Pakistani STEM institute partners with Palestinian firm to expand inclusive learning in Middle East

The screengrab taken from a video on November 24, 2025, shows STEMverse founder and CEO Mashaal Jawad working on a robot with student Musa Mustafa (left), in Peshawar, Pakistan. (Screengrab/AN)
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Updated 25 November 2025
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Pakistani STEM institute partners with Palestinian firm to expand inclusive learning in Middle East

  • Pakistan’s STEMverse and Palestine’s Mufakker collaborate on robotics and inclusive education initiatives
  • Partnership aims to blend special-needs learning tools with hands-on STEM content for Middle East schools

PESHAWAR: STEMvese, a Pakistani educational institution teaching robotics and Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics (STEM) education to children, hopes to promote inclusive and non-traditional learning across classrooms in the Middle East region with the help of Palestinian company Mufakker, the institution’s founder said this week.

Headquartered in the northwestern city of Peshawar, STEMverse says it has trained more than 2,500 students in robotics and STEM education. The institution says it has partnered with over ten schools in Pakistan so far to promote STEM education in the country.

Mufakker, meanwhile, is a Palestinian company that specializes in the design and production of educational tools tailored to the abilities and needs of children with autism, Down syndrome and learning difficulties.

STEMverse founder and CEO Mashaal Jawad met Mufakker founder Maali Diab at the GITEX Global 2025 event held in Dubai last month. Both companies inked a memorandum of understanding to exchange expertise in robotics and STEM education to promote non-traditional learning in classrooms.

“The hope is for both companies to expand into these regions,” Jawad told Arab News on Friday, “If their (Muffaker’s) expertise is in the language department, I’d be more than happy to have their games being used here to teach us things like Urdu or English, even regional languages like Pashto, Sindhi and Punjabi.”

STEMverse, on the other hand, hopes to expand into these regions and help people who have autism, Down syndrome and other learning difficulties get access to STEM education, Jawad said.

Jawad pointed out that Mufakker specializes in creating educational games for people with learning disabilities because “the traditional classroom is not well equipped for them.”

“I’m partnering with them to actually bring that sort of technology and that sort of input into our classrooms here,” the STEMverse CEO added.

The collaboration will blend Muffaker’s language-based learning tools with STEMverse’s technical and engineering content, Jawad said.

“We’re working on making content that can be transformed into games that will benefit them from learning STEM and technical education all through games as well,” she pointed out.

Jawad said she generated several leads at GITEX Global 2025, helping her promote STEM education in the Middle East region.

“I’m now in talks with multiple schools in Dubai and Saudi Arabia who are particularly interested in having our content run in their schools,” she said.

‘COMPLETELY NEW THING’

STEMverse works through three models. In the first model, it partners with schools and teaches STEM as a formal subject like other curriculums.

“What we have is a year-long curriculum that our trainers and my engineers go into schools and they teach all of this through hands-on robotic kits, virtual tools and 3D printers,” she explained.

The second model brings children to STEMverse campuses for after school programs that focus on hands-on innovation. Besides Peshawar, the institute has a campus in Islamabad.

She said children at these campuses, some of them as old as eight, are building products for people to buy. One student is currently building an automatic beverage machine that combines tea and coffee, Jawad said.

The third model aims to reach underserved areas by developing a gamified mobile app that teaches robotics, AI, 3D modelling and more.

“It’s harder for us to reach these underserved areas but most people have smartphones,” Jawad said. “So what we’ve done is we’ve gamified STEM.”

Maheen Arshad, who has graduated in Industrial Engineering, works with STEMverse as a science communicator. According to her, STEM education is popular among children.

“The children are obviously really excited because it’s a completely new thing to them and parents also love it,” she said.

“It takes a bit of time for them to adjust to this new concept of STEM education, but once they see the results and the projects that the children made themselves, they’re quite ecstatic about it.”

Musa Mustafa, 11, is a student of the Edex School in Peshawar and has been enrolled in one of the STEMverse’s programs, called ‘Maker’s Club.’ He has been building a robot for the past three months that will help carry food, water or any other object.

Once finished, users will be able to control the robot via an application on their laptops or phones, Mustafa said. 

“I wanted to help my grandparents since they can’t move that much,” Mustafa said. “So I made this robot.”


UN torture expert decries Pakistan ex-PM Khan’s detention

Updated 12 December 2025
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UN torture expert decries Pakistan ex-PM Khan’s detention

  • Khan’s party alleges government is holding him in solitary confinement, barring prison visits
  • Pakistan’s government rejects allegations former premier is being denied basic rights in prison

GENEVA: Pakistan’s former prime minister Imran Khan is being held in conditions that could amount to torture and other inhuman or degrading treatment, the United Nations’ special rapporteur on torture warned Friday.

Alice Jill Edwards urged Pakistan to take immediate and effective action to address reports of the 73-year-old’s inhumane and undignified detention conditions.

“I call on Pakistani authorities to ensure that Khan’s conditions of detention fully comply with international norms and standards,” Edwards said in a statement.

“Since his transfer to Adiala Jail in Rawalpindi on September 26, 2023, Imran Khan has reportedly been held for excessive periods in solitary confinement, confined for 23 hours a day in his cell, and with highly restricted access to the outside world,” she said.

“His cell is reportedly under constant camera surveillance.”

Khan an all-rounder who captained Pakistan to victory in the 1992 Cricket World Cup, upended Pakistani politics by becoming the prime minister in 2018.

Edwards said prolonged or indefinite solitary confinement is prohibited under international human rights law and constitutes a form of psychological torture when it lasts longer than 15 days.

“Khan’s solitary confinement should be lifted without delay. Not only is it an unlawful measure, extended isolation can bring about very harmful consequences for his physical and mental health,” she said.

UN special rapporteurs are independent experts mandated by the Human Rights Council. They do not, therefore, speak for the United Nations itself.

Initially a strong backer of the country’s powerful military leadership, Khan was ousted in a no-confidence vote in 2022, and has since been jailed on a slew of corruption charges that he denies.

He has accused the military of orchestrating his downfall and pursuing his Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party and its allies.

Khan’s supporters say he is being denied prison visits from lawyers and family after a fiery social media post this month accusing army leader Field Marshal Asim Munir of persecuting him.

According to information Edwards has received, visits from Khan’s lawyers and relatives are frequently interrupted or ended prematurely, while he is held in a small cell lacking natural light and adequate ventilation.

“Anyone deprived of liberty must be treated with humanity and dignity,” the UN expert said.

“Detention conditions must reflect the individual’s age and health situation, including appropriate sleeping arrangements, climatic protection, adequate space, lighting, heating, and ventilation.”

Edwards has raised Khan’s situation with the Pakistani government.