes hold,” he said, urging the religious scholars to help keep society unified and to “broaden the nation’s vision.”

Munir also criticized India, describing “terrorism” as “India’s habit, not Pakistan’s.”

His remarks came months after a four-day military confrontation in May, during which the two nuclear-armed neighbors exchanged artillery and missile fire and deployed drones and fighter jets.

India blamed Pakistan for a militant attack in Indian-administered Kashmir before launching a missile attack. Islamabad denied involvement and called for an international probe.

Pakistan claimed it had shot down six Indian fighter jets before a US-brokered ceasefire took effect.

“We do not hide when confronting the enemy,” Munir said. “We challenge openly.”