Pakistan’s first global Qirat competition featuring Qur’an reciters from 40 nations underway in Islamabad

Pakistan’s Religious Affairs Ministry speaks during a dinner hosted for the participants of the International Qirat Competition (IQC-2025) in Islamabad on November 23, 2025. (Ministry of Religious Affairs)
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Updated 26 November 2025
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Pakistan’s first global Qirat competition featuring Qur’an reciters from 40 nations underway in Islamabad

  • Event aims to promote art of Qur’anic recitation while strengthening intercultural and interfaith harmony
  • Pakistan’s religious affairs minister hopes event will help promote Arabic language in South Asian country

ISLAMABAD: Qur’an reciters from over 40 countries are taking part in the first ever International Qirat Competition organized by Pakistan, which is underway in its capital city Islamabad. 

The five-day International Qirat Competition (IQC-2025) features over 40 Qur’an reciters from the Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) member countries, who are sharing the stage to recite passages from the holy book. 

The judges’ panel comprises three international and five Pakistani jurors. One reciter from Pakistan is also participating in the competition. 

“I am very happy to be in Pakistan. I enjoy reading the Qur’an,” Mamaddu Adamah Bah, a reciter from Guinea, told Arab News on Tuesday. 

Hamza Muaz, a Qur’an reciter From Bahrain, shared that he had started memorizing the Qur’an with his father as a child. 

“I learnt while listening to the great reciters such as Sheikh Al-Minshawi and Sheikh Abdulbaset Al-Samad,” Muaz said, referencing the names of famous Qur’an reciters from Egypt. 

Abdul Rasheed Abdul Razzaq, a Qur’an reciter from Pakistan, noted that this was the first time a global competition of such a nature was being organized in Pakistan. 

“Today, we are seeing foreign Qur’an reciters in Pakistan,” Razzaq said. “Just like we go to foreign countries and represent our country there, similarly, we are seeing representatives from other countries in Pakistan.”

The jurors will evaluate the Qur’an reciters’ performances on tajweed, which refers to application of the rules of reciting the holy book, melody, rhythm and the spiritual impact of their deliveries.

The grand prize distribution ceremony will take place on Nov. 29 at the Jinnah Convention Center in Islamabad, where the winners will be bestowed with awards. State-level dignitaries are expected to preside over the concluding session.

In his speech at the opening of the competition, Pakistan’s Religious Affairs Minister Sardar Muhammad Yousaf hoped the event would help promote Arabic language in Pakistan.

“This will bring success in this world and the Hereafter,” Yousaf said on Monday. “Arabic is the language of the Qur’an, and it is essential for all of us to learn it so that we can read, understand, and act upon the Holy Qur’an.”


Pakistan plans $3,500 locally made electric car to lure motorcycle users

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Pakistan plans $3,500 locally made electric car to lure motorcycle users

  • Government-backed program aims to speed shift to electric transport
  • Lithium battery plants and possible tax cuts seen lowering EV costs

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan is set to launch a locally manufactured low-cost electric vehicle (EV) priced at Rs1 million ($3,556), aimed at helping motorcycle users transition more easily to cars, an official from the Engineering Development Board (EDB) told Arab News on Monday.

The country has seen a gradual rise in the adoption of EVs in a market traditionally dominated by Japanese automakers. The development comes as major cities across Pakistan face some of the world’s highest levels of air pollution, leading to dense smog in winter, with road transport being a major contributor.

In June last year, Pakistan introduced its Electric Vehicle Policy 2025–30, announcing more than Rs100 billion ($353 million) in subsidies over five years to support electric bikes and rickshaws and accelerate the shift toward cleaner transport.

“The car will be fully made in Pakistan and a local company is working on it,” Zeeshan Ashraf, a spokesman for the Engineering Development Board, a government body, told Arab News. “Its full price will be Rs1 million while the government is planning to give extra subsidy on this.”

Chinese and Korean electric vehicle brands have increasingly entered Pakistan’s market in recent years, making EVs a more common sight in cities such as Islamabad, Lahore and Karachi.

Ashraf said the vehicle will be launched under the Pakistan Accelerated Vehicle Electrification (PAVE) Program, a public-sector initiative designed to promote an eco-friendly and economical transportation system in the country.

The locally manufactured low-cost EV is expected to become available across the country within the next few months, he added.

Earlier, Engineering Development Board Chief Executive Hammad Mansoor was quoted by local media as saying that Pakistan could see its first fully electric, locally manufactured car enter the market by June 2026, with an estimated price of around Rs1 million.

Speaking to journalists during an iftar dinner in Karachi this month, Mansoor also signaled that the government may lower vehicle taxes in the upcoming federal budget to make hybrid, electric and conventional fuel vehicles more affordable.

He said Pakistan’s first lithium battery manufacturing facility is expected to begin production by May, while a second plant could start operations in September.

According to him, about 74 percent of battery components will be produced locally, which could significantly reduce the cost of EVs by relying on domestically manufactured parts.