EU warns Pakistan GSP+ status dependent on ‘list of issues,’ including human rights

EU warns Pakistan GSP+ status dependent on ‘list of issues,’ including human rights
Ambassador Olof Skoog, EU Special Representative for Human Rights (EUSR) meets Pakistan’s Foreign Minister Ishaq Dar (left) in Islamabad, Pakistan, on January 28, 2025. (MOFA/File)
Short Url
Updated 31 January 2025
Follow

EU warns Pakistan GSP+ status dependent on ‘list of issues,’ including human rights

EU warns Pakistan GSP+ status dependent on ‘list of issues,’ including human rights
  • Statement comes after EU envoy’s visit to Pakistan following bloc criticizing sentencing of civilians by military courts
  • GSP+ status in spotlight again this week as Pakistan passed controversial cybercrime law to regulate social media platforms

ISLAMABAD: The European Union’s mission in Islamabad on Friday reminded Pakistan that trade benefits it received under the GSP+ scheme depended on progress the country made on addressing a list of issues, including human rights, saying “tangible” efforts remained essential. 

The statement came after a week-long visit to Pakistan by Ambassador Olof Skoog, EU Special Representative for Human Rights (EUSR), to engage the country on human and labor rights issues and to discuss Pakistan’s plans to address them, including in view of the ongoing assessment under the GSP+ trade scheme.

The GSP+ scheme grants beneficiary countries’ exports duty-free access to the European market in exchange for voluntarily agreeing to implement 27 international core conventions, including on human and civil rights.

Multiple developments on the human rights front have raised concerns over Pakistan’s GSP+ status in recent weeks. The EU last month openly criticized Pakistan for sentencing over 80 civilians in army courts after charging them for anti-government riots in May 2023 in which military installations were attacked, saying it was “inconsistent” with Pakistan’s international obligations. This week, the country’s GSP+ status was once more in the spotlight after parliament passed a controversial cybercrime law that journalists and digital rights activists have widely said aims to crackdown against dissent on social media platforms. The government denies this. 

“As we approach the midterm of the current monitoring cycle, we encourage Pakistan to continue on its reform path as it prepares for reapplication under the upcoming new GSP+ regulation,” the EU mission in Islamabad said in a statement. 

“The trade benefits under GSP+ depend on the progress made on addressing a list of issues, including on human rights, and tangible reforms remain essential.”

In his meetings with senior Pakistani leaders including the deputy prime minister, information minister, the chief justice and military leaders, Skoog discussed areas of concern such as the application of blasphemy laws, women’s rights, forced marriages and conversions, enforced disappearances, freedoms of expression, religion or belief, independence of the media, impunity for rights violations, due process, the right to a fair trial, civic space, the death penalty, judicial backlog and the integrity and independence of the judiciary.

Pakistan has become the largest beneficiary of GSP+ in recent years, with its businesses increasing their exports to the EU market by 108 percent since the launch of the trade scheme in 2014.

In October 2023, the EU unanimously voted to extend GSP+ status until 2027 for developing countries, including Pakistan.


KSrelief, WHO sign $300 million deal to fight polio in Pakistan, Afghanistan

KSrelief, WHO sign $300 million deal to fight polio in Pakistan, Afghanistan
Updated 15 sec ago
Follow

KSrelief, WHO sign $300 million deal to fight polio in Pakistan, Afghanistan

KSrelief, WHO sign $300 million deal to fight polio in Pakistan, Afghanistan
  • The deal was agreed on the sidelines of Riyadh International Humanitarian Forum
  • It includes a series of preventive activities to eradicate polio in settlement areas

RIYADH: The Saudi aid agency KSrelief recently signed a $300 million cooperation agreement with the World Health Organization to develop a strategy for eradicating polio around the world.

The deal, agreed on the sidelines of the 4th Riyadh International Humanitarian Forum, was signed by Abdullah Al-Rabeeah, the agency’s supervisor general and adviser to the Royal Court, and WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus.

