‘Pak-Saudi Friendship’: Pakistani artists take truck art to Kingdom on vintage Italian scooter

Artists works on a vintage Vespa scooter (left) , while portraits of Saudi Arabia’s King Salman and Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman are painted in vibrant Pakistani truck art style (right) in Islamabad, Pakistan, on Febraury 17, 2026. (AN photo)
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Updated 19 February 2026
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‘Pak-Saudi Friendship’: Pakistani artists take truck art to Kingdom on vintage Italian scooter

  • Hand-painted scooter featuring Saudi leaders and landmarks to be displayed at Al Khobar restaurant
  • Artists say project symbolizes people-to-people ties between longtime allies Pakistan and Saudi Arabia

ISLAMABAD: In a modest Islamabad workshop thick with the scent of enamel paint, artist Muhammad Ejaz Ullah Mughal carefully guided his brush across the curved body of a vintage Vespa scooter, covering the metal in blooming florals, intricate foliage and portraits of Saudi Arabia’s King Salman and Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman as well as landmarks from the Kingdom.

Mughal, 48, is collaborating with fellow painter Ghulam Shabbir, 65, on the hand-decorated scooter, which will be shipped later this month to a restaurant in Al Khobar, Saudi Arabia, owned by a Pakistani expat. The display, alongside other examples of Pakistani truck art, is intended as a cultural bridge between the two countries.

Pakistan and Saudi Arabia maintain close economic, political and security relations, underpinned by shared religious and cultural connections. The two countries have recently expanded cooperation through agreements on defense and economic coordination.

The connection also runs through personal experience. Both Mughal and Shabbir have previously worked in the Kingdom and say the project carries deeper meaning.

“When I was in Saudi Arabia, I used to write ‘Pak-Saudi Friendship’ [on different things] and gift them to people,” Mughal told Arab News as he painted a floral motif on the Vespa.




Two artists paint a vintage Italian Vespa in Islamabad, Pakistan, on February 17, 2026. (AN)

“They would ask me what I had written in Urdu, in Nastaliq [style]. When it was explained to them in Arabic, they would embrace me warmly.”

For Mughal, choosing the vintage Vespa symbolized pairing two fading traditions: the classic Italian scooter and Pakistan’s hand-painted truck art.

“Now because of [this] truck art, I will need not say anything, because it will itself be speaking: ‘Long live Pak-Saudi Friendship’,” he said.

Pakistani truck art is a distinctive folk aesthetic known for vivid colors, poetic calligraphy and elaborate imagery. Originating from decorations on cargo vehicles, the style has gained international recognition and appeared in exhibitions and public installations abroad.

The project is being mentored by Sofia Akhtar, an income tax lawyer-turned-artist who runs a studio supporting traditional craftsmen.




The artist, Ghulam Shabir, paints a portrait of Saudi King Salman on a Vespa in Islamabad, Pakistan, on February 17, 2026. (AN)

“Before this, our work began to be recognized in Europe, when in the UK a bus was adorned with truck art,” Akhtar said. “Now after Europe, at this time our diversion has started toward the Arab countries.”

She expects the Saudi reception to be strong as the Kingdom expands cultural initiatives.

“I feel as if their [artists] work will explode like a volcano and spread all over Arab countries,” she said.

While Mughal focuses on design, the detailed execution relies on Shabbir, a veteran artist who previously painted large cinema hoardings before digital printing replaced the craft.

He worked in Saudi Arabia from 2009 to 2022, including on the Makkah Hotel in Jeddah.

“I know that when this goes there to Saudi




A vintage Vespa displays Pakistan’s iconic truck art, featuring portraits of the Saudi King and Crown Prince, in Islamabad, Pakistan, on February 17, 2026. (AN)

Arabia, a fair will gather around it,” Shabbir said. “Those people are very devoted to their Kings. They love King Salman and [Crown Prince] Mohammed bin Salman very much. They love them a lot. When they see this portrait, it is a new style, new work for them.”

He noted that although the imagery was familiar in Pakistan, the level of hand-painted detail was unusual in the Gulf.




Portraits of the Saudi King (right) and Crown Prince (left) are painted on a Vespa by Pakistani artists in Islamabad, Pakistan, on February 17, 2026. (AN)

“It involves a lot of small, detailed work. Every single thing is observed carefully, trees, leaves, animals, birds, their perspective,” he explained, highlighting the border of a portrait with his brush. “We have to work while considering all of that.”

For Shabbir, the decorated scooter represents more than an artistic commission.

“They love Pakistanis very much. And Pakistanis also consider Saudi Arabia as a second home,” he said. “When it goes there, god willing, it will create waves. People will come in crowds to see it.”


IMF team expected in Islamabad today for loan reviews amid reform scrutiny

Updated 25 February 2026
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IMF team expected in Islamabad today for loan reviews amid reform scrutiny

  • Talks to cover third review of $7 billion bailout and second climate resilience assessment
  • Analysts flag revenue shortfall and energy reforms as potential sticking points in negotiations

KARACHI: An International Monetary Fund (IMF) staff mission is expected to arrive in Islamabad today, Wednesday, to begin discussions on key program reviews that will determine Pakistan’s continued access to funding under its $7 billion bailout and a parallel climate resilience facility.

The visit, confirmed last week by IMF communications director Julie Kozack, will cover the third review under the Extended Fund Facility (EFF) and the second review under the Resilience and Sustainability Facility (RSF), which supports climate-vulnerable countries.

“We do have a staff team that is expected to visit Pakistan starting February 25th for discussions on the third review under the EFF and the second review under the RSF,” Kozack said at a regular press briefing last week.

The talks come at a sensitive moment for Islamabad, which has spent the past year implementing tax increases, subsidy rationalization and tight monetary policy to stabilize an economy that teetered on the brink of default in 2023.

IMF officials have credited those measures with producing measurable gains. Kozack said Pakistan’s policy efforts under the EFF had helped stabilize the economy and rebuild confidence, pointing to a primary fiscal surplus of 1.3 percent of GDP in the last fiscal year, contained inflation and the country’s first current account surplus in 14 years.

The review is expected to probe fiscal discipline and energy sector reforms, two areas that have historically complicated negotiations between Islamabad and the Fund.

Analysts told Arab News last week that while approval of the next tranche is likely, discussions might not be straightforward.

“This is expected to be a smooth sailing. However, questions might arise,” Shankar Talreja, head of research at Karachi-based Topline Securities Limited, said earlier.

He pointed to a revenue shortfall of Rs336 billion ($1.2 billion) against IMF targets and raised the possibility that the Fund may seek clarification over the government’s recent reduction in electricity tariffs for export-oriented industries, a move designed to support manufacturing but with fiscal implications.

A positive outcome of the review is vital for continued disbursements under the EFF and RSF programs. It will also be important to sustain investor confidence as the country seeks to consolidate its fragile economic recovery.

A successful staff-level review leads to a provisional agreement between the two sides, which then requires approval by the Fund’s Executive Board before the disbursement of the next tranche.