Pakistan showcases tech gains at GITEX Dubai 2025 amid 20 percent IT export rise

Picture of Pakistan's pavilion at GITEX Global Expo in Dubai, UAE, on October 13, 2025. (Pakistan Embassy UAE)
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Updated 16 October 2025
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Pakistan showcases tech gains at GITEX Dubai 2025 amid 20 percent IT export rise

  • Pakistan has set up a National Pavilion at the exhibition that features 10 startups and over 26 tech firms
  • PM’s aide urges exhibitors to act as ‘digital ambassadors,’ showcasing Pakistan’s technological capabilities

KARACHI: Pakistan has spotlighted its rapid digital transformation at GITEX Global 2025 exhibition in Dubai, unveiling a 20 percent year-on-year surge in IT exports as it positions itself as a rising tech hub on the global stage.

Pakistan has set up a National Pavilion that features 10 startups and more than 26 tech firms, highlighting the country’s expanding digital potential. Launched by IT Minister Shaza Fatima Khawaja, it aims to promote business networking, global partnerships, and foreign investment in Pakistan’s tech sector.

The five-day exhibition, running from October 13 to 17, features over 6,500 companies from more than 180 countries and attracts about 200,000 tech professionals along with thousands of expert speakers on artificial intelligence, cybersecurity, quantum computing, digital transformation and sustainable technologies.

Speaking to attendees at the exhibition, Rana Ihsaan Afzal Khan, Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif’s coordinator on commerce, said Pakistan ranks among the top five freelance economies worldwide and possesses one of the largest youth-driven digital talent pools, with nearly two-thirds of its population under 30.

“Our tech professionals are delivering cutting-edge digital solutions to clients across the globe,” he was quoted as saying by Pakistan’s Press Information Department (PID) on Thursday. “Pakistan’s IT exports have grown at an average annual rate of 20 percent over the past five years, reaching USD3.8 billion in FY 2024–25.”

Khan said this achievement reflects Pakistan’s evolution into a competitive and innovative digital economy. This year’s participation marks a collaborative initiative between the Pakistani commerce and IT ministries.

The PM’s aide underscored that Pakistan would host the PIXS Expo 2026, an international technology exhibition of its kind, in Lahore next year.

“Our message to the world is clear: Pakistan is open for innovation, open for investment, and open for collaboration,” he said, inviting international investors and partners to explore opportunities in the country’s thriving tech ecosystem.

He also urged Pakistani exhibitors to act as the country’s “digital ambassadors,” building partnerships to showcase Pakistan’s technological capabilities.


Pakistan warns 2026 monsoon season likely to be 22-26% more intense

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Pakistan warns 2026 monsoon season likely to be 22-26% more intense

  • Pakistan PM directs climate change ministry to begin preparations immediately for next year’s monsoon season
  • Pakistan suffered a deadly monsoon season this year which saw over 1,000 people killed due to torrential rains, floods

ISLAMABAD: The chairman of Pakistan’s National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA) warned on Wednesday that the 2026 monsoon season is expected to be more intense in the country, as Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif directed authorities to start preparations immediately for a potential crisis next year. 

Pakistan suffered a deadly monsoon season this year, which saw over 1,000 people killed due to heavy rains and floods since late June. Deadly floods in Pakistan’s eastern Punjab province in late August killed over 130, affected over 4.5 million people and washed away large swathes of crops across the province. 

Experts attribute Pakistan’s irregular weather patterns, which include floods, droughts and heatwaves to climate change. Pakistan is counted among the world’s most vulnerable countries to climate change effects, where authorities say nearly 4,600 people have been killed in floods since 2010. 

“We think in the coming days, the 2026 monsoon is expected to be 22-26% more intense compared to this year’s monsoon,” NDMA Chairman Lt. Gen. Inam Haider Malik told reporters at a news conference. 

Malik said this meant glaciers would melt earlier next year or in higher quantity, pointing out that glacial lake outburst floods (GLOFs) and deluges were observed in the northern Gilgit-Baltistan (GB) region, Punjab and the southern Sindh province during 2025. 

“Pakistan bore all possible components of the monsoon this year,” Malik said, adding that over 3.1 million people were evacuated from high-risk riverine areas across the country. 

PM APPROVES SHORT-TERM PLAN

Separately, Sharif approved a short-term plan by the climate change ministry to induce climate-related losses for the next year’s monsoon, a statement by his office said, directing authorities to begin preparations to implement it immediately. 

The prime minister noted that a substantial amount of Pakistan’s GDP has to be spent every three years to mitigate the adverse impacts of climate change. 

Speaking to reporters alongside Malik, Climate Change Minister Musadik Maik said that as per the short-term plan, the government will fix all dams, embankments and floodgates that were damaged due to the recent floods in Pakistan in late August. 

“Whatever damage that has happened in the next 200 days it will be fixed,” Malik said. 

He pointed out that the prime minister has also directed authorities to ensure that an integrated early warning system is made functional and implemented in the country. 

Malik said at the moment, various government ministries and authorities, such as the Planning Ministry and the NDMA, had their own early warning systems. 

He said that as per one automatic and integrated warning system, the people and officials of the area where a natural calamity strikes will be warned first so that they can take precautionary measures before Islamabad is alerted. 
 
“The prime minister has issued an order and told us that you have to do both of these things immediately,” the minister said.