On Qatar’s National Day, Pakistan hails Doha as global ‘emissary of peace’

Pakistan's Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif speaking during a ceremony to mark Qatar’s National Day in Islamabad on December 9, 2025. (Government of Pakistan)
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Updated 10 December 2025
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On Qatar’s National Day, Pakistan hails Doha as global ‘emissary of peace’

  • PM says Pakistan stood with Qatar after Israeli airstrike, notes Doha backed Islamabad during May conflict with India
  • Doha has recently facilitated de-escalation talks between Pakistan and Afghanistan after border clashes this year

ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif on Tuesday praised Qatar as one of the region’s most active diplomatic mediators, calling Doha an “emissary of peace” during an address at a ceremony to mark Qatar’s National Day in Islamabad.

Sharif’s remarks come after Qatar led negotiations aimed at easing the Gaza conflict, working with nations like the United States to reach a ceasefire and secure humanitarian pauses and prisoner exchanges. Doha also facilitated de-escalation talks between Pakistan and Afghanistan after border clashes earlier this year, underscoring its growing role as a crisis mediator across the region.

Pakistan has also aligned closely with Qatar in recent months. Sharif visited Doha in a show of solidarity after Israel’s airstrikes on the country in September, while Qatar publicly supported Pakistan during a brief military conflict with India in May, which Islamabad has highlighted as evidence of a deepening two-way partnership.

“Pakistan deeply appreciates Qatar’s distinguished and long-standing role as the emissary of peace, a nation that has repeatedly opened doors for dialogue, helped defuse tensions, and encouraged reconciliation with the noble aim of fostering peace and stability in the region and beyond,” Sharif said during his National Day address. 

He described Qatar as a “brotherly country of Pakistan” with “very strong fraternal and friendly relations,” noting that bilateral engagement spans energy security, defense cooperation, trade and investment. More than 150,000 Pakistanis live and work in Qatar, contributing to its economy and remitting income back home, while Qatari investments in Pakistan’s real estate, infrastructure and renewable energy sectors have expanded.

Sharif said he had traveled to Doha twice this year, first to convey Pakistan’s solidarity after the Israeli airstrike on Doha on September 9, 2025, and again for the Arab-Islamic Summit, and stressed that Islamabad stands “shoulder-to-shoulder” with Doha in pursuit of regional stability.


Pakistan’s first digital Islamic banking platform partners with central bank to boost rural financial access

Updated 10 December 2025
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Pakistan’s first digital Islamic banking platform partners with central bank to boost rural financial access

  • Aik by BankIslami says Shariah-compliant digital finance can expand inclusion beyond urban centers
  • Merchants, vendors and small business owners in rural area trained in how digital Islamic banking works

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s first fully digital Islamic banking platform, Aik by BankIslami, said on Tuesday it had partnered with the State Bank of Pakistan to hold financial literacy sessions in a rural community near the capital, part of efforts to expand digital payments and banking in underserved areas.

The initiative forms part of Islamabad’s national shift toward a cashless system, with the central bank describing digitalization as key to widening financial access, reducing cash dependency and aligning the economy with global banking practices.

Under the initiative, a training session was held in Maira Bagwal village where merchants, vendors and small business owners were trained in how digital Islamic banking works and how electronic payments can replace cash-based transactions that still dominate Pakistan’s informal economy.

“Through ‘aik’ we are helping drive the growth of Islamic banking by giving communities simple access to Shariah-compliant digital financial services,” Aik Chief Officer Ashfaque Ahmed said in a statement. “When people adopt digital banking, financial inclusion improves, and more families are able to participate in a fair and transparent financial system.”

Aik and BankIslami said they would continue working with the State Bank to run more awareness drives and onboard local merchants into the digital ecosystem.

Organizers said the session highlighted how electronic payments can make daily transactions safer, faster and more transparent for residents unfamiliar with banking, while ensuring compliance with Islamic finance rules that prohibit interest-based lending.

The statement added that Aik and BankIslami are focused on making Shariah-compliant digital banking simple, accessible and relevant to rural customers, a segment often excluded from formal finance despite Pakistan having one of the world’s fastest-growing Islamic banking markets.

The program falls under Pakistan’s Smart Village initiative, which aims to bring digital tools like mobile wallets, merchant QR payments, online banking and e-government interfaces to remote areas where formal banking penetration remains low.