Authorities to bar vehicles without e-tag from entering Islamabad starting Jan. 1

Pakistani motorists sit in a traffic jam after roads were cordoned off during an anti-government protest in Islamabad on August 18, 2014. (AFP/ file)
Short Url
Updated 28 December 2025
Follow

Authorities to bar vehicles without e-tag from entering Islamabad starting Jan. 1

  • Authorities made e-tags mandatory for all vehicles in Islamabad to enhance security
  • Vehicles already equipped with a motorway tag, or m-tag, do not require an e-tag

ISLAMABAD: Authorities will bar vehicles without an electronic tag, or e-tag, from entering the federal capital of Islamabad starting Jan. 1, the Pakistani interior ministry announced on Sunday, in a move aimed at streamlining traffic management and improving monitoring at Islamabad’s entry and exit points.

Authorities made e-tags mandatory for all vehicles in the capital in Nov. to enhance security in the city. Vehicles already equipped with a motorway tag, or m-tag, do not require an e-tag.

The enforcement will rely on e-tag readers installed at entry and check points across the capital, which will automatically identify untagged vehicles and allow authorities to take action without manual checks.

The move is aimed at regulating traffic flow, improving record-keeping, and ensuring that vehicles entering the federal capital are properly registered within the system, according to the officials.

“Reforms in Safe City operations and the effective use of technology are the need of the hour,” Interior Minister Mohsin Naqvi was quoted as saying, following a review of the city’s monitoring system.

He presided over a meeting at the Safe City headquarters to review measures taken for the protection of citizens’ lives and property.

‎Under the Capital Smart City initiative, citizen services such as Rescue 1122, traffic management, security, and the Capital Development Authority (CDA) would be integrated into a centralized system,” Naqvi said.

At present, 16 e-tag points have been set up at different locations across Islamabad to tag vehicles.

Islamabad Deputy Commissioner Irfan Memon advised citizens to get their vehicles tagged immediately to avoid legal action.

“The administration is making efforts to facilitate the public, but compliance from citizens is essential for smooth implementation,” he was quoted as saying by the state-run APP news agency.


Pakistan’s Senate passes bill to regulate virtual assets, protect investors

Updated 5 sec ago
Follow

Pakistan’s Senate passes bill to regulate virtual assets, protect investors

  • PVARA chairman terms the approval of bill a ‘defining moment’ for Pakistan’s digital economy
  • Senator says Pakistan will soon be trading major crypto coins such as Bitcoin, Ethereum, XRP

ISLAMABAD: The Senate, the upper house of Pakistan parliament, has passed the Virtual Assets Bill 2026 that paves the way for regulation and supervision of the digital assets sector to protect investors, the Pakistan Virtual Assets Regulatory Authority (PVARA) said on Friday. 

Pakistan has in recent months stepped up efforts to draft rules for regulating the fast-expanding market for digital coins and tokens, requiring virtual asset service providers to secure government approval. Islamabad’s move to embrace digital currency marks a significant policy shift as it had banned cryptocurrency in 2018, citing financial risks.

PVARA will oversee the registration and licensing of virtual asset exchanges, custodians and other service providers, according to the bill. It will set conduct of business requirements, enforce customer protection safeguards and implement measures to combat money-laundering and financial crime.

“The passage of this bill through the Senate represents a defining moment for Pakistan’s digital economy,” PVARA quoted its Chairman Bilal bin Saqib as saying. “We are transforming years of unregulated activity into a transparent, secure, and investor-friendly ecosystem that positions Pakistan as a credible jurisdiction for virtual assets.”

The legislation introduces regulatory provisions, including mandatory licensing for virtual asset service providers, market surveillance mechanisms, anti-money laundering and counter-terrorism financing compliance, and coordination with Pakistani financial regulators, including the State Bank of Pakistan and the Securities and Exchange Commission of Pakistan.

The bill establishes a formal legal framework empowering PVARA to oversee virtual asset service providers and seeks to enhance market transparency by aligning the country’s digital asset regime with international standards. It will now be sent to the National Assembly, lower house of parliament, for approval before being submitted to President Asif Ali Zardari for its enactment into law.

Pakistan ranks among the world’s largest cryptocurrency markets by adoption, with millions of citizens actively engaged in virtual assets. PVARA said the Virtual Assets Bill 2026 provides a legal foundation to channel this organic growth into a regulated framework.

On Wednesday, Dr. Afnanullah Khan, a Pakistani senator from the ruling party, said major crypto coins such as Bitcoin, Ethereum and XRP will soon be traded in Pakistan through crypto exchanges.

Last week, Pakistan launched a crypto testing framework called the “regulatory sandbox” to regulate digital assets, allowing firms to trial new products and services under official supervision. The initiative creates a controlled environment where companies can test crypto-related services under the oversight of PVARA before full-scale approval.

In January, Pakistan signed a memorandum of understanding with a company affiliated with World Liberty Financial, a crypto-based finance platform launched in September 2024 and linked to US President Donald Trump’s family, to explore the use of a dollar-linked Stablecoin for cross-border payments. Stablecoins are cryptocurrencies pegged to a fiat currency to maintain a stable value.