Pakistan launches first locally hosted AI cloud to keep national data inside the country

The undated picture shows building of Data Vault Pakistan. (Data Vault Pakistan)
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Updated 27 November 2025
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Pakistan launches first locally hosted AI cloud to keep national data inside the country

  • New sovereign cloud allows financial, health, telecom and government data to stay within Pakistan while enabling AI development
  • Telenor–Data Vault partnership offers on-shore access to high-performance GPUs and AI infrastructure for businesses, public institutions

KARACHI: Pakistan this week launched its first locally hosted artificial intelligence cloud, a step officials say will allow sensitive national data to remain inside the country while giving businesses and public institutions access to powerful AI computing for the first time.

Pakistan, like many emerging markets, has relied on cloud servers located abroad for AI and machine-learning workloads, raising concerns over compliance with domestic regulations, financial data privacy, telecom metadata protections and broader national security. Around the world, countries are investing in “sovereign clouds” — cloud platforms physically hosted within national borders under local jurisdiction — to build digital autonomy and reduce reliance on foreign service providers. Pakistan’s new AI cloud aims to meet that need by keeping all AI training, analytics and data processing within its borders.

The cloud has been launched by Telenor Pakistan in collaboration with Data Vault Pakistan, whose high-density AI data center will host all workloads domestically.

“Today we are turning sovereign, high performance computer into a national capability,” Data Vault Pakistan CEO Mehwish Salman Ali said at the launch event on Wednesday. 

“By weaving Data Vault Cloud into Telenor Pakistan’s enterprise portfolio, we are giving every organization a secure, local path from idea to inference — without sending data abroad. This is how Pakistan moves from consuming AI to producing it.”

According to the press release, the cloud enables organizations to train and deploy artificial intelligence models, process large datasets and run real-time applications without relying on offshore cloud regions. It covers sensitive data types including financial transactions, medical imaging, telecom data and government records, ensuring none of it leaves Pakistan.

AI systems require intensive computing power, especially for tasks such as training large language models, processing video analytics, powering generative AI systems or running real-time fraud detection. These workloads depend on GPUs — specialized processors far more powerful than standard chips. Pakistan has previously struggled to access such hardware because of global shortages and high import costs.

The new platform introduces GPU-as-a-Service, allowing organizations to rent NVIDIA-grade accelerators on demand rather than purchase expensive physical equipment. The release said this will enable a range of applications, from machine-learning pipelines and industrial automation to Urdu and regional-language AI models, computer-vision systems for public safety and advanced sector-specific analytics in health care and fintech.

Officials expect the cloud to support national priorities across multiple sectors. In finance, it can power fraud detection and anti-money laundering systems. In health care, it can assist with diagnostics and medical image processing. Manufacturers and logistics companies can use the platform for automation and predictive analytics, while public agencies can deploy secure local AI for citizen services and governance.

According to the release, the initiative aligns with regulations from the State Bank of Pakistan (SBP), the Pakistan Telecommunication Authority (PTA), health care data laws and emerging national AI safety frameworks. Hosting all data within the country, the statement said, strengthens cybersecurity, improves audit trails, enhances privacy and identity controls and bolsters digital trust.

With onshore GPU capacity now available in Pakistan, researchers and startups can develop their own AI systems rather than depend on offshore platforms. 

The press release said the partnership “positions Pakistan alongside global markets investing in sovereign AI clouds to power next-generation digital transformation,” and gives the country the foundation “to move from consuming AI to producing it.”


Pakistan president meets UAE counterpart, explores trade, investment opportunities

Updated 27 January 2026
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Pakistan president meets UAE counterpart, explores trade, investment opportunities

  • Asif Ali Zardari is in UAE on four-day visit to strengthen bilateral ties, review bilateral cooperation
  • Both sides discuss regional, international developments, reaffirm commitment to promote peace

ISLAMABAD: President Asif Ali Zardari met his UAE counterpart Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed Al-Nahyan in Abu Dhabi on Tuesday during which both sides explored new opportunities in trade, investment, energy and other sectors, Zardari's office said. 

Zardari arrived in Abu Dhabi on Monday evening with a high-level delegation on a four-day official visit to the UAE to review trade, economic and security cooperation. 

"The leaders discussed ways to further deepen the longstanding and brotherly relations between Pakistan and the UAE," a statement from Zardari's office said about his meeting with the UAE president. 

"They reviewed the full spectrum of bilateral cooperation and explored new opportunities in trade, investment, energy, infrastructure, technology, and people-to-people exchanges, highlighting the significant potential for expanding economic and strategic partnership.

Zardari highlighted the significance of Al-Nayhan's visit to Pakistan last month, the statement said, expressing appreciation for the UAE's continued support for strengthening bilateral ties.

It said both sides also exchanged views on a range of regional and international developments, reaffirming their commitment to promoting peace, stability and sustainable development.

The meeting was also attended by Pakistan's First Lady Aseefa Bhutto-Zardari, the Pakistani president's son Bilawal Bhutto-Zardari, who is also the chairman of the Pakistan Peoples Party, Interior Minister Mohsin Naqvi and Pakistan's ambassador to the UAE. 

ZARDARI MEETS AD PORTS CEO

Zardari earlier met AD Ports Group CEO Captain Mohamed Juma Al-Shamisi to discuss the group's investment initiatives in Karachi. 

"Both sides agreed that the expansion and modernization of port infrastructure would strengthen trade flows and support Pakistan’s broader economic development and country’s seaborne trade," the President's Secretariat said in a statement.

It added that Zardari described the AD Ports Group's long-term investment and expanding role in Pakistan's maritime and logistics sector as a key pillar of Pakistan–UAE economic cooperation.

Pakistan and the UAE maintain close political and economic relations, with Abu Dhabi playing a pivotal role in supporting Islamabad during periods of financial stress through deposits, oil facilities and investment commitments. 

The UAE is Pakistan's third-largest trading partner, after China and the United States, and a key destination for Pakistani exports, particularly food, textiles and construction services.

The Gulf state is also home to more than 1.5 million Pakistani expatriates, one of the largest overseas Pakistani communities in the world, who contribute billions of dollars annually in remittances, a crucial source of foreign exchange for Pakistan’s economy.

Beyond trade and labor ties, Pakistan and the UAE have steadily expanded defense and security cooperation over the years, including military training, joint exercises and collaboration in counter-terrorism and regional security matters.