Pakistan digital authority partners with Swiss-based group on sovereign cloud, AI systems

Representatives from Pakistan Digital Authority (front-left) and DFINITY (front-right) sign an MoU to advance sovereign AI‑native digital infrastructure in Pakistan in a ceremony held in Islamabad, according to a statement released by Pakistan Digital Authority (PDA) on February 10, 2026. (PDA)
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Updated 10 February 2026
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Pakistan digital authority partners with Swiss-based group on sovereign cloud, AI systems

  • Deal aims to keep sensitive data in-country as Pakistan seeks to reduce reliance on foreign cloud providers
  • Partnership includes national messaging app, AI platform access and plans for a local DFINITY presence

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s digital regulator has signed a partnership with Swiss-based non-profit DFINITY Foundation to develop sovereign cloud infrastructure and AI-native software systems, according to an official statement issued on Tuesday.

The agreement between the Pakistan Digital Authority, the government body overseeing the country’s digital transformation, and DFINITY seeks to ensure sensitive public data remains within the country while enabling tamper-resistant software, national-scale digital services and artificial intelligence applications without reliance on foreign cloud providers.

As part of the collaboration, DFINITY will support the creation of a Pakistan-specific subnet on its Internet Computer Platform, a sovereign cloud network designed to host secure government applications and AI-powered systems.

The partnership also includes plans to pilot a national messaging application, expand access to DFINITY’s AI software platform Caffeine, and roll out capacity-building initiatives across government, education and entrepreneurship.

“This partnership marks an important step in Pakistan’s digital evolution,” said Dr. Sohail Munir, chairperson of the Pakistan Digital Authority, in the statement issued by the authority.

“By investing in sovereign cloud infrastructure and modern AI‑ready platforms, we are strengthening national resilience, supporting innovation, and creating new opportunities for our public institutions, students, and entrepreneurs,” he continued.

DFINITY, which describes itself as a research organization, said the agreement would allow Pakistan to develop and operate cloud and AI services under its own control.

The foundation has also committed to establishing a local presence in Pakistan and providing 1,500 licenses for its Caffeine platform, which enables users to build and deploy applications using natural language commands.

“Pakistan is taking a forward‑looking approach to digital infrastructure,” said Dominic Williams, founder and chief scientist at the organization.

“By establishing a Pakistan Subnet and investing in sovereign, tamper‑proof systems, the country is laying the groundwork for software and AI applications that are secure, verifiable, and built to serve national priorities,” he added.

The Pakistan Digital Authority was established under the Digital Nation Pakistan Act 2025 and is mandated to oversee digital policy, data and AI governance and national digital infrastructure across federal and provincial institutions.

DFINITY, founded in 2016, operates from Zurich and San Francisco and focuses on distributed systems, cryptography and advanced computing.
 


Attack on paramilitary post in northwest Pakistan kills seven security personnel, child

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Attack on paramilitary post in northwest Pakistan kills seven security personnel, child

  • Blast hits Frontier Corps checkpoint in Bajaur near Afghan border
  • Police recover bodies from rubble as rescue operation continues

ISLAMABAD: An attack on a paramilitary checkpoint in northwest Pakistan killed at least seven security personnel and a child on Monday, officials said, the latest in a series of attacks in a region bordering Afghanistan.

Pakistan has witnessed a steady rise in attacks in the northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province since the Taliban returned to power in Afghanistan in 2021, with most violence targeting police and security forces in former tribal districts along the border.

Islamabad says the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) militant group has reorganized across the frontier and operates from safe havens inside Afghanistan, a charge Kabul rejects, insisting it does not allow its territory to be used against other countries.

The latest attack struck a Frontier Corps (FC) post in the Mamond area of Bajaur district, destroying a small compound where security personnel were stationed.

“We have recovered seven dead bodies, one of them police, and two injured from the debris while search for other bodies is underway,” Deputy Superintendent of Police Niaz Mohammad told Arab News, describing the compound as “a structure comprising four to five rooms.”

Rescue teams continued operations to locate anyone trapped beneath the rubble, officials said.

Police did not comment on the nature of the attack but a statement from the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa chief minister’s office described it as a suicide bombing and confirmed casualties among security personnel and a child.

“The martyrdom of security personnel and a child in the terrorist attack is extremely tragic,” the statement said, adding that emergency services had been instructed to speed up rescue efforts.

Authorities said operations against militants in the province would be intensified.

Districts along Pakistan’s border with Afghanistan, including Bajaur and Bannu, have repeatedly been targeted in bombings and assaults on security checkpoints since a fragile ceasefire between Islamabad and the TTP collapsed in late 2022. Security forces continue to conduct intelligence-based operations in the region, but patrols and outposts remain frequent targets.