Pakistan urges Islamic leaders to support family planning, cites ‘patriarchal neglect’ of maternal health

Pakistan’s information minister, Attaullah Tarar (left), speaks at a population summit in Islamabad on December 2, 2025. (Dawn)
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Updated 02 December 2025
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Pakistan urges Islamic leaders to support family planning, cites ‘patriarchal neglect’ of maternal health

  • Information minister warns Pakistan’s rapid population growth is straining health systems, driving high infant, maternal mortality
  • Calls on Islamic scholars, parliament, media to counter misconceptions, support nationwide family-planning efforts

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s information minister Attaullah Tarar on Tuesday urged Islamic scholars and leaders to actively support family-planning and reproductive-health campaigns, warning that deep-rooted patriarchal attitudes were preventing women from accessing lifesaving maternal care and contributing to the country’s worsening population crisis.

Tarar’s remarks come as Pakistan faces one of the fastest-growing populations in Asia. As he put it, the country was adding the equivalent of “the size of New Zealand every year” to its population, placing immense pressure on health systems, education, jobs and long-term economic growth. The World Bank and UN agencies have repeatedly warned that Pakistan’s demographic trajectory threatens to undermine development gains unless family-planning uptake sharply increases.

Pakistan also continues to record among the world’s highest rates of infant and maternal mortality. UNICEF data show nearly 50 deaths per 1,000 live births, and government officials say deaths linked to poor reproductive care, neonatal complications and preventable maternal conditions remain widespread, especially in rural and low-income communities.

Speaking at a population summit in Islamabad, Tarar said Pakistan’s male-dominated social norms and reluctance to treat maternal health as a core right were costing lives, and that religious scholars were essential to shifting public attitudes.

“So, when we go to the religious segment, I think no one can shed more light on this than them [scholars], that religion is not an impediment,” the minister said. 

“Religion highlights your health responsibilities, it also highlights the rights of the mother, it also highlights the responsibilities of the husband toward the wife, and it also highlights the health of the children, and it also highlights the balance.”

He said Pakistan remains a society where maternal health is routinely sidelined, warning that the number of mothers lost due to poor awareness reflects a level of neglect so severe it amounts to “criminal negligence” on the part of society.

He also praised Pakistan’s Council of Islamic Ideology, which advises the government on the compatibility of laws with Islam, for publicly supporting population-management initiatives. 

The minister said Pakistan could not continue ignoring the connection between rapid population growth and rising mortality, including infant deaths, neonatal complications and untreated reproductive-health conditions, and called for a multi-pronged strategy combining legislation, education, community-based messaging and targeted outreach through mosques.

He urged parliamentarians to adopt reforms supporting reproductive rights and mental-health protections, including recognizing postpartum depression, which he said is widely dismissed in Pakistan despite its severe impact on new mothers.

Tarar added that Pakistan’s economic challenges were inseparable from its demographic pressure. The country’s fast-expanding population was straining resources, limiting job creation and weakening the impact of any economic recovery:

“Yes, we will not be able to achieve the desired growth rate… Yes, there will be fewer resources to go by,” he said, calling for a nationwide shift “from awareness to action.”


Qatar, Pakistan resolve to boost strategic, economic cooperation at Doha talks

Updated 24 February 2026
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Qatar, Pakistan resolve to boost strategic, economic cooperation at Doha talks

  • Both countries urge dialogue on Afghanistan amid renewed border tensions between Islamabad and Kabul
  • Discussions focus on bilateral trade and investment, energy, defense, manpower and labor and culture

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan and Qatar on Tuesday agreed to deepen their strategic and economic cooperation during high-level talks between Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif and his Qatari counterpart Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman bin Jassim Al Thani, Sharif’s office said.

Sharif visited Qatar along with a high-level delegation on the invitation of Qatari emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani. The Pakistani premier also held meetings with Qatar’s trade and defense ministers to discuss cooperation in various domains.

The visit came at a time when Pakistan is seeking closer economic engagement with Gulf partners amid its broader push to stabilize the economy and attract investment, while maintaining security and defense cooperation with key regional states.

During their meeting in Doha, PM Sharif and Qatar’s Sheikh Mohammed discussed bilateral relations and exchanged views on regional and international developments, according to the Pakistan prime minister’s office.

“They reaffirmed the strong brotherly relations between Pakistan and Qatar and expressed satisfaction at the growing momentum in political, economic and institutional ties,” Sharif’s office said.

“Discussions focused on enhancing cooperation in the fields of trade and investment, energy, defense, manpower and labor and culture, with both sides stressing the importance of their task force to accelerate cooperation in all these areas.”

Pakistan and Qatar maintain strong trade and investment ties. In 2022, the office of Qatar’s emir said the Qatar Investment Authority planned to invest $3 billion in Pakistan, targeting sectors including transport, aviation, education, health, media, technology and labor.

Nearly 300,000 Pakistanis live and work in Qatar, according to Pakistan’s foreign office, with many employed in health, education, engineering and public services, as well as construction and transport. The two countries engage through forums such as the Bilateral Political Consultations and the Joint Ministerial Commission.

Sharif said he had productive discussions with Qatar’s emir, Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani, on how the two sides could transform their brotherly ties into mutually beneficial economic relationships. 

“We also took stock of the regional situation,” he said on X. “Pakistan and Qatar will continue to work together for peace and stability in the region and beyond.”

Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif (second right) meets the Qatari Emir Qatar’s emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani (left) in Doha, Qatar, on February 24, 2026. (PID)

DIALOGUE WITH AFGHANISTAN

Earlier, Sharif and Qatar’s Deputy PM Sheikh Saoud Al-Thani discussed the situation in Afghanistan and called for dialogue to support regional stability.

The meeting took place amid renewed tensions after Islamabad carried out airstrikes last week on what it described as Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) targets inside Afghanistan. Kabul said the strikes killed civilians and vowed to respond to what it called a violation of its sovereignty.

“Regional developments were also discussed, in particular the situation in Iran and Afghanistan,” Sharif’s office said in a statement. “Both sides emphasized the importance of dialogue, de-escalation and collective efforts to promote peace and stability in the region.”

This was the second time in less than six months that Pakistan conducted airstrikes in Afghanistan. The last strikes triggered heavy, weeklong clashes between the neighbors along their border before Qatar and Turkiye mediated a ceasefire between them in Oct. last year.

Separately, Sharif held meetings with Qatar’s State Minister for Trade Dr. Ahmed bin Mohammed Al-Sayed and a delegation of the Qatar Businessmen Association (QBA), highlighting Pakistan’s investment-friendly reforms.

He invited QBA members to explore opportunities in infrastructure, logistics, energy, agriculture, technology and export-oriented manufacturing, his office said.