It includes a series of preventive activities that will help eradicate polio in settlement areas in target countries, notably Pakistan and Afghanistan.


Pakistan reports sixth case of polio virus this year

Pakistan reports sixth case of polio virus this year
Updated 8 min 15 sec ago
Follow

Pakistan reports sixth case of polio virus this year

Pakistan reports sixth case of polio virus this year
  • The latest polio case was reported in the Thatta district, which is the fourth case in Sindh this year
  • Pakistan and Afghanistan are the only two countries in the world where polio remains an endemic

KARACHI: Health authorities have confirmed another case of polio virus in Pakistan, the country’s polio program said on Saturday, taking this year’s nationwide tally to six.
Polio is a paralyzing disease that has no cure. Multiple doses of the oral polio vaccine and completion of the routine vaccination schedule for all children under the age of 5 is essential to provide children high immunity against the disease.
The Regional Reference Laboratory for Polio Eradication at the National Institute of Health in Islamabad confirmed the polio virus in a child in Thatta district of the southern Sindh province, according to the Pakistan polio program.
“This is the fourth polio case from Sindh and the sixth case from Pakistan at large this year,” it said in a statement.
“The polio program urges all parents to get their children vaccinated against polio at every opportunity to keep them protected from this devastating disease.”
Pakistan witnessed an intense resurgence of polio virus last year, with a total of 74 cases reported nationwide. Of these, 27 were from Balochistan, 22 from Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, 23 from Sindh, and one each from Punjab and Islamabad.
The South Asian country last month concluded its first nationwide anti-polio campaign of 2025, with 99 percent of the targets achieved, according to the polio program. The campaign, conducted on Feb. 3-9, vaccinated more than 45 million children.
Pakistan and Afghanistan are the last two countries in the world where polio remains an endemic.
Immunization campaigns have succeeded in most countries and have come close in Pakistan, but persistent problems remain. In the early 1990s, Pakistan reported around 20,000 cases annually but in 2018 the number dropped to eight cases. Six cases were reported in 2023 and only one in 2021.
Pakistan’s polio program began in 1994 but efforts to eradicate the virus have since been undermined by vaccine misinformation and opposition from some religious hard-liners who say immunization is a foreign ploy to sterilize Muslim children or a cover for Western spies. Militant groups also frequently attack and kill members of polio vaccine teams.


Pakistan launches Rs20 billion Ramadan relief package for needy families

Pakistan launches Rs20 billion Ramadan relief package for needy families
Updated 44 min 35 sec ago
Follow

Pakistan launches Rs20 billion Ramadan relief package for needy families

Pakistan launches Rs20 billion Ramadan relief package for needy families
  • Development comes amid a decline in consumer inflation in the South Asian country
  • But many Pakistanis say they are still feeling the pinch ahead of the start of Ramadan

ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif on Saturday launched a Rs20 billion ($71.4 million) relief package for the Islamic holy month of Ramadan in Pakistan, which aims to benefit 4 million families across the South Asian country.
Fasting during Ramadan is one of the five pillars of Islam, wherein Muslims abstain from food and drink from sunrise till sunset for a month. The holy month begins in Pakistan on Sunday.
While consumer inflation in Pakistan declined to 2.4 percent in Jan., compared to 24 percent in the same period last year, many Pakistanis say they are still feeling the pinch.
The Pakistani government has decided to provide Rs5,000 ($17.87) each to around 4 million families across the country to support them during the month of Ramadan, according to officials.
“It is a great blessing of Almighty Allah that inflation has dropped down in this Ramadan as compared to the last year. This year, around Rs20 billion have been allocated for this package, which would benefit 40 lakh families,” Sharif said at the launching ceremony.
“This would cover the whole of Pakistan, all provinces, Gilgit-Baltistan, Azad Jammu and Kashmir. This amount will be distributed among deserving people in all these areas through the digital [wallet] system.”
The development comes as Pakistan treads a long path to economic recovery after being stabilized under a $7 billion International Monetary Fund (IMF) program secured last year. An IMF mission is due to arrive in Islamabad next week for the first review of the facility.
Pakistan’s consumer inflation is expected to remain stable and maintain a downward trajectory compared to the previous year, the finance ministry said in its monthly economic outlook report on Feb. 27.
Sharif thanked all government institutions, international partners and tech companies for their efforts in distributing the funds among deserving families under the Ramadan relief package.
“All those tech companies, which provided their technical support in implementing this system, I thank them all,” Sharif said.
“I believe there are our foreign partners, also international partners, also sitting here. I would like to also thank them for their cooperation and partnership in this very noble cause.”


