Pakistan to host pharma exhibition next week featuring over 100 foreign exhibitors

Visitors arrive on the first day of the 21st Health Asia Exhibition at the Expo Center in Karachi, Pakistan, on October 19, 2024. (AN Photo/File)
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Updated 30 November 2025
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Pakistan to host pharma exhibition next week featuring over 100 foreign exhibitors

  • The Dec. 2-4 event aims to promote technology, digitalization in Pakistan’s pharmaceutical sector
  • Attendees will be able to engage in networking opportunities, gain insights from expert-led sessions

ISLAMABAD: The 23rd Pharma Asia International Exhibition 2025 will be held in Pakistan’s southern port city of Karachi from Dec. 2-4, state media reported on Saturday, aiming to promote technology and digitalization in the local pharma industry. 

Pharma Asia Exhibition says on its website it will provide an “unparalleled platform” for industry professionals, leaders and innovators to showcase cutting-edge technologies, products, and services.

Attendees will have the chance to engage in networking opportunities, gain insights from expert-led sessions and stay abreast of the latest industry trends and advancements.

“The exhibition will feature over 750 stalls and 100 foreign exhibitors and is expected to be attended by many domestic and foreign pharma experts,” state broadcaster Radio Pakistan reported. 

It said the event is being managed by an event management company named E-Commerce Gateway Pakistan (Pvt) Ltd, with support from the Pakistan Pharmaceutical Manufacturers Association (PPMA) and the Special Investment Facilitation Council (SIFC).

The SIFC is a hybrid, civil-military body formed by the government in 2023 to fast-track decisions related to international investment in Pakistan’s economic sectors such as tourism, livestock, agriculture, mines and minerals, and others. 

The exhibition is aimed at promoting modern technology and digitalization in Pakistan’s pharma industry, Radio Pakistan said. 

“Pharmaceutical machinery, raw materials, laboratory equipment and modern packaging solutions will be showcased at the event,” it said. 

In September, the PPMA said Pakistan’s pharmaceutical industry posted a strong growth, with exports rising by 35 percent in the past year to nearly $500 million.

The pharma sector, which produces 90 percent of the country’s medicines domestically, is now looking to expand into new markets such as Afghanistan and scale up to global standards through digitization, technology transfer, and regulatory reform. 


Pakistan, UK launch £10 million higher education partnership

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Pakistan, UK launch £10 million higher education partnership

  • Pak-UK Education Gateway second phase expands climate research, scholarships, university exchanges
  • First phase was launched in 2018 and delivered 165 partnerships, 2,000 joint studies and £5 million in grants

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s Higher Education Commission (HEC) and the British Council have launched the £10 million second phase of the Pak-UK Education Gateway, the HEC said on Monday, a joint initiative aimed at deepening collaboration between universities in both countries on research, mobility and higher-education reform.

The program, funded equally by the HEC and the British Council, builds on a partnership launched in 2018 and seeks to strengthen institutional ties between Pakistani and British universities, focusing on shared challenges including climate change, skills development and economic growth.

Education cooperation has become an increasingly important pillar of broader Pakistan-UK relations, as both countries look to expand academic mobility, research collaboration and international recognition of qualifications at a time when higher-education systems face pressure to respond to climate risks, labor-market shifts and funding constraints.

“This £10 million partnership is set to deepen collaboration between UK and Pakistani universities on critical issues like Climate Change and Mobility. A true system-to-system commitment,” the HEC said in an X post. 

According to the British Council and HEC, the first phase of the Pak-UK Education Gateway supported 165 institutional partnerships, generated around 2,000 joint research papers and awarded £5 million in research grants. Officials say the second phase aims to build on that foundation as part of a longer-term effort to internationalize Pakistan’s higher-education sector.

“Education is the building block of growth and prosperity. Our work on education in Pakistan supports people throughout their lives: from helping reform education policy at the school level, to our strong partnership in higher education,” British High Commissioner Jane Marriott said in a statement.

“This next phase builds on our already strong relationship, and will unlock opportunities to help both our higher education sectors thrive.”

Opportunities under the second phase include increased funding for scholarships, joint research grants and faculty exchanges, alongside a Start-Up Challenge Fund to support Pakistan-UK university collaborations pursuing commercial opportunities and access to new markets.

The program will also focus on leadership and governance reforms within Pakistan’s higher-education system, including quality assurance, improved campus accessibility for people with disabilities, and greater participation of women in senior leadership roles. It further aims to expand opportunities for Pakistani students to study UK-accredited courses without leaving their home cities, alongside a commitment to mutual recognition of qualifications.

Pakistan’s Minister for Federal Education and Professional Training Khalid Maqbool Siddiqui said the initiative had already delivered concrete results since its launch in 2018, calling education “the bridge that connects people, cultures, and futures.”

Acting HEC Chairperson Nadeem Mahbub described the Gateway as a system-to-system partnership rather than a stand-alone program, noting that it had benefited institutions and students in both countries.