Uzbekistan president arrives in Pakistan to strengthen trade, energy cooperation

Uzbekistan's President Shavkat Mirziyoyev delivers remarks at the leaders-level "Central Asia plus Japan" Dialogue (CA+JAD) Summit in Tokyo on December 20, 2025. (AFP/ file)
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Updated 05 February 2026
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Uzbekistan president arrives in Pakistan to strengthen trade, energy cooperation

  • Uzbek President Shavkat Mirziyoyev to lead high-level delegation of ministers, business leaders on Feb. 5-6 visit, says Pakistan foreign office
  • Visit takes place days after Pakistan, Uzbekistan reaffirmed $2 billion trade target during intergovernmental commission meeting

ISLAMABAD: Uzbekistan President Shavkat Mirziyoyev arrives in Pakistan today, Thursday, with a high-level delegation to identify new avenues for bilateral cooperation in trade, defense, energy and other avenues, Pakistan’s foreign ministry said. 

The visit takes place after the 10th session of the Pakistan–Uzbekistan Intergovernmental Commission (IGC) on Trade, Economic and Scientific-Technical Cooperation in Islamabad on Feb. 2. Both sides reaffirmed their $2 billion trade target and areed to push for regional connectivity, develop trade routes and accelerate cooperation in several sectors. 

Mirziyoyev will lead a high-level delegation comprising senior ministers and business leaders on a two-day state visit, Pakistan’s foreign ministry said. 

“Discussions will focus on reviewing the entire gamut of bilateral relations and identifying new avenues to further deepen cooperation in diverse sectors including trade, energy, defense, education, people-to-people exchange and regional connectivity,” the statement said. 

The Uzbek leader’s visit takes place two days after Kazakhstan President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev arrived in Islamabad to hold talks on trade, business and connectivity. 

Pakistan and Kazakhstan signed 37 memoranda of understanding (MoUs) and set a target of raising bilateral trade to $1 billion within a year during Tokayev’s visit. 

Pakistan and Uzbekistan have steadily increased economic ties in recent years as Islamabad seeks greater access to landlocked Central Asian markets, aiming to position itself as a regional transit and trade hub linking South Asia with Central Asia.

Pakistan was the first Central Asian partner with which Uzbekistan signed a bilateral Transit Trade Agreement, along with a Preferential Trade Agreement in March 2022, covering 17 items, which became operational in 2023.

Pakistan’s finance ministry said last month that Azerbaijan’s state energy company SOCAR was set to finalize an investment in the country’s oil and gas sector following high-level engagements at the World Economic Forum in Davos.


At OIC meeting, Pakistan calls on world to halt Israel’s annexation of West Bank

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At OIC meeting, Pakistan calls on world to halt Israel’s annexation of West Bank

  • Israel this month decided to approve land registration procedures in parts of the West Bank for the first time since 1967
  • FM Ishaq Dar demands end to Palestinian displacement, reconstruction of Gaza, pathway to independent Palestinian state

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan on Friday called on the international community to stop Israel from annexing the occupied West Bank, demanding a “political pathway” toward an independent Palestinian state.
Israel decided this month to approve land registration procedures in parts of the West Bank for the first time since 1967, drawing sharp criticism from Muslim nations along with several European countries, which described it as a move to ease the path for settlement expansion and annexation.

Speaking at an extraordinary ministerial session of the Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC), Pakistani Foreign Minister Ishaq Dar said the development carries profound implications not only for the Palestinian people but also for the credibility of international law, United Nations charter and the integrity of the multilateral system.

“Israel continues with impunity to expand illegal settlements and enforce de facto annexation in the Occupied West Bank. These actions, flagrantly violate international law including UN Charter, UN Security Council Resolution 2803 [endorsing President Donald Trump’s peace plan for Gaza], undermine all diplomatic efforts and threaten the very foundation of a just and lasting peace,” Dar said.

“These violations embolden further aggression, erode regional stability and trample on the rights and dignity of the Palestinian people. The international community must decisively act and act now to halt these violations, uphold international law and ensure delivery of the assurances made in good faith to the group of eight Arab-Islamic countries, including Pakistan.”

The West Bank is among the territories that the Palestinians seek for a future independent state. Much of it is under Israeli military control, with limited Palestinian self-rule in some areas run by the Western-backed Palestinian Authority (PA). More than 500,000 Israelis live in settlements and outposts in the West Bank, excluding Israeli-annexed East Jerusalem, alongside nearly three million Palestinians.

Dar recalled that leaders and the foreign ministers of the group of eight Arab-Islamic countries, including Pakistan, engaged with United States President Donald Trump on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly on Sept. 25 to help end the bloodshed in Gaza, ensure unimpeded humanitarian access, secure a permanent and sustainable ceasefire and advance a comprehensive peace process for the Palestinian brothers and sisters.

“During these consultations, we, the group of eight, ensured that the non-annexation of the Occupied West Bank remained firmly on the agenda and assurances were given to us in New York that the annexation of West Bank would not take place,” he said.
“In view of the serious gravity of the situation, we need to collectively ensure, first, an immediate reversal of all Israeli measures aimed at de-facto annexation of the Occupied Palestinian Territory, including West Bank, which constitutes a red line for any just resolution of the issue of Palestine.”

Pakistan is among the Group of Eight Arab Islamic countries, which also includes Saudi Arabia, Jordan, the United Arab Emirates, Qatar, Indonesia, Egypt and Türkiye. Islamabad does not have diplomatic relations with Israel and maintains a firm policy of non-recognition, rooted in its support for an independent Palestinian state in the Middle East with Al-Quds Al-Sharif as its capital.

Speaking at the meeting, Dar called for an immediate end to all “forms of displacement, democratic manipulation and collective punishment” of the Palestinians, a ceasefire in and reconstruction of Gaza as well as “a credible, irreversible and time-bound political horizon” leading to the establishment of a Palestinian state.