Three cops injured in grenade attack in Pakistan’s Karachi day after deadly bombing in northwest

Three cops injured in grenade attack in Pakistan’s Karachi day after deadly bombing in northwest
Updated 01 March 2025
Follow

Three cops injured in grenade attack in Pakistan’s Karachi day after deadly bombing in northwest

Three cops injured in grenade attack in Pakistan’s Karachi day after deadly bombing in northwest
  • No group has so far claimed responsibility for the attack on the police station in Karachi’s Saddar
  • Pakistan, battling twin insurgencies, has witnessed a surge in militant violence in recent months

KARACHI: Three policemen were injured in a grenade attack on a police station in Pakistan’s commercial capital of Karachi, police said on Saturday, a day after a deadly bombing in the country’s northwest killed six people.
Karachi, which is home to over 15 million people, has a history of attacks on police by organized gangs involved in drug trafficking and land grabbing as well as by militant groups.
Mehzor Ali, a senior superintendent of police (SSP), said unidentified men lobbed a hand grenade incident the Preedy police station in Karachi’s Saddar business district at 12:16am on Saturday.
“No group has claimed responsibility for the attack,” he told reporters in Karachi. “Bomb disposal squad has been summoned and the incident is being investigated.”
The development came a day after a deadly bombing killed a top cleric among six people at a mosque in Pakistan’s northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) province, according to officials.
The blast occurred during Friday prayers at Darul Uloom Haqqania, one of Pakistan’s largest and most influential religious seminaries.
Separately on Friday, nine people, including a paramilitary troop, were injured in a roadside blast in Quetta in the southwestern Balochistan province, police said.
No group has claimed responsibility for Friday’s attacks either, but Pakistan has been battling twin insurgencies — one mounted by religiously motivated groups like the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) in the country’s northwest and the other by ethnic Baloch separatists in Balochistan.


Pakistan slashes petroleum prices by up to Rs5 per liter

Pakistan slashes petroleum prices by up to Rs5 per liter
Updated 01 March 2025
Follow

Pakistan slashes petroleum prices by up to Rs5 per liter

Pakistan slashes petroleum prices by up to Rs5 per liter
  • The government cut the petrol price by only Re0.50 to Rs255.63 per liter
  • Pakistan revises fuel prices every fortnight based on international rates

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan has slashed the prices of petroleum products by up to Rs5 per liter for the next 15 days, the Finance Division announced late Friday.
The government slashed the price of high-speed diesel by Rs5.31 to Rs258.64 per liter, while that of petrol by only Re0.50 to Rs255.63 per liter.
The price of kerosene oil went down by Rs3.53 to Rs168.12 and that of light diesel oil by Rs2.47 to Rs153.34, according to a Finance Division notification.
“The Oil & Gas Regulatory Authority (OGRA) has reviewed & adjusted consumer prices for petroleum products in view of recent fluctuations in the international oil market,” it read.
Fuel prices in Pakistan are reviewed and adjusted fortnightly. The mechanism ensures that the net impact of changes in import costs is passed on to consumers, helping sustain the country’s fuel supply chain.
Petrol is mostly used in Pakistan for private transport, small vehicles, rickshaws, and two-wheelers. At the same time, any increase in the price of diesel is considered highly inflationary as it is mostly used to power heavy transport vehicles and particularly adds to the prices of vegetables and other eatables.