Pakistan, Jordan push for preferential trade agreement, expanding cooperation in priority sectors

Pakistan Commerce Minister at a meeting at the Pakistan-Jordan Inter-ministerial Commission in Islamabad on February 5, 2026. (Radio Pakistan)
Short Url
Updated 05 February 2026
Follow

Pakistan, Jordan push for preferential trade agreement, expanding cooperation in priority sectors

  • Pakistan, Jordan hold inter-ministerial commission meeting in Islamabad to discuss cooperation in several sectors
  • Both sides agree to form working group, Jordan-Pakistan Business Council to accelerate trade and investment cooperation

Islamabad: Pakistan and Jordan have agreed to pursue a preferential trade agreement (PFA), vowing to enhance cooperation in investment, banking, energy and other priority sectors, Pakistan’s commerce ministry said on Thursday. 

The understanding was reached between the two sides at a meeting of the Pakistan-Jordan Inter-ministerial Commission in Islamabad on Thursday. The session was co-chaired by Pakistan’s Commerce Minister Jam Kamal Khan and Jordan’s Minister of Industry and Trade Yarub Qudah.

“Pakistan and Jordan have agreed to pursue a preferential trade agreement (PTA) and significantly expand bilateral cooperation across 16 priority sectors, ranging from trade, finance and industry to climate change, maritime affairs, health, technology and education,” the commerce ministry said in a statement. 

Khan said both sides have chosen to strengthen cooperation in trade and investment, industrial development, banking and finance, agriculture and livestock, higher education, vocational training, labor and health.

He said both countries have also agreed to enhance cooperation in climate change, maritime, energy, mineral resources and many more sectors. 

Speaking alongside Qudah at a news conference in Islamabad, Khan said it was a “very good opportunity” for both sides to transform their brotherly relations into economic cooperation. 

Qudah agreed with Khan, saying it was time for Islamabad and Amman to take their economic and trade relations to “a totally different level.”

“We have also agreed to have a working group that will work this year on different sectors and also the establishment of the Pakistan-Jordan Business Council,” he said.

He invited Khan to Jordan to hold talks on further cooperation, adding that the 11th meeting of the inter-ministerial commission will be held in Jordan next year. 

The bilateral trade between Pakistan and Jordan stood at $46.58 million in 2023. Pakistan’s main exports to Jordan include textiles, rice, ethyl alcohol, polymers of styrene, sugar confectionaries, nuts and dried fruits.

Meanwhile, Pakistan mainly imports mineral and chemical fertilizers, ferrous waste and scrap, inorganic acids, chemicals, medicaments and seeds from Jordan. 

Pakistan enjoys cooperation with Jordan in several sectors including trade, defense and minerals. 

Jordan was the fifth country to recognize Pakistan after it secured independence in 1947. The two nations established formal diplomatic ties in 1948. 


Pakistan says it engaged Iran, Saudi Arabia to limit Gulf escalation after US-Israel attacks

Updated 6 sec ago
Follow

Pakistan says it engaged Iran, Saudi Arabia to limit Gulf escalation after US-Israel attacks

  • Deputy PM Ishaq Dar says he reminded Iranian leadership about Pakistan’s defense pact with Saudi Arabia 
  • Saudi Arabia confirmed Iran launched attacks in Kingdom’s Riyadh, Eastern Province regions on Saturday 

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s Deputy Prime Minister Ishaq Dar said on Tuesday that Islamabad had mediated between Saudi Arabia and Iran to reduce tensions amid escalating tensions due to the ongoing conflict in the Middle East. 

Tensions in the Gulf skyrocketed on Saturday following coordinated strikes by the US and Israel against Iran, diminishing prospects of a peaceful settlement to Tehran’s long-running dispute with Western countries and Tel Aviv around its nuclear program.

Iran subsequently targeted American military bases in Gulf states, including the UAE, Bahrain, Qatar, Kuwait and Jordan, prompting their governments to issue condemnations. Saudi Arabia also confirmed Iran launched attacks in Riyadh and the Eastern Province, saying they were successfully intercepted. 

Dar, who also serves as foreign minister, told members of the National Assembly during a televised session that he reminded Iran about Pakistan’s Strategic Mutual Defense Agreement with Saudi Arabia when carried out strikes against Gulf nations. The pact, signed last year in September between Islamabad and Riyadh, states that aggression on one would be considered an attack against both. 

He said the Iranian leadership sought assurances from Saudi Arabia that its soil would not be used against Iran. The Pakistani minister said he conveyed those assurances from Riyadh to Tehran. 

“So, by the grace of god, you saw that what appears to be a minimum reaction at this point, has not been directed against Saudi Arabia and Oman,” Dar said. 

He said Iran carried out strikes against other Middle Eastern countries such as Jordan, Kuwait, UAE, Qatar and Bahrain. Dar added that these were sovereign countries and not bound to heed Pakistan’s advice. 

“I am grateful that they [Iran] understood my point and the assurance they sought was obtained and delivered by us accordingly,” he said. 

Speaking about Islamabad’s efforts to defuse tensions between Iran and the US, Dar said he took up Iran’s nuclear program with US Secretary of State Marco Rubio during their meeting in July last year. 

The Pakistani minister said Iran’s response was also “positive” on Washington’s demands to not pursue nuclear weapons, adding that Pakistan held talks with Iranian officials during President Masoud Pezeshkian’s visit to Islamabad in August 2025.

Dar said Pakistan had immediately condemned US-Israel attacks against Iran when they took place on Saturday, adding that he was directly in contact with Iran’s Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi via WhatsApp. 

“We don’t need the longer routes of the foreign office,” he said. “We just message each other, we just talk to each other as soon as we see the messages.”

He said Islamabad would continue its efforts to de-escalate tensions between Washington and Tehran as regional tensions escalate.